213 research outputs found
Is there an orthographic boost for ambiguous words during their processing?
The present study explores the issue of why ambiguous words are recognized faster than unambiguous ones during word recognition. To this end we contrasted two different hypotheses: the semantic feedback hypothesis (Hino and Lupker in J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 22:1331-1356, 1996. https://doi.org/10.1037/0096-1523.22.6.1331 ), and the hypothesis proposed by Borowsky and Masson (J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cognit 22:63-85, 1996. https://doi.org/10.1037/0278-7393.22.1.63 ). Although both hypotheses agree that ambiguous words benefit during recognition in that they engage more semantic activation, they disagree as to whether or not this greater semantic activation feeds back to the orthographic level, hence speeding up the orthographic coding of ambiguous words. Participants were presented with ambiguous and unambiguous words in two tasks, a lexical decision task (LDT) and a two-alternative forced-choice task (2AFC). We found differences between ambiguous and unambiguous words in both the LDT and the 2AFC tasks. These results suggest that the orthographic coding of ambiguous words is boosted during word processing. This finding lends support to the semantic feedback hypothesis.This research was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (PSI2015-63525-P) and by the Research Promotion Program of the Universitat Rovira i Virgili (2016PFR-URV-B2-37). This has also been partially supported by the FCT (Foundation for Science and Technology) through the state budget with Reference IF/00784/2013/CP1158/CT0013. The first author also holds a grant from the Universitat Rovira i Virgili (2015PMF-PIPF-16)
Colliding AdS gravitational shock waves in various dimensions and holography
The formation of marginally trapped surfaces in the off-center collision of
two shock waves on AdS_D (with D=4,5,6,7 and 8) is studied numerically. We
focus on the case when the two waves collide with nonvanishing impact parameter
while the sources are located at the same value of the holographic coordinate.
In all cases a critical value of the impact parameter is found above which no
trapped surface is formed. The numerical results show the existence of a simple
scaling relation between the critical impact parameter and the energy of the
colliding waves. Using the isometries of AdS_D we relate the solutions obtained
to the ones describing the collision of two waves with a purely holographic
impact parameter. This provides a gravitational dual for the head-on collision
of two lumps of energy of unequal size.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures. v2: minor changes, typos corrected. To appear
in JHE
Entropy from AdS(3)/CFT(2)
We parametrize the (2+1)-dimensional AdS space and the BTZ black hole with
Fefferman-Graham coordinates starting from the AdS boundary. We consider
various boundary metrics: Rindler, static de Sitter and FRW. In each case, we
compute the holographic stress-energy tensor of the dual CFT and confirm that
it has the correct form, including the effects of the conformal anomaly. We
find that the Fefferman-Graham parametrization also spans a second copy of the
AdS space, including a second boundary. For the boundary metrics we consider,
the Fefferman-Graham coordinates do not cover the whole AdS space. We propose
that the length of the line delimiting the excluded region at a given time can
be identified with the entropy of the dual CFT on a background determined by
the boundary metric. For Rindler and de Sitter backgrounds our proposal
reproduces the expected entropy. For a FRW background it produces a
generalization of the Cardy formula that takes into account the vacuum energy
related to the expansion.Comment: major revision with several clarifications and corrections, 22 page
Finite Temperature Aging Holography
We construct the gravity background which describes the dual field theory
with aging invariance. We choose the decay modes of the bulk scalar field in
the internal spectator direction to obtain the dissipative behavior of the
boundary correlation functions of the dual scalar fields. In particular, the
two-time correlation function at zero temperature has the characteristic
features of the aging system: power law decay, broken time translation and
dynamical scaling. We also construct the black hole backgrounds with asymptotic
aging invariance. We extensively study characteristic behavior of the finite
temperature two-point correlation function via analytic and numerical methods.Comment: 38 pages and 5 figures, expanded discussions on correlator, one
mistake is fixed, modified discussion on shear viscosity, to appear in JHE
