156 research outputs found
Damage to fronto-parietal networks impairs motor imagery ability after stroke : a voxel-based lesion symptom mapping study
Background: mental practice with motor imagery has been shown to promote motor skill acquisition in healthy subjects and patients. Although lesions of the common motor imagery and motor execution neural network are expected to impair motor imagery ability, functional equivalence appears to be at least partially preserved in stroke patients.Aim: to identify brain regions that are mandatory for preserved motor imagery ability after stroke.Method: thirty-seven patients with hemiplegia after a first time stroke participated. Motor imagery ability was measured using a Motor Imagery questionnaire and temporal congruence test. A voxelwise lesion symptom mapping approach was used to identify neural correlates of motor imagery in this cohort within the first year post-stroke.Results: poor motor imagery vividness was associated with lesions in the left putamen, left ventral premotor cortex and long association fibres linking parieto-occipital regions with the dorsolateral premotor and prefrontal areas. Poor temporal congruence was otherwise linked to lesions in the more rostrally located white matter of the superior corona radiata. Conclusion: This voxel-based lesion symptom mapping study confirms the association between white matter tract lesions and impaired motor imagery ability, thus emphasizing the importance of an intact fronto-parietal network for motor imagery. Our results further highlight the crucial role of the basal ganglia and premotor cortex when performing motor imagery tasks
Attenuation and damping of electromagnetic fields: Influence of inertia and displacement current
New results for attenuation and damping of electromagnetic fields in rigid
conducting media are derived under the conjugate influence of inertia due to
charge carriers and displacement current. Inertial effects are described by a
relaxation time for the current density in the realm of an extended Ohm's law.
The classical notions of poor and good conductors are rediscussed on the basis
of an effective electric conductivity, depending on both wave frequency and
relaxation time. It is found that the attenuation for good conductors at high
frequencies depends solely on the relaxation time. This means that the
penetration depth saturates to a minimum value at sufficiently high
frequencies. It is also shown that the actions of inertia and displacement
current on damping of magnetic fields are opposite to each other. That could
explain why the classical decay time of magnetic fields scales approximately as
the diffusion time. At very small length scales, the decay time could be given
either by the relaxation time or by a fraction of the diffusion time, depending
whether inertia or displacement current, respectively, would prevail on
magnetic diffusion.Comment: 21 pages, 1 figur
Quantized Roentgen Effect in Bose-Einstein Condensates
A classical dielectric moving in a charged capacitor can create a magnetic
field (Roentgen effect). A quantum dielectric, however, will not produce a
magnetization, except at vortices. The magnetic field outside the quantum
dielectric appears as the field of quantized monopoles
Theory of Supercoupling, Squeezing Wave Energy, and Field Confinement in Narrow Channels and Tight Bends Using Epsilon-Near-Zero Metamaterials
In this work, we investigate the detailed theory of the supercoupling,
anomalous tunneling effect, and field confinement originally identified in [M.
Silveirinha, N. Engheta, Phys. Rev. Lett. 97, 157403, (2006)], where we
demonstrated the possibility of using materials with permittivity near zero to
drastically improve the transmission of electromagnetic energy through a narrow
irregular channel with very subwavelength transverse cross-section. Here, we
present additional physical insights, describe new applications of the
tunneling effect in relevant waveguide scenarios (e.g., the "perfect" or
"super" waveguide coupling), study the effect of metal losses in the metallic
walls, and the possibility of using epsilon-near zero materials to confine
energy in a subwavelength cavity with gigantic field enhancement. In addition,
we systematically study the propagation of electromagnetic waves through narrow
channels filled with anisotropic epsilon-near zero materials. It is
demonstrated that these materials may have interesting potentials, and that for
some particular geometries the reflectivity of the channel is independent of
the specific dimensions or parameters of epsilon-near zero transition. We also
describe several realistic metamaterial implementations of the studied
problems, based on standard metallic waveguides, microstrip line
configurations, and wire media.Comment: under revie
Differential Form Valued Forms and Distributional Electromagnetic Sources
Properties of a fundamental double-form of bi-degree for are
reviewed in order to establish a distributional framework for analysing
equations of the form where
is the Hodge-de Rham operator on forms on .
