1,401 research outputs found

    Competition level determines compensatory growth abilities

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    In many animal taxa, size-selective predation favors fast growth early in life. However, same-aged juveniles can diverge in size due to differences in genotype, environmental conditions, and parental effects and thus may vary in competitive ability. Under food scarcity, competitively inferior juveniles may suffer suppressed growth, whereas under benign conditions, small juveniles may exhibit growth compensation and perform as well as large ones. However, studies testing this while controlling for parental effects are lacking. Here, we hand-raised cichlids, Simochromis pleurospilus, from a wide range of egg sizes and manipulated their size by differential feeding. Afterward, high- and low-ration siblings were kept in groups assigned to either a high- or low-competition environment. We investigated how the degree of competition affected aggressiveness and growth of juveniles with different feeding histories. As predicted, when competition was high, high-ration offspring grew fastest. Interestingly, when competition was weak, low-ration juveniles grew at a similar rate as high-ration ones and many were able to catch up in size. High-ration fish were more aggressive than low-ration ones, and this effect was strongest under high competition. Additionally, in the high-competition environment, received aggression was negatively related to growth, and inflicted aggression correlated positively with the growth of the aggressor. These relationships were absent under low competition. Our findings suggest that the abilities to compensate for early growth depression depend on the prevalent level of competition. Aggression is likely used to monopolize food by juvenile S. pleurospilus; however, when competition is strong, aggression cannot compensate for a size disadvantag

    Characterization of defects in a martensitic CuAlNi shape-memory alloy

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    A water-quenched martensitic CuAlNi shape-memory alloy was investigated by a combination of coincidence Doppler broadening and positron-lifetime spectroscopy, supported by positron-lifetime calculations. We find a high defect concentration in the as-quenched samples. The positron-lifetime calculations suggest that the defects are not only single vacancies but also vacancies associated with dislocations and stacking faults. Annealing in the martensitic phase has no significant influence on the vacancy concentration but results in a different chemical environment around the vacancies. After aging in the austenitic phase the vacancy concentration decreases significantl

    The 'rotiferologist' effect and other global correlates of species richness in monogonont rotifers

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    Global biodiversity patterns are often driven by diff erent environmental variables at diff erent scales. However, it is still controversial whether there are general trends, whether similar processes are responsible for similar patterns, and/or whether confounding eff ects such as sampling bias can produce misleading results. Our aim is twofold: 1) assessing the global correlates of diversity in a group of microscopic animals little analysed so far, and 2) inferring the infl uence of sampling intensity on biodiversity analyses. As a case study, we choose rotifers, because of their high potential for dispersal across the globe. We assembled and analysed a new worldwide dataset of records of monogonont rotifers, a group of microscopic aquatic animals, from 1960 to 1992. Using spatially explicit models, we assessed whether the diversity patterns conformed to those commonly obtained for larger organisms, and whether they still held true after controlling for sampling intensity, variations in area, and spatial structure in the data. Our results are in part analogous to those commonly obtained for macroorganisms (habitat heterogeneity and precipitation emerge as the main global correlates), but show some divergence (potential absence of a latitudinal gradient and of a large-scale correlation with human population). Moreover, the eff ect of sampling eff ort is remarkable, accounting for 50% of the variability; this strong eff ect may mask other patterns such as latitudinal gradients. Our study points out that sampling bias should be carefully considered when drawing conclusions from large-scale analyses, and calls for further faunistic work on microorganisms in all regions of the world to better understand the generality of the processes driving global patterns in biodiversity

    Atherosclerotic Plaque Vulnerability in Experimental Models of Atherosclerosis

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    Atherosclerosis is a chronic and often progressive disease of the wall of the arterial vasculature. The term atherosclerosis is derived from the Greek words “athero” meaning gruel or paste and “skleros” meaning stiff or hard. Atherosclerosis is considered a major clinical problem, which underlies most ischemic events of both the heart as well as the brain. It is the result of the Western lifestyle and can start very early in life even in persons without a strong genetic disposition like untreated familial hypercholesteremia. From the second decade onwards, the disease progresses more rapidly. The clinical silence of atherosclerosis is often broken between the 3rd and 5th decade, when patients present with ischemic complaints of e.g. heart and brain. Despite the continuing decrease in cardiovascular disease (CVD) associated death over the last decade, it still is one of the main causes of death in The Netherlands, accounting for 30,7% of total deaths in 2007. As a result, the socio-economic consequences remain huge. It has been estimated that in the European Union annual CVD-associated costs are €169 billion, of which €105 billion are costs directly related to healthcare. Historically, atherosclerosis was simply considered as an accumulation of lipids in the vascular wall. In the

    Comprehension and navigation of networked hypertexts

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    Contains fulltext : 191141.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)This study aims to investigate secondary school students' reading comprehension and navigation of networked hypertexts with and without a graphic overview compared to linear digital texts. Additionally, it was studied whether prior knowledge, vocabulary, verbal, and visual working memory moderated the relation between text design and comprehension. Therefore, 80 first-year secondary school students read both a linear text and a networked hypertext with and without a graphical overview. Logfiles registered their navigation. After reading the text, students answered textbased multiple choice questions and drew mindmaps to assess their structural knowledge of each text content. It was found that both textbased and structural knowledge were lower after reading a networked hypertext than a linear text, especially in students with lower levels of vocabulary. Students took generally more time to read the hypertext than the linear text. We concluded that networked hypertexts are more challenging to read than linear texts and that students may benefit from explicit training on how to read hypertexts.9 p

    The impact of multisensory integration deficits on speech perception in children with autism spectrum disorders.

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    Speech perception is an inherently multisensory process. When having a face-to-face conversation, a listener not only hears what a speaker is saying, but also sees the articulatory gestures that accompany those sounds. Speech signals in visual and auditory modalities provide complementary information to the listener (Kavanagh and Mattingly, 1974), and when both are perceived in unison, behavioral gains in in speech perception are observed (Sumby and Pollack, 1954). Notably, this benefit is accentuated when speech is perceived in a noisy environment (Sumby and Pollack, 1954). To achieve a behavioral gain from multisensory processing of speech, however, the auditory and visual signals must be perceptually bound into a single, unified percept. The most commonly cited effect that demonstrates perceptual binding in audiovisual speech perception is the McGurk effect (McGurk and MacDonald, 1976), where a listener hears a speaker utter the syllable “ba,” and sees the speaker utter the syllable “ga.” When these two speech signals are perceptually bound, the listener perceives the speaker as having said “da” or “tha,” syllables that are not contained in either of the unisensory signals, resulting in a perceptual binding, or integration, of the speech signals (Calvert and Thesen, 2004)
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