127 research outputs found

    Cultural Differences in Perceptual Reorganization in US and Pirahã Adults

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    Visual illusions and other perceptual phenomena can be used as tools to uncover the otherwise hidden constructive processes that give rise to perception. Although many perceptual processes are assumed to be universal, variable susceptibility to certain illusions and perceptual effects across populations suggests a role for factors that vary culturally. One striking phenomenon is seen with two-tone images—photos reduced to two tones: black and white. Deficient recognition is observed in young children under conditions that trigger automatic recognition in adults. Here we show a similar lack of cue-triggered perceptual reorganization in the Pirahã, a hunter-gatherer tribe with limited exposure to modern visual media, suggesting such recognition is experience- and culture-specific

    Nonfiction Book Leisure Reading Interests of High School Juniors at Columbus High School, Waterloo, Iowa

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    The purpose of this study was to determine the nonfiction leisure reading interests of one-hundred and thirty juniors at Columbus High School in Waterloo, Iowa. The results of the survey revealed that one-third of the students read in their free time. Thirty-four percent of those who reported reading in their leisure time, choose to read nonfiction books. Twenty-four percent of the subjects believed that the purpose of nonfiction books was a combination of completing schoolwork and satisfying personal curiosity. The students also reported that the areas of sports and biography or autobiography were the two subjects they most liked to read about

    A coupling matrix vision for mobile filtering devices with micro-acoustic wave technologies. A systematic approach

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    Con el espectro radioeléctrico cada vez más saturado, los filtros y duplexores son elementos claves de la tecnología en el mercado de dispositivos discretos para la telefonía móvil. El segmento de usuario de los sistemas de comunicaciones inalámbricas aprovecha las destacadas propiedades de los dispositivos filtrantes basados en resonadores acústicos. Generalmente, el diseño de dispositivos de onda acústica ha sido asumido por técnicas de optimización debido a las restrictivas limitaciones impuestas por la viabilidad tecnológica de los resonadores SAW y BAW, así como las exigentes especificaciones eléctricas. Una respuesta de transmisión muy restrictiva y factores tecnológicos muy limitantes conducen a hacer el diseño más y más complejo y una tarea muy desafiante. El objetivo del trabajo está enfocado en facilitar el diseño de filtros/duplexores y hacerlo más eficiente. En consecuencia, la formulación inicial del problema se ha centrado en la viabilidad tecnológica para implementar filtros de onda acústica. Proporcionar una metodología sistemática es útil para acelerar la curva de aprendizaje de nuevos diseñadores. Los filtros de microondas con elevada selectividad son posibles si sus funciones de transferencia incorporan ceros de transmisión finitos. La introducción de nodos no-resonantes (NRN) da la posibilidad de diseñar filtros con el máximo número de ceros de transmisión finitos sin tener que implementar acoplamientos directos entre la fuente y la carga. Además, las configuraciones en línea con NRN permiten la extracción de los elementos analíticamente. La típica configuración de filtro ladder presenta similitudes características de acuerdo con las redes de prototipo en línea con nodos resonantes y no-resonantes, que son las propiedades de modularidad, para controlar los ceros de transmisión con resonadores independientes, y respuestas completamente canonícas sin acoplamiento fuente-carga directo. Los elementos de la red pasobanda son dados por ecuaciones explícitas en términos de aquellos en los prototipos en línea con NRN que pueden ser sintetizados analíticamente. Como consecuencia, es posible definir una metodología de síntesis directa para obtener los parámetros pasobanda eléctricos de un filtro RF general que está basado en resonadores acústicos. Este trabajo presenta una metodología que proporciona un procedimiento de síntesis sistemático para diseñar filtros y duplexores ladder basados en resonadores de onda micro-acústica. La metodología de diseño utiliza un enfoque nodal basado en NRN y nodos resonantes. La representación de la red mediante una matriz de acoplamiento mixta de nodos resonantes y no resonantes es capaz de gestionar de forma eficiente las restricciones tecnológicas. El procedimiento es eficiente en tiempo, preciso en los resultados y proporciona un profundo