339 research outputs found

    Interview with Richard Mavis

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    Richard Mavis, a long-time resident of Mount Vernon, speaks about his service to the county in the commissioner\u27s office for twenty years. He also talks about the political side of the county, and the experience he has had, as a democrat in Knox County. He also discusses how all the aspects of the community work together to create a stronger community.https://digital.kenyon.edu/ffp_interviews/1015/thumbnail.jp

    Correlated Binary Regression Using Orthogonalized Residuals

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    This paper focuses on marginal regression models for correlated binary responses when estimation of the association structure is of primary interest. A new estimating function approach based on orthogonalized residuals is proposed. This procedure allows a new representation and addresses some of the difficulties of the conditional-residual formulation of alternating logistic regressions of Carey, Zeger & Diggle (1993). The new method is illustrated with an analysis of data on impaired pulmonary function

    Orthogonalized Residuals for Estimation of Marginally Specified Association Parameters in Multivariate Binary Data: Orthogonalized residuals

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    This paper focuses on marginal regression models for correlated binary responses when estimation of the association structure is of primary interest. A new estimating function approach based on orthogonalized residuals is proposed. A special case of the proposed procedure allows a new representation of the alternating logistic regressions method through marginal residuals. The connections between second-order generalized estimating equations, alternating logistic regressions, pseudo-likelihood and other methods are explored. Eficiency comparisons are presented, with emphasis on variable cluster size and on the role of higher-order assumptions. The new method is illustrated with an analysis of data on impaired pulmonary function

    A common neural scale for the subjective pleasantness of different primary rewards.

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    When an economic decision is taken, it is between goals with different values, and the values must be on the same scale. Here, we used functional MRI to search for a brain region that represents the subjective pleasantness of two different rewards on the same neural scale. We found activity in the ventral prefrontal cortex that correlated with the subjective pleasantness of two fundamentally different rewards, taste in the mouth and warmth on the hand. The evidence came from two different investigations, a between-group comparison of two independent fMRI studies, and from a within-subject study. In the latter, we showed that neural activity in the same voxels in the ventral prefrontal cortex correlated with the subjective pleasantness of the different rewards. Moreover, the slope and intercept for the regression lines describing the relationship between activations and subjective pleasantness were highly similar for the different rewards. We also provide evidence that the activations did not simply represent multisensory integration or the salience of the rewards. The findings demonstrate the existence of a specific region in the human brain where neural activity scales with the subjective pleasantness of qualitatively different primary rewards. This suggests a principle of brain processing of importance in reward valuation and decision-making

    Avian distribution and abundance records for the Sierra de Los Tuxtlas

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    ABSTRACT.-Between 1973 and 1987 we spent more than 36 months studying birds in the Sierra de Los Tuxtlas, on the Gulf coast of southern Veracruz, Mexico. This area contains the northernmost tropical rainforest in the western hemisphere, and has undergone relatively rapid deforestation in the past three decades. Its avifauna is diverse, consisting of both resident and migratory birds. We recorded 405 species, including 58 that have not been reported from the region before, as well as several that apparently have not been reported for Veracruz. Fully 350 species are documented by specimens; the remaining 55 consist of sight records only. We compare our results with past surveys of Los Tuxtlas and discuss 124 species whose status in the region is affected by our data. Of the 405 species we recorded in Los Tuxtlas, 96 (23.7%) appear on a list of bird species from the northern neotropics thought to be in danger due to tropical deforestation. Received 9 Jan. 1992, accepted 29 April 1992. The Sierra de Los Tuxtlas (hence Los Tuxtlas) is a rugged, mountainous region of volcanic origin, isolated from the Sierr

    Motor Preparatory Activity in Posterior Parietal Cortex is Modulated by Subjective Absolute Value

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    For optimal response selection, the consequences associated with behavioral success or failure must be appraised. To determine how monetary consequences influence the neural representations of motor preparation, human brain activity was scanned with fMRI while subjects performed a complex spatial visuomotor task. At the beginning of each trial, reward context cues indicated the potential gain and loss imposed for correct or incorrect trial completion. FMRI-activity in canonical reward structures reflected the expected value related to the context. In contrast, motor preparatory activity in posterior parietal and premotor cortex peaked in high “absolute value” (high gain or loss) conditions: being highest for large gains in subjects who believed they performed well while being highest for large losses in those who believed they performed poorly. These results suggest that the neural activity preceding goal-directed actions incorporates the absolute value of that action, predicated upon subjective, rather than objective, estimates of one's performance
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