886 research outputs found
More about discrete symmetries in compactified string theories
We discuss discrete symmetries in several string compactification schemes.
The same constraints on the light spectra as for Gepner models \cite{rosss} are
found in various cases for non- symmetries. The analogous constraints for
symmetries are also established.Therefore it seems natural to conjecture
that they always apply.Comment: 10 pages, OUTP-93-15
Was möchte das Gehirn lernen? Biologische Randbedingungen der LangzeitgedÀchtnisbildung
Im folgenden Beitrag sollen zunĂ€chst die Grundmechanismen der Informationsverarbeitung im Gehirn dargestellt werden. AnschlieĂend werden die Besonderheiten von Lernprozessen in unreifen Gehirnen, das interne Belohnungssystem des Gehirns bei Problemlösestrategien sowie das Lernen im sozialen Kontext betrachtet. AbschlieĂend behandelt der Aufsatz das kategoriale Lernen, also die Frage, wie man multiple Erfahrungen konzeptionell ordnet. (DIPF/Orig.
Representation of Reward Feedback in Primate Auditory Cortex
It is well established that auditory cortex is plastic on different time scales and that this plasticity is driven by the reinforcement that is used to motivate subjects to learn or to perform an auditory task. Motivated by these findings, we study in detail properties of neuronal firing in auditory cortex that is related to reward feedback. We recorded from the auditory cortex of two monkeys while they were performing an auditory categorization task. Monkeys listened to a sequence of tones and had to signal when the frequency of adjacent tones stepped in downward direction, irrespective of the tone frequency and step size. Correct identifications were rewarded with either a large or a small amount of water. The size of reward depended on the monkeysâ performance in the previous trial: it was large after a correct trial and small after an incorrect trial. The rewards served to maintain task performance. During task performance we found three successive periods of neuronal firing in auditory cortex that reflected (1) the reward expectancy for each trial, (2) the reward-size received, and (3) the mismatch between the expected and delivered reward. These results, together with control experiments suggest that auditory cortex receives reward feedback that could be used to adapt auditory cortex to task requirements. Additionally, the results presented here extend previous observations of non-auditory roles of auditory cortex and shows that auditory cortex is even more cognitively influenced than lately recognized
An automated method for high-throughput protein purification applied to a comparison of His-tag and GST-tag affinity chromatography
BACKGROUND: Functional Genomics, the systematic characterisation of the functions of an organism's genes, includes the study of the gene products, the proteins. Such studies require methods to express and purify these proteins in a parallel, time and cost effective manner. RESULTS: We developed a method for parallel expression and purification of recombinant proteins with a hexahistidine tag (His-tag) or glutathione S-transferase (GST)-tag from bacterial expression systems. Proteins are expressed in 96-well microplates and are purified by a fully automated procedure on a pipetting robot. Up to 90 microgram purified protein can be obtained from 1 ml microplate cultures. The procedure is readily reproducible and 96 proteins can be purified in approximately three hours. It avoids clearing of crude cellular lysates and the use of magnetic affinity beads and is therefore less expensive than comparable commercial systems. We have used this method to compare purification of a set of human proteins via His-tag or GST-tag. Proteins were expressed as fusions to an N-terminal tandem His- and GST-tag and were purified by metal chelating or glutathione affinity chromatography. The purity of the obtained protein samples was similar, yet His-tag purification resulted in higher yields for some proteins. CONCLUSION: A fully automated, robust and cost effective method was developed for the purification of proteins that can be used to quickly characterise expression clones in high throughput and to produce large numbers of proteins for functional studies. His-tag affinity purification was found to be more efficient than purification via GST-tag for some proteins
Constraints on discrete symmetries from anomaly cancellation in compactified superstring theories
Compactified string theories give rise to discrete symmetries which are
essential if they are to provide a realistic low energy theory. We find that in
a class of four dimensional string theories these symmetries are constrained by
similar conditions to those discrete anomaly cancellation conditions found in
the case the discrete symmetry is a residue of a spontaneously broken gauge
symmetry. Such conditions strongly constrain the allowed form of the low energy
effective theory.Comment: 8 pages, OUTP-93-14
DIE ERFORSCHUNG DES MENSCHLICHEN GEHIRNS: HERAUSFORDERUNG FĂR DAS NĂCHSTE JAHRHUNDERT
Das menschliche Gehirn ist das komplexeste System im bekannten Universum und steht heute an der Schwelle sich selbst zu ergrĂŒnden. Es werden Wege aufgezeigt, die Probleme der SubjektivitĂ€t (Leib-Seele-Problem) und der Bedeutungsgenerierung als wesentliche Unterscheidungsmerkmale zu technischen Systemen der Informationsverarbeitung wissenschaftlich anzugehen. Der heute mit modernen Methoden mögliche Blick in die Arbeitsweise des menschlichen Gehirns wird nicht nur erkenntnistheoretische Fortschritte bringen, sondern auch neue Wege der Behandlung in Neurologie und Psychiatrie eröffnen. Es ist wahrscheinlich, daĂ die Ergebnisse der Hirnforschung im kommenden Jahrhundert zu einem neuen Menschenbild fĂŒhren
High-field fMRI reveals brain activation patterns underlying saccade execution in the human superior colliculus
Background
The superior colliculus (SC) has been shown to play a crucial role in the initiation and coordination of eye- and head-movements. The knowledge about the function of this structure is mainly based on single-unit recordings in animals with relatively few neuroimaging studies investigating eye-movement related brain activity in humans.
