923 research outputs found
Age-ordered shirt numbering reduces the selection bias associated with the relative age effect
When placed into age groups for junior sporting competition, the relative differences in age between children leads to a bias in who is evaluated as being talented. While the impact of this relative age effect (RAE) is clear, until now there has been no evidence to show how to reduce it. The aim of this study was to determine whether the selection bias associated with the RAE could be reduced. Talent scouts from an elite football club watched junior games and ranked players on the basis of their potential. Scouts were allocated to one of three groups provided with contrasting information about the age of the players: (1) no age information, (2) players’ birthdates or (3) knowledge that the numbers on the playing shirts corresponded to the relative age of the players. Results revealed a significant selection bias for the scouts in the no-age information group, and that bias remained when scouts knew the players’ dates-of-birth. Strikingly though, the selection bias was eliminated when scouts watched the games knowing the shirt numbers corresponded to the relative ages of the players. The selection bias associated with the RAE can be reduced if information about age is presented appropriately
Action preferences and the anticipation of action outcomes
Skilled performers of time-constrained motor actions acquire information about the action preferences of their opponents in an effort to better anticipate the outcome of that opponent's actions. However, there is reason to doubt that knowledge of an opponent's action preferences would unequivocally influence anticipatory responses in a positive way. It is possible that overt information about an opponent's actions could distract skilled performers from using the advance kinematic information they would usually rely on to anticipate actions, particularly when the opponent performs an 'unexpected' action that is not in accordance with his or her previous behaviour. The aim of this study was to examine how the ability to anticipate the outcome of an opponent's actions can be influenced by exposure to the action preferences of that opponent. Two groups of skilled handball goalkeepers anticipated the direction of penalty throws performed by opponents before and after a training intervention that provided situational probability information in the form of action preferences (AP). During the training phase participants in an AP-training group anticipated the action outcomes of two throwers who had a strong preference to throw in one particular direction, whilst participants in a NP-training group viewed players who threw equally to all directions. Exposure to opponents who did have an action preference during the training phase resulted in improved anticipatory performance if the opponent continued to bias their throws towards their preferred direction, but decreased performance if the opponent did not. These findings highlight that skilled observers use information about action preferences to enhance their anticipatory ability, but that doing so can be disadvantageous when the outcomes are no longer consistent with their generated expectations. © 2014 Elsevier B.V
Neurophysiological studies may provide a misleading picture of how perceptual-motor interactions are coordinated
Neurophysiological measurement techniques like fMRI and TMS are increasingly being used to examine the perceptual-motor processes underpinning the ability to anticipate the actions of others. Crucially, these techniques invariably restrict the experimental task that can be used and consequently limit the degree to which the findings can be generalised. These limitations are discussed based on a recent paper by Tomeo et al. (2012) who sought to examine responses to fooling actions by using TMS on participants who passively observed spliced video clips where bodily information was, and was not, linked to the action outcome. We outline two particular concerns with this approach. First, spliced video clips that show physically impossible actions are unlikely to simulate a "fooling" action. Second, it is difficult to make meaningful inferences about perceptual-motor expertise from experiments where participants cannot move. Taken together, we argue that wider generalisations based on these findings may provide a misunderstanding of the phenomenon such a study is designed to explore. © 2013 D Mann, M Dicks, R Cañal-Bruland, J van der Kamp
Indication on the universal hadron substructure - constituent quarks
The universality of single-spin asymmetry on inclusive pi-meson production is
discussed. This universality can be related to the hadron substructure -
constituent quarks.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures, references adde
Spacetime as a membrane in higher dimensions
By means of a simple model we investigate the possibility that spacetime is a
membrane embedded in higher dimensions. We present cosmological solutions of
d-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell theory which compactify to two dimensions. These
solutions are analytically continued to obtain dual solutions in which a
(d-2)-dimensional Einstein spacetime "membrane" is embedded in d-dimensions.
The membrane solutions generalise Melvin's 4-dimensional flux tube solution.
