52 research outputs found
Mass transport by buoyant bubbles in galaxy clusters
We investigate the effect of three important processes by which AGN-blown
bubbles transport material: drift, wake transport and entrainment. The first of
these, drift, occurs because a buoyant bubble pushes aside the adjacent
material, giving rise to a net upward displacement of the fluid behind the
bubble. For a spherical bubble, the mass of upwardly displaced material is
roughly equal to half the mass displaced by the bubble, and should be ~
10^{7-9} solar masses depending on the local ICM and bubble parameters. We show
that in classical cool core clusters, the upward displacement by drift may be a
key process in explaining the presence of filaments behind bubbles. A bubble
also carries a parcel of material in a region at its rear, known as the wake.
The mass of the wake is comparable to the drift mass and increases the average
density of the bubble, trapping it closer to the cluster centre and reducing
the amount of heating it can do during its ascent. Moreover, material dropping
out of the wake will also contribute to the trailing filaments. Mass transport
by the bubble wake can effectively prevent the build-up of cool material in the
central galaxy, even if AGN heating does not balance ICM cooling. Finally, we
consider entrainment, the process by which ambient material is incorporated
into the bubble. AbridgedComment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 17 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables.
Formatted for letter paper and adjusted author affiliations
Dendrodendritic synapses in the mouse olfactory bulb external plexiform layer
Odor information relayed by olfactory bulb projection neurons, mitral and tufted cells (M/T), is modulated by pairs of reciprocal dendrodendritic synaptic circuits in the external plexiform layer (EPL). Interneurons, which are accounted for largely by granule cells, receive depolarizing input from M/T dendrites and in turn inhibit current spread in M/T dendrites via hyperpolarizing reciprocal dendrodendritic synapses. Because the location of dendrodendritic synapses may significantly affect the cascade of odor information, we assessed synaptic properties and density within sublaminae of the EPL and along the length of M/T secondary dendrites. In electron micrographs the M/T to granule cell synapse appeared to predominate and was equivalent in both the outer and inner EPL. However, the dendrodendritic synapses from granule cell spines onto M/T dendrites were more prevalent in the outer EPL. In contrast, individual gephyrin-immunoreactive (IR) puncta, a postsynaptic scaffolding protein at inhibitory synapses used here as a proxy for the granule to M/T dendritic synapse was equally distributed throughout the EPL. Of significance to the organization of intrabulbar circuits, gephyrin-IR synapses are not uniformly distributed along M/T secondary dendrites. Synaptic density, expressed as a function of surface area, increases distal to the cell body. Furthermore, the distributions of gephyrin-IR puncta are heterogeneous and appear as clusters along the length of the M/T dendrites. Consistent with computational models, our data suggest that temporal coding in M/T cells is achieved by precisely located inhibitory input and that distance from the soma is compensated for by an increase in synaptic density.Fil: Bartel, Dianna L.. University Of Yale. School Of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Rela, Lorena. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Oficina de Coordinación Administrativa Houssay. Instituto de Fisiología y Biofísica Bernardo Houssay; Argentina. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Medicina; ArgentinaFil: Hsieh, Lawrence. University Of Yale. School Of Medicine; Estados UnidosFil: Greer, Charles A. . University Of Yale. School Of Medicine; Estados Unido
Diagnostic accuracy of a clinical diagnosis of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis: An international case-cohort study
We conducted an international study of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) diagnosis among a large group of physicians and compared their diagnostic performance to a panel of IPF experts.A total of 1141 respiratory physicians and 34 IPF experts participated. Participants evaluated 60 cases of interstitial lung disease (ILD) without interdisciplinary consultation. Diagnostic agreement was measured using the weighted kappa coefficient (κw). Prognostic discrimination between IPF and other ILDs was used to validate diagnostic accuracy for first-choice diagnoses of IPF and were compared using the C-index.A total of 404 physicians completed the study. Agreement for IPF diagnosis was higher among expert physicians (κw=0.65, IQR 0.53–0.72, p less than 0.0001) or physicians with access to multidisciplinary team (MDT) meetings (κw=0.54, IQR 0.45–0.64, p less than 0.0001). The prognostic accuracy of academic physicians with greater than 20 years of experience (C-index=0.72, IQR 0.0–0.73, p=0.229) and non-university hospital physicians with more than 20 years of experience, attending weekly MDT meetings (C-index=0.72, IQR 0.70–0.72, p=0.052), did not differ significantly (p=0.229 and p=0.052 respectively) from the expert panel (C-index=0.74 IQR 0.72–0.75).Experienced respiratory physicians at university-based institutions diagnose IPF with similar prognostic accuracy to IPF experts. Regular MDT meeting attendance improves the prognostic accuracy of experienced non-university practitioners to levels achieved by IPF experts
A 2% Distance to z=0.35 by Reconstructing Baryon Acoustic Oscillations - I : Methods and Application to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We apply the reconstruction technique to the clustering of galaxies from the
SDSS DR7 LRG sample, sharpening the baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) feature
and achieving a 1.9% measurement of the distance to z=0.35. This is the first
application of reconstruction of the BAO feature in a galaxy redshift survey.
We update the reconstruction algorithm of Eisenstein et al, 2007 to account for
the effects of survey geometry as well as redshift-space distortions and
validate it on 160 LasDamas simulations. We demonstrate that reconstruction
sharpens the BAO feature in the angle averaged galaxy correlation function,
reducing the nonlinear smoothing scale \Sigma_nl from 8.1 Mpc/h to 4.4 Mpc/h.
Reconstruction also significantly reduces the effects of redshift-space
distortions at the BAO scale, isotropizing the correlation function. This
sharpened BAO feature yields an unbiased distance estimate (< 0.2%) and reduces
the scatter from 3.3% to 2.1%. We demonstrate the robustness of these results
to the various reconstruction parameters, including the smoothing scale, the
galaxy bias and the linear growth rate. Applying this reconstruction algorithm
to the SDSS LRG DR7 sample improves the significance of the BAO feature in
these data from 3.3 sigma for the unreconstructed correlation function, to 4.2
sigma after reconstruction. We estimate a relative distance scale D_V/r_s to
z=0.35 of 8.88+/-0.17, where r_s is the sound horizon and D_V = (D_A^2/H)^{1/3}
is a combination of the angular diameter distance D_A and Hubble parameter H.
Assuming a sound horizon of 154.25 Mpc, this translates into a distance
measurement D_V (z=0.35) = 1.356+/-0.025 Gpc. We find that reconstruction
reduces the distance error in the DR7 sample from 3.5% to 1.9%, equivalent to a
survey with three times the volume of SDSS.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, MNRAS submitted. This is the first of a series
of three papers. See http://www.astro.yale.edu/padmanabhan/dr7recon/ for
associated data files and figure
26th Annual Computational Neuroscience Meeting (CNS*2017): Part 3 - Meeting Abstracts - Antwerp, Belgium. 15–20 July 2017
This work was produced as part of the activities of FAPESP Research,\ud
Disseminations and Innovation Center for Neuromathematics (grant\ud
2013/07699-0, S. Paulo Research Foundation). NLK is supported by a\ud
FAPESP postdoctoral fellowship (grant 2016/03855-5). ACR is partially\ud
supported by a CNPq fellowship (grant 306251/2014-0)
Global Collaboration, Learning from Other Fields
Neuroscience research is becoming increasingly more collaborative and interdisciplinary with partnerships between industry and academia and insights from fields beyond neuroscience. In the age of institutional initiatives and multi-investigator collaborations, scientists from around the world shared their perspectives on the effectiveness of large-scale collaborations versus single-lab, hypothesis-driven science
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