Methodology/Principal Findings
The present study employed high-field (7 Tesla) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate SC responses during endogenously cued saccades in humans. In response to centrally presented instructional cues, subjects either performed saccades away from (centrifugal) or towards (centripetal) the center of straight gaze or maintained fixation at the center position. Compared to central fixation, the execution of saccades elicited hemodynamic activity within a network of cortical and subcortical areas that included the SC, lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN), occipital cortex, striatum, and the pulvinar.
Conclusions/Significance
Activity in the SC was enhanced contralateral to the direction of the saccade (i.e., greater activity in the right as compared to left SC during leftward saccades and vice versa) during both centrifugal and centripetal saccades, thereby demonstrating that the contralateral predominance for saccade execution that has been shown to exist in animals is also present in the human SC. In addition, centrifugal saccades elicited greater activity in the SC than did centripetal saccades, while also being accompanied by an enhanced deactivation within the prefrontal default-mode network. This pattern of brain activity might reflect the reduced processing effort required to move the eyes toward as compared to away from the center of straight gaze, a position that might serve as a spatial baseline in which the retinotopic and craniotopic reference frames are aligned
Vectors for co-expression of an unrestricted number of proteins
A vector system is presented that allows generation of E. coli co-expression clones by a standardized, robust cloning procedure. The number of co-expressed proteins is not limited. Five âpQLinkâ vectors for expression of His-tag and GST-tag fusion proteins as well as untagged proteins and for cloning by restriction enzymes or Gateway cloning were generated. The vectors allow proteins to be expressed individually; to achieve co-expression, two pQLink plasmids are combined by ligation-independent cloning. pQLink co-expression plasmids can accept an unrestricted number of genes. As an example, the co-expression of a heterotetrameric human transport protein particle (TRAPP) complex from a single plasmid, its isolation and analysis of its stoichiometry are shown. pQLink clones can be used directly for pull-down experiments if the proteins are expressed with different tags. We demonstrate pull-down experiments of human valosin-containing protein (VCP) with fragments of the autocrine motility factor receptor (AMFR). The cloning method avoids PCR or gel isolation of restriction fragments, and a single resistance marker and origin of replication are used, allowing over-expression of rare tRNAs from a second plasmid. It is expected that applications are not restricted to bacteria, but could include co-expression in other hosts such as Bacluovirus/insect cells
Some issues in soft SUSY-breaking terms from dilaton/moduli sectors
We study the structure of the soft SUSY-breaking terms obtained from some
classes of 4-D strings under the assumption of dilaton/moduli dominance in the
process of SUSY-breaking. We generalize previous analysis in several ways and
in particular consider the new features appearing when several moduli fields
contribute to SUSY breaking (instead of an overall modulus ). Some
qualitative features indeed change in the multimoduli case.A general discussion
for symmetric Abelian orbifolds as well as explicit examples are given. Certain
general sum-rules involving soft terms of different particles are shown to
apply to large classes of models. Unlike in the overall modulus case,
gauginos may be lighter than scalars even at the tree-level. However, if one
insists in getting that pattern of soft terms, these sum rules force some of
the scalars to get negative mass. These tachyonic masses could be a problem
for standard model 4-D strings but an advantage in the case of string-GUTs.We
also discuss the possible effects of off-diagonal metrics for the matter fields
which may give rise to flavour-changing neutral currents. Different sources for
the bilinear soft term are studied. It is found that the Giudice-Masiero
mechanism for generating a ``-term'', as naturally implemented in
orbifolds, leads to the prediction at the string scale,
independently of the Goldstino direction.Comment: 27 pages, no figures, Latex; version to appear in Z. Phys. C (some
changes in the discussion on gaugino versus scalar masses in sections 2 and
5, minor corrections elsewhere
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