1,480 research outputs found
Virtuelle Handlungen, reale Konsequenzen:Über Theatralität und die ästhetische Differenz des Digitalen
Welche Rolle spielen virtuelle Handlungen für die Subjektkonstitution? Was bedeutet es, dass wir in Computerspielen auf jemanden schießen, in Chaträumen andere (Geschlechts-)Identitäten leben oder im Flugsimulator trainieren? In Auseinandersetzung mit gegenwärtigen Positionen der Subjekttheorie und Ästhetik versucht der Beitrag eine philosophische Klärung des Begriffs digitalisierter Subjektivität. Seine These lautet: Virtuelle Handlungen müssen vom Paradigma ästhetischer Theatralität her verstanden werden. Sie sind mediale Zeichen, die als Handlungen erlebt werden. Als solche bieten sie uns einzigartige Möglichkeiten praktischer Selbstreflexion, stellen uns aber zugleich vor die Gefahr identifikatorischer Misslektüren, die bis zu prekären Selbstverlusten führen können
Traditional Healing in Uganda: A Statistical Analysis of Treatments by a Group of Traditional Healers
In a project of ethnomedical research the two authors – working as psychotherapists in Switzerland – were visiting a group of traditional healers in the Mpigi District of Uganda. One aim was to look for a cross-cultural understanding of psychological problems, another was to investigate the efficiency of traditional healing and its integration in the public health system. The data of 978 subjects (37.9% males, 47.7% females and 14.4% families) treated in 2007 were analyzed with special respect to the outcome. Three overlapping categories (spiritual, connecting, physical/medical) were used for the definition of the patients problems and their received treatments. No significant differences could be found between males and females, but between singles and families. Singles had more spiritual problems and treatments whereas families had more connecting problems and treatments. 38.7% of the sample had physical problems and 28.3% were sent to medical treatment. The positive outcome rate of the whole sample was very high: 53.4% had recovered, 34.8% improved and only 11.9% were unchanged
FISH: A 3D parallel MHD code for astrophysical applications
FISH is a fast and simple ideal magneto-hydrodynamics code that scales to ~10
000 processes for a Cartesian computational domain of ~1000^3 cells. The
simplicity of FISH has been achieved by the rigorous application of the
operator splitting technique, while second order accuracy is maintained by the
symmetric ordering of the operators. Between directional sweeps, the
three-dimensional data is rotated in memory so that the sweep is always
performed in a cache-efficient way along the direction of contiguous memory.
Hence, the code only requires a one-dimensional description of the conservation
equations to be solved. This approach also enable an elegant novel
parallelisation of the code that is based on persistent communications with MPI
for cubic domain decomposition on machines with distributed memory. This scheme
is then combined with an additional OpenMP parallelisation of different sweeps
that can take advantage of clusters of shared memory. We document the detailed
implementation of a second order TVD advection scheme based on flux
reconstruction. The magnetic fields are evolved by a constrained transport
scheme. We show that the subtraction of a simple estimate of the hydrostatic
gradient from the total gradients can significantly reduce the dissipation of
the advection scheme in simulations of gravitationally bound hydrostatic
objects. Through its simplicity and efficiency, FISH is as well-suited for
hydrodynamics classes as for large-scale astrophysical simulations on
high-performance computer clusters. In preparation for the release of a public
version, we demonstrate the performance of FISH in a suite of astrophysically
orientated test cases.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figure
Corticospinal output and loss of force during motor fatigue
The objective of this study was to analyze central motor output changes in relation to contraction force during motor fatigue. The triple stimulation technique (TST, Magistris et al. in Brain 121(Pt 3):437-450, 1998) was used to quantify a central conduction index (CCI=amplitude ratio of central conduction response and peripheral nerve response, obtained simultaneously by the TST). The CCI removes effects of peripheral fatigue from the quantification. It allows a quantification of the percentage of the entire target muscle motor unit pool driven to discharge by a transcranial magnetic stimulus. Subjects (n=23) performed repetitive maximal voluntary contractions (MVC) of abductor digiti minimi (duration 1s, frequency 0.5Hz) during 2min. TST recordings were obtained every 15s, using stimulation intensities sufficient to stimulate all cortical motor neurons (MNs) leading to the target muscle, and during voluntary contractions of 20% of the MVC to facilitate the responses. TST was also repetitively recorded during recovery. This basic exercise protocol was modified in a number of experiments to further characterize influences on CCI of motor fatigue (4min exercise at 50% MVC; delayed fatigue recovery during local hemostasis, "stimulated exercise” by 20Hz trains of 1s duration at 0.5Hz during 2min). In addition, the cortical silent period was measured during the basic exercise protocol. Force fatigued to approximately 40% of MVC in all experiments and in all subjects. In all subjects, CCI decreased during exercise, but this decrease varied markedly between subjects. On average, CCI reductions preceded force reductions during exercise, and CCI recovery preceded force recovery. Exercising at 50% for 4min reduced muscle force more markedly than CCI. Hemostasis induced by a cuff delayed muscle force recovery, but not CCI recovery. Stimulated exercise reduced force markedly, but CCI decreased only marginally. Summarized, force reduction and reduction of the CCI related poorly quantitatively and in time, and voluntary drive was particularly critical to reduce the CCI. The fatigue induced reduction of CCI may result from a central inhibitory phenomenon. Voluntary muscle activation is critical for the CCI reduction, suggesting a primarily supraspinal mechanis
Notes on Amandinea Petermannii Comb.nov. (Physciaceae) from Antarctica
The new combination Amandinea petermannii (Hue) Matzer, Mayrh. & Scheidegger; is proposed. The taxonomy, morphology, anatomy, chemistry, ecology and distribution of this lichen are discussed. Rinodina convoluta D. C. Lindsay is synonym of A. petermanni
Connectivity strategies to enhance the capacity of weight-bearing networks
The connectivity properties of a weight-bearing network are exploited to
enhance it's capacity. We study a 2-d network of sites where the weight-bearing
capacity of a given site depends on the capacities of the sites connected to it
in the layers above. The network consists of clusters viz. a set of sites
connected with each other with the largest such collection of sites being
denoted as the maximal cluster. New connections are made between sites in
successive layers using two distinct strategies. The key element of our
strategies consists of adding as many disjoint clusters as possible to the
sites on the trunk of the maximal cluster. The new networks can bear much
higher weights than the original networks and have much lower failure rates.
The first strategy leads to a greater enhancement of stability whereas the
second leads to a greater enhancement of capacity compared to the original
networks. The original network used here is a typical example of the branching
hierarchical class. However the application of strategies similar to ours can
yield useful results in other types of networks as well.Comment: 17 pages, 3 EPS files, 5 PS files, Phys. Rev. E (to appear
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