Particular attention is devoted to singular distributional solutions that arise
when the source is a singular form distribution. A constructive
approach to Dirac distributions on (moving) submanifolds embedded in is developed in terms of (Leray) forms generated by the geometry of the
embedding. This framework offers a useful tool in electromagnetic modeling
where the possibly time dependent sources of certain physical attributes, such
as electric charge, electric current and polarization or magnetization, are
concentrated on localized regions in space.Comment: 40 page
First-Principle Homogenization Theory for Periodic Metamaterials
We derive from first principles an accurate homogenized description of
periodic metamaterials made of magnetodielectric inclusions, highlighting and
overcoming relevant limitations of standard homogenization methods. We obtain
closed-form expressions for the effective constitutive parameters, pointing out
the relevance of inherent spatial dispersion effects, present even in the
long-wavelength limit. Our results clarify the limitations of quasi-static
homogenization models, restore the physical meaning of homogenized metamaterial
parameters and outline the reasons behind magnetoelectric coupling effects that
may arise also in the case of center-symmetric inclusions.Comment: 58 pages, 10 figures Phys. Rev. B, in press (2011
Gauge Theories with Cayley-Klein and Gauge Groups
Gauge theories with the orthogonal Cayley-Klein gauge groups and
are regarded. For nilpotent values of the contraction
parameters these groups are isomorphic to the non-semisimple Euclid,
Newton, Galilei groups and corresponding matter spaces are fiber spaces with
degenerate metrics. It is shown that the contracted gauge field theories
describe the same set of fields and particle mass as gauge
theories, if Lagrangians in the base and in the fibers all are taken into
account. Such theories based on non-semisimple contracted group provide more
simple field interactions as compared with the initial ones.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
A rigorous analysis of high order electromagnetic invisibility cloaks
There is currently a great deal of interest in the invisibility cloaks
recently proposed by Pendry et al. that are based in the transformation
approach. They obtained their results using first order transformations. In
recent papers Hendi et al. and Cai et al. considered invisibility cloaks with
high order transformations. In this paper we study high order electromagnetic
invisibility cloaks in transformation media obtained by high order
transformations from general anisotropic media. We consider the case where
there is a finite number of spherical cloaks located in different points in
space. We prove that for any incident plane wave, at any frequency, the
scattered wave is identically zero. We also consider the scattering of finite
energy wave packets. We prove that the scattering matrix is the identity, i.e.,
that for any incoming wave packet the outgoing wave packet is the same as the
incoming one. This proves that the invisibility cloaks can not be detected in
any scattering experiment with electromagnetic waves in high order
transformation media, and in particular in the first order transformation media
of Pendry et al. We also prove that the high order invisibility cloaks, as well
as the first order ones, cloak passive and active devices. The cloaked objects
completely decouple from the exterior. Actually, the cloaking outside is
independent of what is inside the cloaked objects. The electromagnetic waves
inside the cloaked objects can not leave the concealed regions and viceversa,
the electromagnetic waves outside the cloaked objects can not go inside the
concealed regions. As we prove our results for media that are obtained by
transformation from general anisotropic materials, we prove that it is possible
to cloak objects inside general crystals.Comment: The final version is now published in Journal of Physics A:
Mathematical and Theoretical, vol 41 (2008) 065207 (21 pp). Included in
IOP-Selec
Platelets of patients with chronic kidney disease demonstrate deficient platelet reactivity in vitro
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In patients with chronic kidney disease studies focusing on platelet function and properties often are non-conclusive whereas only few studies use functional platelet tests. In this study we evaluated a recently developed functional flow cytometry based assay for the analysis of platelet function in chronic kidney disease.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Platelet reactivity was measured using flow cytometric analysis. Platelets in whole blood were triggered with different concentrations of agonists (TRAP, ADP, CRP). Platelet activation was quantified with staining for P-selectin, measuring the mean fluorescence intensity. Area under the curve and the concentration of half-maximal response were determined.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We studied 23 patients with chronic kidney disease (9 patients with cardiorenal failure and 14 patients with end stage renal disease) and 19 healthy controls. Expression of P-selectin on the platelet surface measured as mean fluorescence intensity was significantly less in chronic kidney disease patients compared to controls after maximal stimulation with TRAP (9.7 (7.9-10.8) vs. 11.4 (9.2-12.2), P = 0.032), ADP (1.6 (1.2-2.1) vs. 2.6 (1.9-3.5), P = 0.002) and CRP (9.2 (8.5-10.8) vs. 11.5 (9.5-12.9), P = 0.004). Also the area under the curve was significantly different. There was no significant difference in half-maximal response between both groups.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>In this study we found that patients with chronic kidney disease show reduced platelet reactivity in response of ADP, TRAP and CRP compared to controls. These results contribute to our understanding of the aberrant platelet function observed in patients with chronic kidney disease and emphasize the significance of using functional whole blood platelet activation assays.</p
- …