Long-Range Rapidity Correlations in Heavy Ion Collisions at Strong Coupling from AdS/CFT
We use AdS/CFT correspondence to study two-particle correlations in heavy ion
collisions at strong coupling. Modeling the colliding heavy ions by shock waves
on the gravity side, we observe that at early times after the collision there
are long-range rapidity correlations present in the two-point functions for the
glueball and the energy-momentum tensor operators. We estimate rapidity
correlations at later times by assuming that the evolution of the system is
governed by ideal Bjorken hydrodynamics, and find that glueball correlations in
this state are suppressed at large rapidity intervals, suggesting that
late-time medium dynamics can not "wash out" the long-range rapidity
correlations that were formed at early times. These results may provide an
insight on the nature of the "ridge" correlations observed in heavy ion
collision experiments at RHIC and LHC, and in proton-proton collisions at LHC.Comment: 32 pages, 2 figures; v2: typos corrected, references adde
The a-theorem and conformal symmetry breaking in holographic RG flows
We study holographic models describing an RG flow between two fixed points
driven by a relevant scalar operator. We show how to introduce a spurion field
to restore Weyl invariance and compute the anomalous contribution to the
generating functional in even dimensional theories. We find that the
coefficient of the anomalous term is proportional to the difference of the
conformal anomalies of the UV and IR fixed points, as expected from anomaly
matching arguments in field theory. For any even dimensions the coefficient is
positive as implied by the holographic a-theorem. For flows corresponding to
spontaneous breaking of conformal invariance, we also compute the two-point
functions of the energy-momentum tensor and the scalar operator and identify
the dilaton mode. Surprisingly we find that in the simplest models with just
one scalar field there is no dilaton pole in the two-point function of the
scalar operator but a stronger singularity. We discuss the possible
implications.Comment: 50 pages. v2: minor changes, added references, extended discussion.
v3: we have clarified some of the calculations and assumptions, results
unchanged. v4: published version in JHE
Holography for chiral scale-invariant models
Deformation of any d-dimensional conformal field theory by a constant null
source for a vector operator of dimension (d + z -1) is exactly marginal with
respect to anisotropic scale invariance, of dynamical exponent z. The
holographic duals to such deformations are AdS plane waves, with z=2 being the
Schrodinger geometry. In this paper we explore holography for such chiral
scale-invariant models. The special case of z=0 can be realized with gravity
coupled to a scalar, and is of particular interest since it is related to a
Lifshitz theory with dynamical exponent two upon dimensional reduction. We show
however that the corresponding reduction of the dual field theory is along a
null circle, and thus the Lifshitz theory arises upon discrete light cone
quantization of an anisotropic scale invariant field theory.Comment: 62 pages; v2, published version, minor improvements and references
adde
AdS Black Hole Solutions in the Extended New Massive Gravity
We have obtained (warped) AdS black hole solutions in the three dimensional
extended new massive gravity. We investigate some properties of black holes and
obtain central charges of the two dimensional dual CFT. To obtain the central
charges, we use the relation between entropy and temperature according to the
AdS/CFT dictionary. For AdS black holes, one can also use the central charge
function formalism which leads to the same results.Comment: 24pages, some organization corrected, minor corrections, references
added, final published versio
Education and wealth inequalities in healthy ageing in eight harmonised cohorts in the ATHLOS consortium: a population-based study
Background: The rapid growth of the size of the older population is having a substantial effect on health and social care services in many societies across the world. Maintaining health and functioning in older age is a key public health issue but few studies have examined factors associated with inequalities in trajectories of health and functioning across countries. The aim of this study was to investigate trajectories of healthy ageing in older men and women (aged ≥45 years) and the effect of education and wealth on these trajectories. Methods: This population-based study is based on eight longitudinal cohorts from Australia, the USA, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, and Europe harmonised by the EU Ageing Trajectories of Health: Longitudinal Opportunities and Synergies (ATHLOS) consortium. We