237 research outputs found
Multiple and plastic receptors mediate tonic GABAA receptor currents in the hippocampus
Persistent activation of GABAA receptors by extracellular GABA (tonic inhibition) plays a critical role in signal processing and network excitability in the brain. In hippocampal principal cells, tonic inhibition has been reported to be mediated by {alpha}5-subunit-containing GABAA receptors ({alpha}5GABAARs). Pharmacological or genetic disruption of these receptors improves cognitive performance, suggesting that tonic inhibition has an adverse effect on information processing. Here, we show that {alpha}5GABAARs contribute to tonic currents in pyramidal cells only when ambient GABA concentrations increase (as may occur during increased brain activity). At low ambient GABA concentrations, activation of {delta}-subunit-containing GABAA receptors predominates. In epileptic tissue, {alpha}5GABAARs are downregulated and no longer contribute to tonic currents under conditions of raised extracellular GABA concentrations. Under these conditions, however, the tonic current is greater in pyramidal cells from epileptic tissue than in pyramidal cells from nonepileptic tissue, implying substitution of {alpha}5GABAARs by other GABAA receptor subtypes. These results reveal multiple components of tonic GABAA receptor-mediated conductance that are activated by low GABA concentrations. The relative contribution of these components changes after the induction of epilepsy, implying an adaptive plasticity of the tonic current in the presence of spontaneous seizures
The role of final state interactions in epsilon'/epsilon
The Standard Model prediction for epsilon'/epsilon is updated, taking into
account the chiral loop corrections induced by final state interactions. The
resulting value, epsilon'/epsilon = (17\pm 6)\times 10^{-4}, is in good
agreement with present measurements.Comment: 3 pages. Invited talk at the 2000 Meeting of the Division of
Particles and Fields of the American Physical Society --DPF2000-- (Columbus,
Ohio, August 2000
The Standard Model prediction for eps'/eps
We review fundamental aspects of a new Standard Model analysis of eps'/eps
which takes into account the strong enhancement induced by final state
interactions.Comment: 3 pages, LaTex, uses ws-p10x7.cls. Talk given by E.P. at ICHEP2000,
Osaka, July 27-August 2, 200
epsilon'/eps in the Standard Model
We overview the detailed analysis of epsilon'/epsilon within the Standard
Model, presented in ref. 1. When all sources of large logarithms are
considered, both at short and long distances, it is possible to perform a
reliable Standard Model estimate of epsilon'/epsilon. The strong S-wave
rescattering of the final pions has an important impact on this observable. The
Standard Model prediction is found to be Re(epsilon'/epsilon) =(1.7 +-
0.9)*10^{-3}, in good agreement with the most recent experimental measurements.
A better estimate of the strange quark mass would reduce the uncertainty to
about 30%.Comment: Talk presented at the International Europhysics Conference on High
Energy Physics, July 12-18, 2001,Budapest, Hungar
GTMDs and the factorization of exclusive double Drell-Yan
Different exclusive processes have been proposed to access the generalized
transverse momentum dependent distributions (GTMDs) with no proof of
factorization, which allows to rigorously define the GTMDs. Using Soft
Collinear Effective Theory we derive for the first time the factorization of
the differential cross section for the exclusive double Drell-Yan process for
the exclusive double Drell-Yan process pion N to N' gamma* gamma* to N'
(l^+l^-)(l^+l^-), for small transverse momenta of the photons in terms of a
perturbatively calculable hard factor, GTMDs and light-cone wave functions
(LCWFs). We find that the hard factor of the process can be obtained from
single inclusive Drell-Yan production so that one can resum logarithms at high
orders in QCD. We also discuss the evolution of the GTMDs and the LCWFs.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure. Version accepted for publicatio
Delta M_K and epsilon_K in SUSY at the Next-to-Leading order
We perform a Next-to-Leading order analysis of Delta S=2 processes beyond the
Standard Model. Combining the recently computed NLO anomalous dimensions and
the B parameters of the most general Delta S=2 effective Hamiltonian, we give
an analytic formula for Delta M_K and epsilon_K in terms of the Wilson
coefficients at the high energy scale. This expression can be used for any
extension of the Standard Model with new heavy particles. Using this result, we
consider gluino-mediated contributions to Delta S=2 transitions in general SUSY
models and provide an improved analysis of the constraints on off-diagonal mass
terms between the first two generations of down-type squarks. Finally, we
improve the constraints on R-violating couplings from Delta M_K and epsilon_K.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure, uses JHEP.cls; the magic numbers in eq. (2.7),
previously given in the basis (13) of hep-ph/9711402, are now given in the
basis (2.3) of this work. All numerical results are unchange
CP violation in decay
CP violation leads to a difference between the parameters and
describing the energy distributions of the charged pions produced in the and decays. We study the
difference as a function of the relative contributions from the
QCD-penguin and the electroweak-penguin diagrams. We find that the combination
of these contributions in is very similar to the corresponding
one defining the parameter in the decays. This
observation allows a determination of the value of , using data on
OPA1-related auditory neuropathy: site of lesion and outcome of cochlear implantation.
