114,761 research outputs found
Controlling Listeria monocytogenes on ready-to-eat poultry products using carboxymethylcellulose film coatings containing green tea extract (GTE) combined with nisin and malic acid
The ability to control Listeria monocytogenes on ready-to-eat poultry products using carboxymethyl-cellulose film coatings containing green tea extract (GTE), malic acid (M), nisin (N), and their combinations was evaluated. The antimicrobials (GTE: 1.0%, nisin: 10,000 IU/g, malic acid: 1.0%) were incorporated alone or in combination into a carboxymethyl cellulose film coating. Pre-inoculated, fully cooked chicken pieces (~1g, 1cm x 1cm x 1cm) were coated with the film solution. The coated chicken pieces were stored at 4°C and the inhibitory activity against Listeria monocytogenes was evaluated at 0, 7, 14, 21, and 28 days. The highest inhibitory activity was found in the sample containing GTE, nisin, and malic acid in combination with a reduction of 3.3 log CFU/mL. These data demonstrate that GTE—combined with nisin and malic acid and incorporated into a carboxymethyl-cellulose film coating, multiple-hurdle technology—is effective in inhibiting L. monocytogenes growth on fully cooked chicken pieces at 4°C. Research in the area of finding natural antimicrobials to aid in the prevention of food-borne illnesses is necessary to improve safety and shelf life of products such as ready-to-eat meats. This project provides an effective combination of natural anti-microbials to control L. monocytogenes in ready-to-eat chicken pieces
Speaker-normalized sound representations in the human auditory cortex
The acoustic dimensions that distinguish speech sounds (like the vowel differences in “boot” and “boat”) also differentiate speakers’ voices. Therefore, listeners must normalize across speakers without losing linguistic information. Past behavioral work suggests an important role for auditory contrast enhancement in normalization: preceding context affects listeners’ perception of subsequent speech sounds. Here, using intracranial electrocorticography in humans, we investigate whether and how such context effects arise in auditory cortex. Participants identified speech sounds that were preceded by phrases from two different speakers whose voices differed along the same acoustic dimension as target words (the lowest resonance of the vocal tract). In every participant, target vowels evoke a speaker-dependent neural response that is consistent with the listener’s perception, and which follows from a contrast enhancement model. Auditory cortex processing thus displays a critical feature of normalization, allowing listeners to extract meaningful content from the voices of diverse speakers
Mixed population Minority Game with generalized strategies
We present a quantitative theory, based on crowd effects, for the market
volatility in a Minority Game played by a mixed population. Below a critical
concentration of generalized strategy players, we find that the volatility in
the crowded regime remains above the random coin-toss value regardless of the
"temperature" controlling strategy use. Our theory yields good agreement with
numerical simulations.Comment: Revtex file + 3 figure
Deterministic Dynamics in the Minority Game
The Minority Game (MG) behaves as a stochastically perturbed deterministic
system due to the coin-toss invoked to resolve tied strategies. Averaging over
this stochasticity yields a description of the MG's deterministic dynamics via
mapping equations for the strategy score and global information. The
strategy-score map contains both restoring-force and bias terms, whose
magnitudes depend on the game's quenched disorder. Approximate analytical
expressions are obtained and the effect of `market impact' discussed. The
global-information map represents a trajectory on a De Bruijn graph. For small
quenched disorder, an Eulerian trail represents a stable attractor. It is shown
analytically how anti-persistence arises. The response to perturbations and
different initial conditions are also discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
Multi-Agent Complex Systems and Many-Body Physics
Multi-agent complex systems comprising populations of decision-making
particles, have many potential applications across the biological,
informational and social sciences. We show that the time-averaged dynamics in
such systems bear a striking resemblance to conventional many-body physics. For
the specific example of the Minority Game, this analogy enables us to obtain
analytic expressions which are in excellent agreement with numerical
simulations.Comment: Accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
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