1,052 research outputs found
Sense of Self in Baby Chimpanzees
Philippe Rochat and his colleague tentatively proposed that young infants' propensity to engage in self-perception and systematic exploration of the perceptual consequences of their own action plays and is probably at the origin of an early sense of self: the ecological self. Rochat and Hespos (1997) reported that neonates discriminate between external and self-stimulation. Neonate tended to display significantly more rooting responses (i.e., head turn towards the stimulation with mouth open and tonguing) following external compared to self-stimulation. Rochat et al. (1998) also reported that 2-month-olds showed clear sign of modulation of their oral activity on the pacifier as a function of analog versus non-analog condition. Rochat and his colleague concluded that these observations are interpreted as evidence of self-exploration and the emergence of a sense of self-agency by 2-month-olds. We tried to replicate these findings in infant chimpanzees. We observed rooting responses of three baby chimpanzees in two condition, self-stimulation and external stimulation. In external stimulation condition, the index finger of the experimenter or small stick touched one of the infant's cheeks. In self-stimulation condition, the experimenter took infant's hand and touched his or her cheek with their fingers. In Rochat and Hespos, they recorded and analyzed several measures such as state, head movement, mouth activity and so on. How ever, we analyzed only mouth activities tentatively. We found infant chimpanzees tended to show more rooting responses following external stimulation compared to self-stimulation as well as human infants.
We also carried out sucking experiment with two baby chimpanzees. The experimenter held the pacifier and put the artificial nipple into the infant's mouth. A session started when the infant take the nipple inside the his or her mouth. Auditory stimulus, which was a complex tone comprised of six harmonics with equal intensity, was given to the chimpanzee according to the test condition during their sucking. There were four test conditions and each condition consisted with three types of feedback as follows: 1) silent baseline, contingent, and steady, 2) contingent baseline, 1-sec delay, and 3-sec delay, 3) contingent baseline, 6-sec delay, and 12-sec delay, 4) contingent baseline, 1/2 efficiency, and 1/4 efficiency. In test 1, one infant chimpanzee showed decrease of the minimum pressure of sucking in the contingent condition. In test 2, one subject showed shorter intervals of sucking in 3-sec delay condition. This seems to be similar to human infant's. We may be able to postulate ecological self in baby chimpanzees according to the self-exploration. In test 3 and 4, we did not obtain any effects of stimulus conditions. Results of these studies. These studies were conducted as the parts of the chimpanzee development project in Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, organized by Professor Tetsuro Matsuzawa
Study of the charge correlation function in one-dimensional Hubbard heterostructures
We study inhomogeneous one-dimensional Hubbard systems using the density
matrix renormalization group method. Different heterostructures are
investigated whose configuration is modeled varying parameters like the on-site
Coulomb potential and introducing local confining potentials. We investigate
their Luttinger liquid properties through the parameter K_rho, which
characterizes the decay of the density-density correlation function at large
distances. Our main goal is the investigation of possible realization of
engineered materials and the ability to manipulate physical properties by
choosing an appropriate spatial and/or chemical modulation.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figure
Probing the intrinsic state of a one-dimensional quantum well with a photon-assisted tunneling
The photon-assisted tunneling (PAT) through a single wall carbon nanotube
quantum well (QW) under influence an external electromagnetic field for probing
of the Tomonaga Luttinger liquid (TLL) state is suggested. The elementary TLL
excitations inside the quantum well are density () and spin
() bosons. The bosons populate the quantized energy levels
and where is the interlevel spacing, is an
integer number, is the tube length, is the TLL parameter. Since the
electromagnetic field acts on the bosons only while the neutral
and bosons remain unaffected, the PAT spectroscopy
is able of identifying the levels in the QW setup. The spin
boson levels in the same QW are recognized from Zeeman
splitting when applying a d.c. magnetic field field. Basic TLL
parameters are readily extracted from the differential conductivity curves.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
A mass formula for light mesons from a potential model
The quark dynamics inside light mesons, except pseudoscalar ones, can be
quite well described by a spinless Salpeter equation supplemented by a Cornell
interaction (possibly partly vector, partly scalar). A mass formula for these
mesons can then be obtained by computing analytical approximations of the
eigenvalues of the equation. We show that such a formula can be derived by
combining the results of two methods: the dominantly orbital state description
and the Bohr-Sommerfeld quantization approach. The predictions of the mass