Hearing impairment is the second most prevalent clinical feature after optic atrophy in Dominant Optic Atrophy associated with mutations in the OPA1 gene. In this study we characterized the hearing dysfunction in OPA1-linked disorders and provided effective rehabilitative options to improve speech perception.
We studied two groups of OPA1 subjects, one comprising 11 patients (7 males; age range 13-79 years) carrying OPA1 mutations inducing haploinsufficiency, the other, 10 subjects (3 males; age range 5-58 years) carrying OPA1 missense mutations. Both groups underwent audiometric assessment with pure tone and speech perception evaluation, and otoacoustic emissions and auditory brainstem response recording. Cochlear potentials were recorded through transtympanic electrocochleography from the group of patients harboring OPA1 missense mutations and were compared to recordings obtained from 20 normally-hearing controls and from 19 subjects with cochlear hearing loss. Eight patients carrying OPA1 missense mutations underwent cochlear implantation. Speech perception measures and electrically-evoked auditory nerve and brainstem responses were obtained after one year of cochlear implant use.
Nine out of 11 patients carrying OPA1 mutations inducing haploinsufficiency had normal hearing function. In contrast, all but one subject harboring OPA1 missense mutations displayed impaired speech perception, abnormal brainstem responses and presence of otoacoustic emissions consistent with auditory neuropathy. In electrocochleography recordings, cochlear microphonic had enhanced amplitudes while summating potential showed normal latency and peak amplitude consistent with preservation of both outer and inner hair cell activities. After cancelling the cochlear microphonic, the synchronized neural response seen in both normally-hearing controls and subjects with cochlear hearing loss was replaced by a prolonged, low-amplitude negative potential that decreased in both amplitude and duration during rapid stimulation consistent with neural generation. The use of cochlear implant improved speech perception in all but one patient. Brainstem potentials were recorded in response to electrical stimulation in five subjects out of six, whereas no compound action potential was evoked from the auditory nerve through the cochlear implant.
These findings indicate that underlying the hearing impairment in patients carrying OPA1 missense mutations is a disordered synchrony in auditory nerve fiber activity resulting from neural degeneration affecting the terminal dendrites. Cochlear implantation improves speech perception and synchronous activation of auditory pathways by by-passing the site of lesion
Electromagnetic corrections in hadronic processes
In quantum field theory, the splitting of the Hamiltonian into a strong and
an electromagnetic part cannot be performed in a unique manner. We propose a
convention for disentangling these two effects: one matches the parameters of
two theories -- with and without electromagnetic interactions -- at a given
scale mu_1, referred to as the matching scale. This procedure enables one to
analyze the separation of strong and electromagnetic contributions in a
transparent manner. We illustrate the method -- in the framework of the loop
expansion -- in a Yukawa model, as well as in the linear sigma model, where we
also investigate the corresponding low-energy effective theory.Comment: 19 pages (LaTex), 5 figures, published version. References in the
introduction added, discussion shortened, 1 figure removed, conclusions
unchange
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