255 research outputs found

    Ambiguous Figures – What Happens in the Brain When Perception Changes But Not the Stimulus

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    During observation of ambiguous figures our perception reverses spontaneously although the visual information stays unchanged. Research on this phenomenon so far suffered from the difficulty to determine the instant of the endogenous reversals with sufficient temporal precision. A novel experimental paradigm with discontinuous stimulus presentation improved on previous temporal estimates of the reversal event by a factor of three. It revealed that disambiguation of ambiguous visual information takes roughly 50 ms or two loops of recurrent neural activity. Further, the decision about the perceptual outcome has taken place at least 340 ms before the observer is able to indicate the consciously perceived reversal manually. We provide a short review about physiological studies on multistable perception with a focus on electrophysiological data. We further present a new perspective on multistable perception that can easily integrate previous apparently contradicting explanatory approaches. Finally we propose possible extensions toward other research fields where ambiguous figure perception may be useful as an investigative tool

    HER2 und Topoisomerase IIa-Expression und Amplifikation des Mamma-Karzinoms

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    Determinanten der Endkundenakzeptanz mobilkommunikationsbasierter Zahlungssysteme: eine theoretische und empirische Analyse

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    Angesichts der Fülle an gescheiterten Versuchen, mobilkommunikationsbasierte Zahlungssysteme (MBZS) als Ergänzung oder Alternative zu gängigen Zahlungsverfahren im Endkundenmarkt zu etablieren, beabsichtigt die Dissertation einen Beitrag zur Erklärung endkundenseitiger Akzeptanzprozesse innerhalb des Mobile Commerce und zur Erschließung des betriebswirtschaftlichen Potentials von MBZS zu leisten. Den Ausgangspunkt bildet eine von theoretischen und sachlogischen Überlegungen geleitete Formulierung von Hypothesen zu Einflussfaktoren der MBZS-Akzeptanz. Diese werden in ein Akzeptanzmodell überführt, welches genutzt werden kann, um Präferenzen von Endkunden zu erkennen, Gründe für unterschiedliche Akzeptanzniveaus zu verstehen sowie Determinanten des wahrgenommenen Risikos zu identifizieren. Die strukturanalytische Überprüfung des Akzeptanzmodells erfolgt mittels PLS. Abschließend werden aus den Ergebnissen der empirischen Studie resultierende Implikationen für die (Marketing-)Praxis diskutiert

    Mona Lisa is always happy - And only sometimes sad

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    The worldwide fascination of da Vinci’s Mona Lisa has been dedicated to the emotional ambiguity of her face expression. In the present study we manipulated Mona Lisa’s mouth curvature as one potential source of ambiguity and studied how a range of happier and sadder face variants influences perception. In two experimental conditions we presented different stimulus ranges with different step sizes between stimuli along the happy-sad axis of emotional face expressions. Stimuli were presented in random order and participants indicated the perceived emotional face expression (first task) and the confidence of their response (second task). The probability of responding ‘happy’ to the original Mona Lisa was close to 100%. Furthermore, in both conditions the perceived happiness of Mona Lisa variants described sigmoidal functions of the mouth curvature. Participants’ confidence was weakest around the sigmoidal inflection points. Remarkably, the sigmoidal functions, as well as confidence values and reaction times, differed significantly between experimental conditions. Finally, participants responded generally faster to happy than to sad faces. Overall, the original Mona Lisa seems to be less ambiguous than expected. However, perception of and reaction to the emotional face content is relative and strongly depends on the used stimulus range

    Prevalence of visual snow and relation to attentional absorption

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    Visual snow is a condition of unclear prevalence characterized by tiny flickering dots throughout the entire visual field. It appears to result from visual cortex hyperactivity and possibly correlates with propensity to be engrossed in sensory and imaginary experiences (absorption). The prevalence and correlates of visual snow, and emotional reactions to it, were explored in the general Portuguese population with three studies with online surveys. In Study 1, 564 participants were shown an animated graphic simulation of visual snow and asked to rate how frequently they have similar percepts on a scale anchored by 0% and 100% of their waking time. They also reported their degree of distress and fascination resulting from visual snow. Absorption was measured with the Modified Tellegen Absorption Scale. 44% of respondents reported they see visual snow at least 10% of the time, and 20% reported seeing it between 80% and 100% of the time. Similar to findings in clinical samples, the frequency of visual snow correlated with tinnitus frequency and entoptic phenomena, but not with ophthalmologic problems. It was confirmed that visual snow is related to absorption. Although distress caused by visual snow was generally absent or minimal in our samples, a substantial minority (28%) reported moderate to high levels of distress. High fascination with visual snow was reported by 9%. In Studies 2 and 3, visual snow was measured by means of verbal descriptions without graphic simulation (“visual field full of tiny dots of light” and “world seen with many dots of light”, respectively). The results were similar to those in Study 1, but seeing visual snow 80%-100% of the time was less frequent (6.5% in Study 2 and 3.6% in Study 3). Visual snow has been insufficiently investigated. More research is needed to uncover underlying neurophysiological mechanisms and psychological and behavioral correlates.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Neutronographic Residual Stress Analysis for Materials With Depth Gradients of the Strain Free Lattice Parameter d0{{{d}}}_{0} for the Example of a Case-Hardened Steel 20MnCr5

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    In the present work, ring-shaped samples made from steel 20MnCr5 were low-pressure carburized (LPC) and subsequently hardened by gas quenching (case-hardened). This results in a near-surface gradient in chemical composition, microstructure- and hardness distribution, as well as a three-dimensional residual stress (RS) distribution, which was investigated by neutron diffraction. Near-surface RSs in the ferrite-/martensite- and austenite phase are additionally determined by X-ray diffraction. It is shown that the chemical gradient has an influence on the chosen d0{{{d}}}_{0} strategy and how such a reference sample should be extracted. If near-surface RS values are to be determined by neutron diffraction, the pseudo-strain effect must be taken into account. For this purpose, a suitable approach using the ‘‘open source’’ software SIMRES and STRESSFIT is also presented. By combining neutron and X-ray diffraction data, a complete RS distribution over the whole sample can be obtained
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