4,829 research outputs found

    In vivo magnetomyograms of skeletal muscle

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    Magnetomyography (MMG) is a new noninvasive technique inspired by the magnetoneurographic method of J.P. Wikswo (IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng., Vol.BME-30, p.215-21, 1983). MMG is used to detect action currents in a muscle, which is immersed in a highly conducting fluid. The detection coil is of a toroidal shape, with the muscle passing through the center of the coil. For a long muscle which fits tightly in the toroid, it is to be expected that magnetic fields correspond almost completely to the intracellular longitudinal (axial) currents in active muscle fibers. An experimental setup with specific coils for rat and mouse skeletal muscles was developed. It is sensitive enough to detect currents from single motor units. The technique can be used to record stimulated twitch activity in live muscle as a function of force level, coil position along the muscle, temperature, etc. By simulating the response with a finite-element forward model, it is possible to calculate action currents under various experimental condition

    Strategy for control of muscle force using a 3D multi electrode array in intraneural stimulation

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    A control algorithm for regulation of the force produced by the rat EDL muscle is presented, using a 128-electrodes intraneural stimulation device. The algorithm is based on force regulation in nature; its task is basically to find a combination of rate coding and recruitment to produce a required force, keeping fatigue minimized. The algorithm was tested in a simulated environment, with satisfactory result

    Intra-burst firing characteristics as network state parameters

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    Introduction \ud In our group we are aiming to demonstrate learning and memory capabilities of cultured networks of cortical neurons. A first step is to identify parameters that accurately describe changes in the network due to learning. Usually, such parameters are calculated from the responses to test-stimuli before and after a learning experiment. We propose that parameters should be calculated from the spontaneous activity before and after a learning experiment, as the applying of test-stimuli itself may alter the network. Since bursting is dominant in our cultures, we have investigated its spatio-temporal structure. \ud \ud Methods \ud Networks of cortical neurons were cultured on a MEA. Over a period from 9 to 35 DIV, the spontaneous activity has been measured on a regular basis. Measurements on a single day are always continuous; otherwise cultures are kept in a stove under controlled conditions (37 ˚C, 5% CO2, 100% humidity). Network bursts were detected by analysing the Array-Wide Spiking Rate (AWSR, the sum of activity over all electrodes). Next, we estimated the instantaneous AWSR during a burst by convolving spike-occurrences with a Gaussian function. We investigated the changes in burst profiles over time by aligning them to their peak AWSR. In 4 hour recording sessions, we grouped the burst profiles over 1 hour, resulting in 4 average burst profiles per day. In addition, a sufficient amount of aligned bursts yielded enough data to calculate the contribution of each recording site. \ud \ud Results \ud The burst profiles, calculated over a period of 1 hour, generally show little variation (figure 1). In subsequent hours, the profiles gradually change shape. Over a period of days however, the shape can change dramatically (figure 2). The relatively slow changes over the period of hours indicate an underlying probabilistic structure in the AWSR during bursts. The apparent structure in the burst profiles result from the relationships between individual recording sites, and thus also on the connectivity in the neural network. This is revealed in more detail by showing the contributions of individual sites (figure 3). The spike envelopes have a shape that is too detailed to be described accurately by a small set of parameters. \ud \ud Discussion \ud The burst profiles prove to be stable over a period of one hour, and gradually change their shape over several hours, as has also been suggested in [1]. The day-to-day changes in burst profiles may be the result of these gradual changes, thereby suggesting an intrinsically changing network. However, they can also be the result of putting the cultures back in the stove. The spike envelopes per recording site offer more detailed descriptions of the network state than the burst profiles. This may however be the amount of detail required to reveal the changes made during learning experiments. A subsequent refinement can be made by identifying distinct subgroups of bursts, as has been suggested in [2]

    General Recursion via Coinductive Types

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    A fertile field of research in theoretical computer science investigates the representation of general recursive functions in intensional type theories. Among the most successful approaches are: the use of wellfounded relations, implementation of operational semantics, formalization of domain theory, and inductive definition of domain predicates. Here, a different solution is proposed: exploiting coinductive types to model infinite computations. To every type A we associate a type of partial elements Partial(A), coinductively generated by two constructors: the first, return(a) just returns an element a:A; the second, step(x), adds a computation step to a recursive element x:Partial(A). We show how this simple device is sufficient to formalize all recursive functions between two given types. It allows the definition of fixed points of finitary, that is, continuous, operators. We will compare this approach to different ones from the literature. Finally, we mention that the formalization, with appropriate structural maps, defines a strong monad.Comment: 28 page