selected these studies from the repository of 17 ageing studies in the ATHLOS consortium because they reported at least three waves of collected data. We used multilevel modelling to investigate the effect of education and wealth on trajectories of healthy ageing scores, which incorporated 41 items of physical and cognitive functioning with a range between 0 (poor) and 100 (good), after adjustment for age, sex, and cohort study. Findings: We used data from 141 214 participants, with a mean age of 62·9 years (SD 10·1) and an age range of 45–106 years, of whom 76 484 (54·2%) were women. The earliest year of baseline data was 1992 and the most recent last follow-up year was 2015. Education and wealth affected baseline scores of healthy ageing but had little effect on the rate of decrease in healthy ageing score thereafter. Compared with those with primary education or less, participants with tertiary education had higher baseline scores (adjusted difference in score of 10·54 points, 95% CI 10·31–10·77). The adjusted difference in healthy ageing score between lowest and highest quintiles of wealth was 8·98 points (95% CI 8·74–9·22). Among the eight cohorts, the strongest inequality gradient for both education and wealth was found in the Health Retirement Study from the USA. Interpretation: The apparent difference in baseline healthy ageing scores between those with high versus low education levels and wealth suggests that cumulative disadvantage due to low education and wealth might have largely deteriorated health conditions in early life stages, leading to persistent differences throughout older age, but no further increase in ageing disparity after age 70 years. Future research should adopt a lifecourse approach to investigate mechanisms of health inequalities across education and wealth in different societies. Funding: European Union Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme.The ATHLOS project was funded by the European Union Horizon 2020
Research and Innovation Programme (grant number 635316). This study
was supported by the 5-year ATHLOS projec
Reappraisal of Vipera aspis Venom Neurotoxicity
BACKGROUND: The variation of venom composition with geography is an important aspect of intraspecific variability in the Vipera genus, although causes of this variability remain unclear. The diversity of snake venom is important both for our understanding of venomous snake evolution and for the preparation of relevant antivenoms to treat envenomations. A geographic intraspecific variation in snake venom composition was recently reported for Vipera aspis aspis venom in France. Since 1992, cases of human envenomation after Vipera aspis aspis bites in south-east France involving unexpected neurological signs were regularly reported. The presence of genes encoding PLA(2) neurotoxins in the Vaa snake genome led us to investigate any neurological symptom associated with snake bites in other regions of France and in neighboring countries. In parallel, we used several approaches to characterize the venom PLA(2) composition of the snakes captured in the same areas. [br/]
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We conducted an epidemiological survey of snake bites in various regions of France. In parallel, we carried out the analysis of the genes and the transcripts encoding venom PLA(2)s. We used SELDI technology to study the diversity of PLA(2) in various venom samples. Neurological signs (mainly cranial nerve disturbances) were reported after snake bites in three regions of France: Languedoc-Roussillon, Midi-Pyrénées and Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. Genomes of Vipera aspis snakes from south-east France were shown to contain ammodytoxin isoforms never described in the genome of Vipera aspis from other French regions. Surprisingly, transcripts encoding venom neurotoxic PLA(2)s were found in snakes of Massif Central region. Accordingly, SELDI analysis of PLA(2) venom composition confirmed the existence of population of neurotoxic Vipera aspis snakes in the west part of the Massif Central mountains. [br/]
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The association of epidemiological studies to genetic, biochemical and immunochemical analyses of snake venoms allowed a good evaluation of the potential neurotoxicity of snake bites. A correlation was found between the expression of neurological symptoms in humans and the intensity of the cross-reaction of venoms with anti-ammodytoxin antibodies, which is correlated with the level of neurotoxin (vaspin and/or ammodytoxin) expression in the venom. The origin of the two recently identified neurotoxic snake populations is discussed according to venom PLA(2) genome and transcriptome data
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