formula are compared with accurate solutions of the spinless Salpeter equation
computed with a Lagrange-mesh calculation method.Comment: 5 figure
Bose-Fermi Mixtures in One Dimension
We analyze the phase stability and the response of a mixture of bosons and
spin-polarized fermions in one dimension (1D). Unlike in 3D, phase separation
happens for low fermion densities. The dynamics of the mixture at low energy is
independent of the spin-statistics of the components, and zero-sound-like modes
exist that are essentially undamped.Comment: 5 pages; 1 figur
The mean energy, strength and width of triple giant dipole resonances
We investigate the mean energy, strength and width of the triple giant dipole
resonance using sum rules.Comment: 12 page
Analysis of a fragmentary diatom record from Lake Van (Turkey) reveals substantial lake-level variability during previous interglacials MIS7 and MIS5e
Ancient lake sediments provide opportunities to reconstruct aquatic ecosystems during previous interglacials. In the summer of 2010, the ICDP project PALEOVAN drilled a complete succession of the lacustrine sedimentary sequence deposited during the last ~600,000 years in Lake Van, eastern Anatolia (Turkey). Previous palaeolimnological analysis of the Lake Van sediment record has shown diatoms to be absent over most of the sequence apart from a short interval during the Holocene. Here, we demonstrate the preservation of additional fragmentary diatom records during Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 7 (243,000–191,000 years ago; Lisiecki and Raymo in Paleoceanography 20:PA1003, 2005; Jouzel et al. in Science 317:793–796, 2007) and MIS5e (130,000–116,000 years ago; Lisiecki and Raymo 2005; Jouzel et al. 2007), each spanning no more than a few thousand years. Although brief, the presence of contrasting diatom assemblages between these two interglacials provide a snapshot of varying water depth and, by inference, climate. Analysis of MIS7e samples suggests that lake water levels were low after a period when the lake was open (i.e., high lake levels with the presence of an outflow present), resulting in higher salinities and possibly less stable bottom waters, which switched between anoxic and oxic states more frequently. By contrast, the diatom assemblages during MIS5e are characteristic of fresh, relatively nutrient rich waters. This suggests that lake levels were high, that the lake was hydrologically open with an outlet, and that the bottom waters were anoxic for long periods of time. Furthermore, our palaeoconductivity estimates and modelling of the past lake volumes with respect to its salt content support the presence of an outflow
Correlation effects in quasi one dimensional electron wires
We explore the role of electron correlation in quasi one dimensional quantum
wires as the range of the interaction potential is changed and their thickness
is varied by performing exact quantum Monte Carlo simulations at various
electronic densities. In the case of unscreened interactions with a long range
1/x tail there is a crossover from a liquid to a quasi Wigner crystal state as
the density decreases. When this interaction is screened, quasi long range
order is prevented from forming, although a significant correlation with 4 k_F
periodicity is still present at low densities. At even lower electron
concentration, exchange is suppressed and the spin-dependent interactions
become negligible, making the electrons behave like spinless fermions. We show
that this behavior is shared by the long range and screened interactions by
studying the spin and charge excitations of the system in both cases. Finally,
we study the effect of electron correlations in the double quantum wire
experiment [Steinberg et al., Phys. Rev. B 77, 113307 (2006)], by introducing
an accurate model for the screening in the experiment and explicitly including
the finite length of the system in our simulations. We find that decreasing the
electron density drives the system from a liquid to a state with quite strong 4
k_F correlations. This crossover takes place around , the
density where the electron localization occurs in the experiment. The charge
and spin velocities are also in remarkable agreement with the experimental
findings in the proximity of the crossover. We argue that correlation effects
play an important role at the onset of the localization transition.Comment: minor improvements, 13 pages, 12 figure
Correlated sequential tunneling through a double barrier for interacting one-dimensional electrons
The problem of resonant tunneling through a quantum dot weakly coupled to
spinless Tomonaga-Luttinger liquids has been studied. We compute the linear
conductance due to sequential tunneling processes upon employing a master
equation approach. Besides the previously used lowest-order golden rule rates
describing uncorrelated sequential tunneling (UST) processes, we systematically
include higher-order correlated sequential tunneling (CST) diagrams within the
standard Weisskopf-Wigner approximation. We provide estimates for the parameter
regions where CST effects can be important. Focusing mainly on the temperature
dependence of the peak conductance, we discuss the relation of these findings
to previous theoretical and experimental results.Comment: replaced with the published versio
- …