26,039 research outputs found
Large Perceptual Distortions Of Locomotor Action Space Occur In Ground-Based Coordinates: Angular Expansion And The Large-Scale Horizontal-Vertical Illusion
What is the natural reference frame for seeing large-scale spatial scenes in locomotor action space? Prior studies indicate an asymmetric angular expansion in perceived direction in large-scale environments: Angular elevation relative to the horizon is perceptually exaggerated by a factor of 1.5, whereas azimuthal direction is exaggerated by a factor of about 1.25. Here participants made angular and spatial judgments when upright or on their sides to dissociate egocentric from allocentric reference frames. In Experiment 1, it was found that body orientation did not affect the magnitude of the up-down exaggeration of direction, suggesting that the relevant orientation reference frame for this directional bias is allocentric rather than egocentric. In Experiment 2, the comparison of large-scale horizontal and vertical extents was somewhat affected by viewer orientation, but only to the extent necessitated by the classic (5%) horizontal-vertical illusion (HVI) that is known to be retinotopic. Large-scale vertical extents continued to appear much larger than horizontal ground extents when observers lay sideways. When the visual world was reoriented in Experiment 3, the bias remained tied to the ground-based allocentric reference frame. The allocentric HVI is quantitatively consistent with differential angular exaggerations previously measured for elevation and azimuth in locomotor space. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved
Improved Templates for Photometric Redshifts of Submm Sources
There is growing evidence that some star-forming galaxies at z>1 are
characterized by high efficiencies and specific star formation rates. In the
local universe, these traits are shared by ``active'' Blue Compact Dwarf
galaxies (BCDs) with compact and dense star-forming regions. The Spectral
Energy Distributions (SEDs) of these BCDs are dominated by young massive star
clusters, embedded in a cocoon of dust. In this Letter, we incorporate these
BCD SEDs as templates for two samples of high-redshift galaxy populations
selected at submm wavelengths. Because of the severe absorption of the optical
light, the featureless mid-infrared spectrum, and the relatively flat radio
continuum, the dusty star-cluster SEDs are good approximations to most of the
submm sources in our samples. In most cases, the active BCD SEDs fit the
observed photometric points better than the ``standard'' templates, M 82 and
Arp 220, and predict photometric redshifts significantly closer to the
spectroscopic ones. Our results strongly suggest that the embedded dusty star
clusters in BCD galaxies are superior to other local templates such as M 82 and
Arp 220 in fitting distant submm starburst galaxies.Comment: Accepted by ApJL: 4 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Evidence for electron-phonon interaction in FeMSb (M=Co, Cr) single crystals
We have measured polarized Raman scattering spectra of the
FeCoSb and FeCrSb (00.5)
single crystals in the temperature range between 15 K and 300 K. The highest
energy symmetry mode shows significant line asymmetry due to phonon
mode coupling width electronic background. The coupling constant achieves the
highest value at about 40 K and after that it remains temperature independent.
Origin of additional mode broadening is pure anharmonic. Below 40 K the
coupling is drastically reduced, in agreement with transport properties
measurements. Alloying of FeSb with Co and Cr produces the B mode
narrowing, i.e. weakening of the electron-phonon interaction. In the case of
A symmetry modes we have found a significant mode mixing
Stimulus-invariant processing and spectrotemporal reverse correlation in primary auditory cortex
The spectrotemporal receptive field (STRF) provides a versatile and
integrated, spectral and temporal, functional characterization of single cells
in primary auditory cortex (AI). In this paper, we explore the origin of, and
relationship between, different ways of measuring and analyzing an STRF. We
demonstrate that STRFs measured using a spectrotemporally diverse array of
broadband stimuli -- such as dynamic ripples, spectrotemporally white noise,
and temporally orthogonal ripple combinations (TORCs) -- are very similar,
confirming earlier findings that the STRF is a robust linear descriptor of the
cell. We also present a new deterministic analysis framework that employs the
Fourier series to describe the spectrotemporal modulations contained in the
stimuli and responses. Additional insights into the STRF measurements,
including the nature and interpretation of measurement errors, is presented
using the Fourier transform, coupled to singular-value decomposition (SVD), and
variability analyses including bootstrap. The results promote the utility of
the STRF as a core functional descriptor of neurons in AI.Comment: 42 pages, 8 Figures; to appear in Journal of Computational
Neuroscienc
Real Compton Scattering via Color Dipoles
We study photoabsorption reaction and real Compton scattering (RCS) within
the color dipole model. We rely on a photon wave function derived in the
instanton vacuum model, and on the energy dependent phenomenological elastic
dipole amplitude. Data for the photoabsorption cross section at high energies
agree with our parameter free calculations. We also provide predictions for the
differential RCS cross section. Although no data for small angle Compton
scattering are available so far, this process can be measured in
ultra-peripheral hadronic and nuclear collisions at the LHC.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Some statements clarified, bibliographic
inaccuracy correcte
Single Boson Images Via an Extended Holstein Primakoff Mapping
The Holstein-Primakoff mapping for pairs of bosons is extended in order to
accommodate single boson mapping. The proposed extension allows a variety of
applications and especially puts the formalism at finite temperature on firm
grounds. The new mapping is applied to the O(N+1) anharmonic oscillator with
global symmetry broken down to O(N). It is explicitly demonstrated that
N-Goldstone modes appear. This result generalizes the Holstein-Primakoff
mapping for interacting boson as developed in ref.[1].Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX. Physical content unchanged. Unnecessary figure
remove
Large Extra Dimensions from a Small Extra Dimension
Models with extra dimensions have changed our understanding of the hierarchy
problem. In general, these models explain the weakness of gravity by diluting
gravity in a large bulk volume, or by localizing the graviton away from the
standard model. In this paper, we show that the warped geometries necessary for
the latter scenario can naturally induce the large volumes necessary for the
former. We present a model in which a large volume is stabilized without
supersymmetry. We comment on the phenomenology of this scenario and
generalizations to additional dimensions.Comment: Some formulae altered, conclusions unchange
Magnetocardiography with a modular spin-exchange relaxation free atomic magnetometer array
We present a portable four-channel atomic magnetometer array operating in the
spin exchange relaxation-free regime. The magnetometer array has several design
features intended to maximize its suitability for biomagnetic measurement,
specifically foetal magnetocardiography, such as a compact modular design, and
fibre coupled lasers. The modular design allows the independent positioning and
orientation of each magnetometer, in principle allowing for non-planar array
geometries. Using this array in a magnetically shielded room, we acquire adult
magnetocadiograms. These measurements were taken with a 6-11 fT Hz^(-1/2)
single-channel baseline sensitivity that is consistent with the independently
measured noise level of the magnetically shielded room.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
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