310 research outputs found
On the difficulties to resurrect the beyond. A commentary on the article Learning beyond the body by Juan-Ignacio Pozo / Sobre las dificultades para resucitar el más allá. Un comentario sobre el artículo Aprender más allá del cuerpo de Juan-Ignacio Pozo
Título, resumen y palabras clave también en inglésResumen basado en el de la publicaciónSe aborda la crítica de Juan Ignacio Pozo sobre las teorías psicológicas que emanaron de la ‘revolución cognitiva’ surgida con la aparición de la tecnología digital a mediados del siglo XX. La base de su crítica radica en el supuesto dualismo mente/cuerpo adoptado en esas teorías. Pozo defiende un enfoque integrador del cuerpo y la mente, al tiempo que propone la idea de una mente encarnada básica que se desarrolla más allá de las restricciones del cuerpo a través del dominio de los sistemas formales simbólicos de la cultura. En el comentario se defiende que este enfoque suaviza el dualismo mente/cuerpo sin llegar a superarlo. Se desarrollan cuatro áreas en las que la teoría de Pozo coincide con los supuestos característicos de este dualismo: claridad, notaciones formales, cognición animal y representaciones.Biblioteca del Ministerio de Educación y Formación Profesional; Calle San Agustín, 5 - 3 planta; 28014 Madrid; Tel. +34917748000; [email protected]
Pedagogies of Emergent Learning
We distinguish emergent learning from “teleological” learning, which is learning for the sake of passing pre-defined tests and goals. While teleological learning may succeed or fail, emergent learning is always going on in ways that move pass disciplinary boundaries and anticipated results. To advance a perspective on pedagogies of emergent learning we analyze selected episodes from a program for children who volunteered to enroll. The sessions alternated between the after school club they attended and an art museum. The program engaged the children in basket weaving, in the analysis of baskets exhibited at the museum, and with ways in which flat materials can be shaped in 3D space along distinct surface curvatures. These experiences have inspired us to outline two streams of pedagogical ideas that seem to nurture and go along with the unforeseeable paths of emergent learning
The effects of the pre-pulse on capillary discharge extreme ultraviolet laser
In the past few years collisionally pumped extreme ultraviolet (XUV) lasers
utilizing a capillary discharge were demonstrated. An intense current pulse is
applied to a gas filled capillary, inducing magnetic collapse (Z-pinch) and
formation of a highly ionized plasma column. Usually, a small current pulse
(pre-pulse) is applied to the gas in order to pre-ionize it prior to the onset
of the main current pulse. In this paper we investigate the effects of the
pre-pulse on a capillary discharge Ne-like Ar XUV laser (46.9nm). The
importance of the pre-pulse in achieving suitable initial conditions of the gas
column and preventing instabilities during the collapse is demonstrated.
Furthermore, measurements of the amplified spontaneous emission (ASE)
properties (intensity, duration) in different pre-pulse currents revealed
unexpected sensitivity. Increasing the pre-pulse current by a factor of two
caused the ASE intensity to decrease by an order of magnitude - and to nearly
disappear. This effect is accompanied by a slight increase in the lasing
duration. We attribute this effect to axial flow in the gas during the
pre-pulse.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent (BOLD) MRI in Glomerular Disease
Renal hypoxia has recently been implicated as a key contributor and indicator of various glomerular diseases. As such, monitoring changes in renal oxygenation in these disorders may provide an early diagnostic advantage that could prevent potential adverse outcomes. Blood oxygen level-dependent magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD MRI) is an emerging noninvasive technique for assessing renal oxygenation in glomerular disease. Although BOLD MRI has produced promising initial results for the use in certain renal pathologies, the use of BOLD imaging in glomerular diseases, including primary and secondary nephrotic and nephritic syndromes, is relatively unexplored. Early BOLD studies on primary nephrotic syndrome, nephrotic syndrome secondary to diabetes mellitus, and nephritic syndrome secondary to systemic lupus erythematosus have shown promising results to support its future clinical utility. In this review, we outline the advancements made in understanding the use of BOLD MRI for the assessment, diagnosis, and screening of these pathologies
The Effect of Neutral Atoms on Capillary Discharge Z-pinch
We study the effect of neutral atoms on the dynamics of a capillary discharge
Z-pinch, in a regime for which a large soft-x-ray amplification has been
demonstrated. We extended the commonly used one-fluid magneto-hydrodynamics
(MHD) model by separating out the neutral atoms as a second fluid. Numerical
calculations using this extended model yield new predictions for the dynamics
of the pinch collapse, and better agreement with known measured data.Comment: 4 pages, 4 postscript figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Closed-loop auditory stimulation method to modulate sleep slow waves and motor learning performance in rats
Slow waves and cognitive output have been modulated in humans by phase-targeted auditory stimulation. However, to advance its technical development and further our understanding, implementation of the method in animal models is indispensable. Here, we report the successful employment of slow waves' phase-targeted closed-loop auditory stimulation (CLAS) in rats. To validate this new tool both conceptually and functionally, we tested the effects of up- and down-phase CLAS on proportions and spectral characteristics of sleep, and on learning performance in the single-pellet reaching task, respectively. Without affecting 24 hr sleep-wake behavior, CLAS specifically altered delta (slow waves) and sigma (sleep spindles) power persistently over chronic periods of stimulation. While up-phase CLAS does not elicit a significant change in behavioral performance, down-phase CLAS exerted a detrimental effect on overall engagement and success rate in the behavioral test. Overall CLAS-dependent spectral changes were positively correlated with learning performance. Altogether, our results provide proof-of-principle evidence that phase-targeted CLAS of slow waves in rodents is efficient, safe, and stable over chronic experimental periods, enabling the use of this high-specificity tool for basic and preclinical translational sleep research
Entropy of chains placed on the square lattice
We obtain the entropy of flexible linear chains composed of M monomers placed
on the square lattice using a transfer matrix approach. An excluded volume
interaction is included by considering the chains to be self-and mutually
avoiding, and a fraction rho of the sites are occupied by monomers. We solve
the problem exactly on stripes of increasing width m and then extrapolate our
results to the two-dimensional limit to infinity using finite-size scaling. The
extrapolated results for several finite values of M and in the polymer limit M
to infinity for the cases where all lattice sites are occupied (rho=1) and for
the partially filled case rho<1 are compared with earlier results. These
results are exact for dimers (M=2) and full occupation (\rho=1) and derived
from series expansions, mean-field like approximations, and transfer matrix
calculations for some other cases. For small values of M, as well as for the
polymer limit M to infinity, rather precise estimates of the entropy are
obtained.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
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