2,535 research outputs found
Production of a pseudo-scalar Higgs boson at hadron colliders at next-to-next-to leading order
The production cross section for pseudo-scalar Higgs bosons at hadron
colliders is computed at next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) in QCD. The
pseudo-scalar Higgs is assumed to couple only to top quarks. The NNLO effects
are evaluated using an effective lagrangian where the top quarks are integrated
out. The NNLO corrections are similar in size to those found for scalar Higgs
boson production.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, JHEP style, Minor changes, Journal reference
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Optogenetic Interrogation of Functional Synapse Formation by Corticospinal Tract Axons in the Injured Spinal Cord
To restore function after injury to the CNS, axons must be stimulated to extend into denervated territory and, critically, must form functional synapses with appropriate targets. We showed previously that forced overexpression of the transcription factor Sox11 increases axon growth by corticospinal tract (CST) neurons after spinal injury. However, behavioral outcomes were not improved, raising the question of whether the newly sprouted axons are able to form functional synapses. Here we developed an optogenetic strategy, paired with single-unit extracellular recordings, to assess the ability of Sox11-stimulated CST axons to functionally integrate in the circuitry of the cervical spinal cord. Initial time course experiments established the expression and function of virally expressed Channelrhodopsin (ChR2) in CST cell bodies and in axon terminals in cervical spinal cord. Pyramidotomies were performed in adult mice to deprive the left side of the spinal cord of CST input, and the right CST was treated with adeno-associated virus (AAV)–Sox11 or AAV–EBFP control, along with AAV–ChR2. As expected, Sox11 treatment caused robust midline crossing of CST axons into previously denervated left spinal cord. Clear postsynaptic responses resulted from optogenetic activation of CST terminals, demonstrating the ability of Sox11-stimulated axons to form functional synapses. Mapping of the distribution of CST-evoked spinal activity revealed overall similarity between intact and newly innervated spinal tissue. These data demonstrate the formation of functional synapses by Sox11-stimulated CST axons without significant behavioral benefit, suggesting that new synapses may be mistargeted or otherwise impaired in the ability to coordinate functional output. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT As continued progress is made in promoting the regeneration of CNS axons, questions of synaptic integration are increasingly prominent. Demonstrating direct synaptic integration by regenerated axons and distinguishing its function from indirect relay circuits and target field plasticity have presented technical challenges. Here we force the overexpression of Sox11 to stimulate the growth of corticospinal tract axons in the cervical spinal cord and then use specific optogenetic activation to assess their ability to directly drive postsynaptic activity in spinal cord neurons. By confirming successful synaptic integration, these data illustrate a novel optogenetic-based strategy to monitor and optimize functional reconnection by newly sprouted axons in the injured CNS
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Evolution of Spur-Length Diversity in Aquilegia Petals Is Achieved Solely Through Cell-Shape Anisotropy
The role of petal spurs and specialized pollinator interactions has been studied since Darwin. Aquilegia petal spurs exhibit striking size and shape diversity, correlated with specialized pollinators ranging from bees to hawkmoths in a textbook example of adaptive radiation. Despite the evolutionary significance of spur length, remarkably little is known about Aquilegia spur morphogenesis and its evolution. Using experimental measurements, both at tissue and cellular levels, combined with numerical modelling, we have investigated the relative roles of cell divisions and cell shape in determining the morphology of the Aquilegia petal spur. Contrary to decades-old hypotheses implicating a discrete meristematic zone as the driver of spur growth, we find that Aquilegia petal spurs develop via anisotropic cell expansion. Furthermore, changes in cell anisotropy account for 99 per cent of the spur-length variation in the genus, suggesting that the true evolutionary innovation underlying the rapid radiation of Aquilegia was the mechanism of tuning cell shape.Engineering and Applied SciencesOrganismic and Evolutionary Biolog
Strain Hardening of Polymer Glasses: Entanglements, Energetics, and Plasticity
Simulations are used to examine the microscopic origins of strain hardening
in polymer glasses. While stress-strain curves for a wide range of temperature
can be fit to the functional form predicted by entropic network models, many
other results are fundamentally inconsistent with the physical picture
underlying these models. Stresses are too large to be entropic and have the
wrong trend with temperature. The most dramatic hardening at large strains
reflects increases in energy as chains are pulled taut between entanglements
rather than a change in entropy. A weak entropic stress is only observed in
shape recovery of deformed samples when heated above the glass transition.