    Control electronics for a neuro-electronic interface implemented in a gate array

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    Presents a Gate Array for implementing electronic circuitry to control multi-electrode arrays, which consist of 128 microelectrodes. The chip contains multiplexers, current sources and buffer amplifiers in CMOS technolog

    Dynamics of the solar chromosphere. V. High-frequency modulation in ultraviolet image sequences from TRACE

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    We search for signatures of high-frequency oscillations in the upper solar photosphere and low chromosphere in the context of acoustic heating of outer stellar atmospheres. We use ultraviolet image sequences of a quiet center-disk area from the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer (TRACE) mission which were taken with strict cadence regularity. The latter permits more reliable high-frequency diagnosis than in earlier work. Spatial Fourier power maps, spatially averaged coherence and phase-difference spectra, and spatio-temporal k-f decompositions all contain high-frequency features that at first sight seem of considerable intrinsic interest but actually are more likely to represent artifacts of different nature. Spatially averaged phase difference measurement provides the most sensitive diagnostic and indicates the presence of acoustic modulation up to f=20 mHz (periods down to 50 seconds) in internetwork areas.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure

    The enemy within:designing a cell-based gameplay system for cancer education

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    This paper outlines the design and preliminary evaluation of The Enemy Within, a browser-based game produced to raise awareness of the nature of cancer as a progressive disease. Aimed at high school and young adult audiences, the ambition with the game is to make visible to players the myriad ways in which healthy cells can mutate and ultimately inherit hallmarks of cancer, whilst also demonstrating how both real-world behaviours and underlying genetics impact both positively and negatively on cell health

    The Quiet-Sun Photosphere and Chromosphere

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    The overall structure and the fine structure of the solar photosphere outside active regions are largely understood, except possibly important roles of a turbulent near-surface dynamo at its bottom, internal gravity waves at its top, and small-scale vorticity. Classical 1D static radiation-escape modelling has been replaced by 3D time-dependent MHD simulations that come closer to reality. The solar chromosphere, in contrast, remains ill-understood although its pivotal role in coronal mass and energy loading makes it a principal research area. Its fine structure defines its overall structure, so that hard-to-observe and hard-to-model small-scale dynamical processes are the key to understanding. However, both chromospheric observation and chromospheric simulation presently mature towards the required sophistication. The open-field features seem of greater interest than the easier-to-see closed-field features.Comment: Accepted for special issue "Astrophysical Processes on the Sun" of Phil. Trans. Royal Soc. A, ed. C. Parnell. Note: clicking on the year in a citation opens the corresponding ADS abstract page in the browse

    3D Neuro-electronic interface devices for neuromuscular control: Design studies and realisation steps

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    In order to design the shape and dimensions of new 3D multi-microelectrode information transducers properly, i. e. adapted to the scale of information delivery to and from peripheral nerve fibres, a number of studies were, and still are, being performed on modelling and simulation of electrical volume conduction inside and outside nerves, on animal experiments on stimulation and recording with single wires and linear arrays, and on new technologies for 3D micro-fabrication. This paper presents a selection of the results of these `Neurotechnology¿ studies at the University of Twente. The experimental and simulation results apply primarily to the peripheral motor nerves of the rat, but are also of interest for neural interfacing with myelinated nerves in man, as fascicles in man are about the same size as in the rat

    Welfarism vs. extra-welfarism

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    'Extra-welfarism' has received some attention in health economics, yet there is little consensus on what distinguishes it from more conventional 'welfarist economics'. In this paper, we seek to identify the characteristics of each in order to make a systematic comparison of the ways in which they evaluate alternative social states. The focus, though this is not intended to be exclusive, is on health. Specifically, we highlight four areas in which the two schools differ: (i) the outcomes considered relevant in an evaluation; (ii) the sources of valuation of the relevant outcomes; (iii) the basis of weighting of relevant outcomes and (iv) interpersonal comparisons. We conclude that these differences are substantive. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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