1,969 research outputs found
The timing of meals
In most individuals, food intake occurs as discrete bouts or meals, and little attention has been paid to the factors that normally determine when meals will occur when food is freely available. On the basis of experiments using rats, the authors suggest that when there are no constraints on obtaining food and few competing activities, 3 levels of interacting controls normally dictate when meals will start. The first is the genetically determined circadian activity pattern on which nocturnal animals tend to initiate most meals in the dark. The second is the regularly occurring changing of the light cycle: These changes provide temporal anchors. The third relates to the size of the preceding meal, such that larger meals cause a longer delay until the onset of the next meal. Superimposed on these 3 are factors related to learning, convenience, and opportunity
Rebuttal of comments by Griffiths, Lader and Greenblatt to Review by Woods and Winger
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/46348/1/213_2005_Article_BF02245828.pd
Gravitational Collapse and Fragmentation in Molecular Clouds with Adaptive Mesh Refinement
We describe a powerful methodology for numerical solution of 3-D
self-gravitational hydrodynamics problems with extremely high resolution. Our
method utilizes the technique of local adaptive mesh refinement (AMR),
employing multiple grids at multiple levels of resolution. These grids are
automatically and dynamically added and removed as necessary to maintain
adequate resolution. This technology allows for the solution of problems in a
manner that is both more efficient and more versatile than other fixed and
variable resolution methods. The application of AMR to simulate the collapse
and fragmentation of a molecular cloud, a key step in star formation, is
discussed. Such simulations involve many orders of magnitude of variation in
length scale as fragments form. In this paper we briefly describe the
methodology and present an illustrative application for nonisothermal cloud
collapse. We describe the numerical Jeans condition, a criterion for stability
of self-gravitational hydrodynamics problems. We show the first well-resolved
nonisothermal evolutionary sequence beginning with a perturbed dense molecular
cloud core that leads to the formation of a binary system consisting of
protostellar cores surrounded by distinct protostellar disks. The scale of the
disks, of order 100 AU, is consistent with observations of gaseous disks
surrounding single T-Tauri stars and debris disks surrounding systems such as
Pictoris.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures (color postscript). To appear in the proceedings
of Numerical Astrophysics 1998, Tokyo, March 10-13, 199
Solving the subset-sum problem with a light-based device
We propose a special computational device which uses light rays for solving
the subset-sum problem. The device has a graph-like representation and the
light is traversing it by following the routes given by the connections between
nodes. The nodes are connected by arcs in a special way which lets us to
generate all possible subsets of the given set. To each arc we assign either a
number from the given set or a predefined constant. When the light is passing
through an arc it is delayed by the amount of time indicated by the number
placed in that arc. At the destination node we will check if there is a ray
whose total delay is equal to the target value of the subset sum problem (plus
some constants).Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, Natural Computing, 200
Static stretching of the hamstring muscle for injury prevention in football codes: a systematic review
Purpose: Hamstring injuries are common among football players. There is still disagreement regarding prevention. The aim of this review is to determine whether static stretching reduces hamstring injuries in football codes.
Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted on the online databases PubMed, PEDro, Cochrane, Web of Science, Bisp and Clinical Trial register. Study results were presented descriptively and the quality of the studies assessed were based on Cochraneâs ârisk of biasâ tool.
Results: The review identified 35 studies, including four analysis studies. These studies show deficiencies in the quality of study designs.
Conclusion: The study protocols are varied in terms of the length of intervention and follow-up. No RCT studies are available, however, RCT studies should be conducted in the near future
Intrinsic and Extrinsic Performance Limits of Graphene Devices on SiO2
The linear dispersion relation in graphene[1,2] gives rise to a surprising
prediction: the resistivity due to isotropic scatterers (e.g. white-noise
disorder[3] or phonons[4-8]) is independent of carrier density n. Here we show
that acoustic phonon scattering[4-6] is indeed independent of n, and places an
intrinsic limit on the resistivity in graphene of only 30 Ohm at room
temperature (RT). At a technologically-relevant carrier density of 10^12 cm^-2,
the mean free path for electron-acoustic phonon scattering is >2 microns, and
the intrinsic mobility limit is 2x10^5 cm^2/Vs, exceeding the highest known
inorganic semiconductor (InSb, ~7.7x10^4 cm^2/Vs[9]) and semiconducting carbon
nanotubes (~1x10^5 cm^2/Vs[10]). We also show that extrinsic scattering by
surface phonons of the SiO2 substrate[11,12] adds a strong temperature
dependent resistivity above ~200 K[8], limiting the RT mobility to ~4x10^4
cm^2/Vs, pointing out the importance of substrate choice for graphene
devices[13].Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
Madness decolonized?: Madness as transnational identity in Gail Hornsteinâs Agnesâs Jacket
The US psychologist Gail Hornsteinâs monograph Agnesâs Jacket: A Psychologistâs Search for the Meanings of Madness (2009) is an important intervention in the identity politics of the mad movement. Hornstein offers a resignified vision of mad identity that embroiders the central trope of an âanti-colonialâ struggle to reclaim the experiential world âcolonizedâ by psychiatry. A series of literal and figurative appeals make recourse to the inner world and (corresponding) cultural world of the mad, as well as to the ethno-symbolic cultural materials of dormant nationhood. This rhetoric is augmented by a model in which the mad comprise a diaspora without an origin, coalescing into a single transnational community. The mad are also depicted as persons displaced from their metaphorical homeland, the âinnerâ world âcolonizedâ by the psychiatric regime. There are a number of difficulties with Hornsteinâs rhetoric, however. Her âethnicity-and-rightsâ response to the oppression of the mad is symptomatic of Western parochialism, while her proposed transmutation of putative psychopathology from limit upon identity to parameter of successful identity is open to contestation. Moreover, unless one accepts Hornsteinâs porous vision of mad identity, her self-ascribed insider status in relation to the mad community may present a problematic âre-colonizationâ of mad experience
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