While short chains do not form an entangled network, they exhibit partial shape
recovery, orientation, and strain hardening. Stresses for all chain lengths
collapse when plotted against a microscopic measure of chain stretching rather
than the macroscopic stretch. The thermal contribution to the stress is
directly proportional to the rate of plasticity as measured by breaking and
reforming of interchain bonds. These observations suggest that the correct
microscopic theory of strain hardening should be based on glassy state physics
rather than rubber elasticity.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures: significant revision
Galactic Center Pulsars with the ngVLA
Pulsars in the Galactic Center (GC) are important probes of General
Relativity, star formation, stellar dynamics, stellar evolution, and the
interstellar medium. Despite years of searching, only a handful of pulsars in
the central 0.5 deg are known. The high-frequency sensitivity of ngVLA will
open a new window for discovery and characterization of pulsars in the GC. A
pulsar in orbit around the GC black hole, Sgr A*, will provide an unprecedented
probe of black hole physics and General Relativity.Comment: To be published in the ASP Monograph Series, "Science with a
Next-Generation VLA", ed. E. J. Murphy (ASP, San Francisco, CA
A parsimonious explanation for intersecting perinatal mortality curves: understanding the effects of race and of maternal smoking
BACKGROUND: Neonatal mortality rates among black infants are lower than neonatal mortality rates among white infants at birth weights <3000 g, whereas white infants have a survival advantage at higher birth weights. This finding is also observed when birth weight-specific neonatal mortality rates are compared between infants of smokers and non-smokers. We provide a parsimonious explanation for this paradoxical phenomenon. METHODS: We used data on births in the United States in 1997 after excluding those with a birth weight <500 g or a gestational age <22 weeks. Birth weight- and gestational age-specific perinatal mortality rates were calculated per convention (using total live births at each birth weight/gestational age as the denominator) and also using the fetuses at risk of death at each gestational age. RESULTS: Perinatal mortality rates (calculated per convention) were lower among blacks than whites at lower birth weights and at preterm gestational ages, while blacks had higher mortality rates at higher birth weights and later gestational ages. With the fetuses-at-risk approach, mortality curves did not intersect; blacks had higher mortality rates at all gestational ages. Increases in birth rates and (especially) growth-restriction rates presaged gestational age-dependent increases in perinatal mortality. Similar findings were obtained in comparisons of smokers versus nonsmokers. CONCLUSIONS: Formulating perinatal risk based on the fetuses-at-risk approach solves the intersecting perinatal mortality curves paradox; blacks have higher perinatal mortality rates than whites and smokers have higher perinatal mortality rates than nonsmokers at all gestational ages and birth weights
Does one size fit all? The case for ethnic-specific standards of fetal growth
10.1186/1471-2393-8-1BMC pregnancy and childbirth8
Inspection of the Math Model Tools for On-Orbit Assessment of Impact Damage Report
In Spring of 2005, the NASA Engineering Safety Center (NESC) was engaged by the Space Shuttle Program (SSP) to peer review the suite of analytical tools being developed to support the determination of impact and damage tolerance of the Orbiter Thermal Protection Systems (TPS). The NESC formed an independent review team with the core disciplines of materials, flight sciences, structures, mechanical analysis and thermal analysis. The Math Model Tools reviewed included damage prediction and stress analysis, aeroheating analysis, and thermal analysis tools. Some tools are physics-based and other tools are empirically-derived. Each tool was created for a specific use and timeframe, including certification, real-time pre-launch assessments, and real-time on-orbit assessments. The tools are used together in an integrated strategy for assessing the ramifications of impact damage to tile and RCC. The NESC teams conducted a peer review of the engineering data package for each Math Model Tool. This report contains the summary of the team observations and recommendations from these reviews
The (mis)use of performance quartiles in metacognition and face perception: A comment on Zhou and Jenkins (2020) and Estudillo and Wong (2021)
A common measurement convention within the field of metacognition is to divide participants into quartiles based on task performance, and then compare self-estimated and actual scores within these sub-groups. This analysis strategy created the famous Dunning-Kruger effect, which asserts that the poorest performers tend to grossly overestimate their abilities. A study by Zhou and Jenkins (2020) has recently replicated this effect within the domain of face matching. However, it can be shown that the analysis strategy induces numerical artefacts prone to misinterpretation, and that randomly generated data lead to the same pattern of results. Estudillo and Wong (2021) used a different quartiles-based approach to argue that only the lowest and highest performers on a task of face recognition showed some insight into their performance. Again, a numerical artefact can explain their result, with the restricted range of the second and third quartiles causing reduced observed correlations between actual and self-estimated abilities. These studies highlight the need for methodological caution when exploring metacognitive questions, and we outline some avenues that may aid future investigation
Spreading in Social Systems: Reflections
In this final chapter, we consider the state-of-the-art for spreading in
social systems and discuss the future of the field. As part of this reflection,
we identify a set of key challenges ahead. The challenges include the following
questions: how can we improve the quality, quantity, extent, and accessibility
of datasets? How can we extract more information from limited datasets? How can
we take individual cognition and decision making processes into account? How
can we incorporate other complexity of the real contagion processes? Finally,
how can we translate research into positive real-world impact? In the
following, we provide more context for each of these open questions.Comment: 7 pages, chapter to appear in "Spreading Dynamics in Social Systems";
Eds. Sune Lehmann and Yong-Yeol Ahn, Springer Natur
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