entendimiento de las particulares interacciones que se producen entre las restricciones tecnológicas y el funcionamiento del dispositivo. Un completo paquete de software, con un simulador rápido, preciso y de fácil uso, ha sido desarrollado, permitiendo obtener diseños de primera etapa exitosos. Como resultado de la metodología sistemática, hemos desarrollado un método de diseño que combina y sistemáticamente gestiona redes filtrantes compuestas de bloques de polo extraído con bloques de resonadores acoplados, es decir, celdas ladder con secciones CRF. Además, la metodología has sido extendida exitosamente para tener en cuenta el diseño de divisores de potencia con respuesta filtrante por medio de dos topologías diferentes: la configuración ladder y las secciones CRF. La metodología propuesta ofrece una solución que combina el completo cumplimiento de las máscaras de espectro con topologías preparadas para acomodar las restricciones tecnológicas de la tecnología micro-acústica. La metodología ha sido desarrollada orientada nativamente a gestionar la tecnología, como es el ajuste de la limitación en el acoplo electromagnético, y basada en fundamentos de síntesis rigurosos.With a spectrum more and more overcrowded, filters and duplexers are drivers of the technology in the discrete device mobile market. The user segment of wireless communication systems takes profit of the outstanding performance of filtering devices based on acoustic resonators. Usually, the design of acoustic wave devices have been mainly entrusted to optimization techniques because the stringent constraints imposed by the technological feasibility of SAW and BAW resonators and the challenging electrical specifications. A stringent transmission response and very restrictive technological factors lead the design to a more and more complex and challenging task. The aim of the work is focused on easing the filters/duplexers designs and making it more efficient. Consequently, the initial formulation of the problem was focused on the technological feasibility of acoustic wave filters. Providing a systematic methodology is useful to accelerate the learning curve of new entrant designers. Microwave filters with high selectivity are possible if their transfer functions incorporates finite transmission zeros. The inclusion of non-resonant nodes gives the possibility of designing filters with the maximum number of finite transmission zeros without implementing direct couplings between source and load. Furthermore, inline configuration with NRN allows the extraction of the elements analytically. The common ladder filter configuration exhibits characteristic similarities regarding inline prototype networks with resonant and non-resonant nodes, which are the property of modularity, to control transmission zeros by independent resonators, and fully canonical response without a direct source-load coupling. The elements of the lowpass prototype are given by explicit equations in terms of those in in-line prototypes with non-resonating nodes that can be synthesized analytically. As a consequence it is possible to define a direct synthesis methodology to obtain the bandpass electric parameters of a general RF filter that is based on acoustic resonators. This work presents a methodology that provides a systematic synthesis procedure for designing ladder filters and duplexers based on acoustic wave resonators. The methodology uses a nodal approach based on resonating and non-resonating nodes. The coupling matrix representation with a mix of different nature nodes, resonant and non-resonant, is able to efficiently manage the technological restrictions. The procedure is time efficient, precise in the outcomes and provides a deep understanding of the particular interactions between technological constraints and device performance. A complete software package with fast, accurate and easy-to-use simulator has been developed, enabling starting point design success. As a result of the systematic methodology, we have developed a design method that combines and systematically manages a filtering network composed of extracted-pole blocks with coupling resonators blocks, so it is ladder cells with CRF sections. Moreover, the methodology has been successfully extended to take into consideration filtering power dividers by means of two different topologies: ladder configuration and CRF sections. The proposed methodology offers a solution that combines a complete spectrum fulfillment with topologies ready to accommodate technological constraints of micro-acoustics technologies. The methodology has been developed natively oriented to manage with the technology, such as accommodating electromechanical coupling constraints, leveraged in rigorous synthesis foundations