The flat membrane is shown to be classically stable. It is shown that there are
zero mode solutions of the d-dimensional Dirac equation which are confined to a
neighbourhood of the membrane and move within it like massless chiral
(d-2)-dimensional fermions. An investigation of the spectrum of scalar
perturbations shows that a well-defined mass gap between the zero modes and
massive modes can be obtained if there is a positive cosmological term in (d-2)
dimensions or a negative cosmological term in d dimensions.Comment: 30 pages, 4 figures in 10 files, epsf. This early brane world paper
is being placed on the archive to make it more easily accessible, as its
results are used in a new brane world construction in an accompanying
submissio
Thermodynamic and gravitational instability on hyperbolic spaces
We study the properties of anti--de Sitter black holes with a Gauss-Bonnet
term for various horizon topologies (k=0, \pm 1) and for various dimensions,
with emphasis on the less well understood k=-1 solution. We find that the zero
temperature (and zero energy density) extremal states are the local minima of
the energy for AdS black holes with hyperbolic event horizons. The hyperbolic
AdS black hole may be stable thermodynamically if the background is defined by
an extremal solution and the extremal entropy is non-negative. We also
investigate the gravitational stability of AdS spacetimes of dimensions D>4
against linear perturbations and find that the extremal states are still the
local minima of the energy. For a spherically symmetric AdS black hole
solution, the gravitational potential is positive and bounded, with or without
the Gauss-Bonnet type corrections, while, when k=-1, a small Gauss-Bonnet
coupling, namely, \alpha << {l}^2 (where l is the curvature radius of AdS
space), is found useful to keep the potential bounded from below, as required
for stability of the extremal background.Comment: Shortened to match published (PRD) version, 18 pages, several eps
figure
Effective theory of the Delta(1232) in Compton scattering off the nucleon
We formulate a new power-counting scheme for a chiral effective field theory
of nucleons, pions, and Deltas. This extends chiral perturbation theory into
the Delta-resonance region. We calculate nucleon Compton scattering up to
next-to-leading order in this theory. The resultant description of existing
p cross section data is very good for photon energies up to about 300
MeV. We also find reasonable numbers for the spin-independent polarizabilities
and .Comment: 29 pp, 9 figs. Minor revisions. To be published in PR
Nucleon Spin-Polarisabilities from Polarisation Observables in Low-Energy Deuteron Compton Scattering
We investigate the dependence of polarisation observables in elastic deuteron
Compton scattering below the pion production threshold on the spin-independent
and spin-dependent iso-scalar dipole polarisabilities of the nucleon. The
calculation uses Chiral Effective Field Theory with dynamical Delta(1232)
degrees of freedom in the Small Scale Expansion at next-to-leading order.
Resummation of the NN intermediate rescattering states and including the Delta
induces sizeable effects. The analysis considers cross-sections and the
analysing power of linearly polarised photons on an unpolarised target, and
cross-section differences and asymmetries of linearly and circularly polarised
beams on a vector-polarised deuteron. An intuitive argument helps one to
identify kinematics in which one or several polarisabilities do not contribute.
Some double-polarised observables are only sensitive to linear combinations of
two of the spin-polarisabilities, simplifying a multipole-analysis of the data.
Spin-polarisabilities can be extracted at photon energies \gtrsim 100 MeV,
after measurements at lower energies of \lesssim 70 MeV provide high-accuracy
determinations of the spin-independent ones. An interactive Mathematica 7.0
notebook of our findings is available from [email protected]: 30 pages LaTeX2e, including 22 figures as 66 .eps file embedded with
includegraphicx; three errors in initial submission corrected. This
submission includes ot the erratum to be published in EPJA (2012) and the
corrections in the tex
Height and risk of death among men and women: aetiological implications of associations with cardiorespiratory disease and cancer mortality
OBJECTIVES: Height is inversely associated with cardiovascular disease mortality risk and has shown variable associations with cancer incidence and mortality. The interpretation of findings from previous studies has been constrained by data limitations. Associations between height and specific causes of death were investigated in a large general population cohort of men and women from the West of Scotland.
DESIGN: Prospective observational study.
SETTING: Renfrew and Paisley, in the West of Scotland.
SUBJECTS: 7052 men and 8354 women aged 45-64 were recruited into a study in Renfrew and Paisley, in the West of Scotland, between 1972 and 1976. Detailed assessments of cardiovascular disease risk factors, morbidity and socioeconomic circumstances were made at baseline.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Deaths during 20 years of follow up classified into specific causes.
RESULTS: Over the follow up period 3347 men and 2638 women died. Height is inversely associated with all cause, coronary heart disease, stroke, and respiratory disease mortality among men and women. Adjustment for socioeconomic position and cardiovascular risk factors had little influence on these associations. Height is strongly associated with forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) and adjustment for FEV1 considerably attenuated the association between height and cardiorespiratory mortality. Smoking related cancer mortality is not associated with height. The risk of deaths from cancer unrelated to smoking tended to increase with height, particularly for haematopoietic, colorectal and prostate cancers. Stomach cancer mortality was inversely associated with height. Adjustment for socioeconomic position had little influence on these associations.
CONCLUSION: Height serves partly as an indicator of socioeconomic circumstances and nutritional status in childhood and this may underlie the inverse associations between height and adulthood cardiorespiratory mortality. Much of the association between height and cardiorespiratory mortality was accounted for by lung function, which is also partly determined by exposures acting in childhood. The inverse association between height and stomach cancer mortality probably reflects Helicobacter pylori infection in childhood resulting inor being associated withshorter height. The positive associations between height and several cancers unrelated to smoking could reflect the influence of calorie intake during childhood on the risk of these cancers
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