    The emergence of synaesthesia in a Neuronal Network Model via changes in perceptual sensitivity and plasticity

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    Synaesthesia is an unusual perceptual experience in which an inducer stimulus triggers a percept in a different domain in addition to its own. To explore the conditions under which synaesthesia evolves, we studied a neuronal network model that represents two recurrently connected neural systems. The interactions in the network evolve according to learning rules that optimize sensory sensitivity. We demonstrate several scenarios, such as sensory deprivation or heightened plasticity, under which synaesthesia can evolve even though the inputs to the two systems are statistically independent and the initial cross-talk interactions are zero. Sensory deprivation is the known causal mechanism for acquired synaesthesia and increased plasticity is implicated in developmental synaesthesia. The model unifies different causes of synaesthesia within a single theoretical framework and repositions synaesthesia not as some quirk of aberrant connectivity, but rather as a functional brain state that can emerge as a consequence of optimising sensory information processing

    Capacity development in food composition database management and nutritional research and education in Central and Eastern European, Middle Eastern and North African countries

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    Background/Objectives: Capacity development (CD) in food and nutrition is much more than formal training and includes human resource development, and organisational, institutional and legal framework development with the aim of enhancing nutrition-relevant knowledge and skills to support infrastructural development. The goal of the European Food Information Resource (EuroFIR) Network of Excellence has been to develop and integrate food composition data throughout Europe. EuroFIR joined forces in CD with the United Nations (UN) University and UN System Standing Committee on Nutrition, the Network for Capacity Development in Nutrition in Central and Eastern Europe, the Central and Eastern European Countries Food Data Systems network and with the Middle East and North African Capacity Building Initiative. The aim of this paper is to discuss an inventory of the status of food composition databases (FCDBs) and the training needs of compilers in non-EuroFIR countries in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) and in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), and to present the CD achieved through EuroFIR and other network collaborations. Subjects/Methods: Two online questionnaires were created addressing the FCDB status and specific training needs in countries of the targeted regions. Data were collected during 2006-2008 and then analysed. Subsequently, CD activities were organised. Results: Contacts were established in 19 CEE and 7 MENA countries, of which several had national food composition tables, but no electronic versions. Education, training, workshops, networking and the sharing of experiences were uniformly requested. Subsequently, CD activities in EuroFIR were organised focussing on food composition courses, exchange visits, workshops and individual training for PhD students, junior scientists and other staff categories, as well as conferences linked to food composition research and food information. To facilitate CD activities, EuroFIR has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovenia, Croatia and Estonia. Conclusions: EuroFIR has created training activities that complement national activities. Collaboration with other networks has provided an overview of FCDB status and training needs, providing directions for CD activities in those countries. This provides a platform for new funding and further development and networking for CD, which would be conducive to European Commission objectives and public health strategies for CD. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2010) 64, S134-S138; doi:10.1038/ejcn.2010.22

    Nitric oxide of human colorectal adenocarcinoma cell lines promotes tumour cell invasion

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    The present study investigates the role of nitric oxide and the involvement of nitric oxide synthase II isoform on the invasion of human colorectal adenocarcinoma cell lines HRT-18 and HT-29. HRT-18 cells, which constitutively express nitric oxide synthase II mRNA were three-fold more invasive in a Matrigel® invasion assay than nitric oxide synthase II mRNA negative HT-29 cells. Treatment of HT-29 cells with the nitric oxide donor Deta NONOate (50 nM) as well as induction of nitric oxide synthase II mRNA and production of endogenous nitric oxide by inflammatory cytokines (IFN-γ and IL-1α) increased the invasiveness of HT-29 cells by approximately 40% and 75%, respectively. In HT-29 cells nitric oxide synthase II mRNA was also induced in co-culture with human monocytes. The invasiveness of HRT-18 cells and stimulated HT-29 cells was partly inhibited by the nitric oxide synthase II inhibitor 1400 W. These results show that nitric oxide increases the invasion of human colorectal adenocarcinoma cell lines HRT-18 and HT-29, and the involvement of nitric oxide synthase II isoform in tumour cell invasion. Therefore, the production of nitric oxide and secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines by tumour-associated macrophages, which in turn induce nitric oxide synthase II isoform in tumour cells, promotes tumour cell invasiveness

    Do Synesthetes Have a General Advantage in Visual Search and Episodic Memory? A Case for Group Studies

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    BACKGROUND: Some studies, most of them case-reports, suggest that synesthetes have an advantage in visual search and episodic memory tasks. The goal of this study was to examine this hypothesis in a group study. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In the present study, we tested thirteen grapheme-color synesthetes and we compared their performance on a visual search task and a memory test to an age-, handedness-, education-, and gender-matched control group. The results showed no significant group differences (all relevant ps>.50). For the visual search task effect sizes indicated a small advantage for synesthetes (Cohen's d between .19 and .32). No such advantage was found for episodic memory (Cohen's d<.05). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The results indicate that synesthesia per se does not seem to lead to a strong performance advantage. Rather, the superior performance of synesthetes observed in some case-report studies may be due to individual differences, to a selection bias or to a strategic use of synesthesia as a mnemonic. In order to establish universal effects of synesthesia on cognition single-case studies must be complemented by group studies

    The histidine kinase AHK5 integrates endogenous and environmental signals in <em>Arabidopsis</em> guard cells

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    Background: Stomatal guard cells monitor and respond to environmental and endogenous signals such that the stomatal aperture is continually optimised for water use efficiency. A key signalling molecule produced in guard cells in response to plant hormones, light, carbon dioxide and pathogen-derived signals is hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). The mechanisms by which H2O2 integrates multiple signals via specific signalling pathways leading to stomatal closure is not known. Principal Findings: Here, we identify a pathway by which H2O2, derived from endogenous and environmental stimuli, is sensed and transduced to effect stomatal closure. Histidine kinases (HK) are part of two-component signal transduction systems that act to integrate environmental stimuli into a cellular response via a phosphotransfer relay mechanism. There is little known about the function of the HK AHK5 in Arabidopsis thaliana. Here we report that in addition to the predicted cytoplasmic localisation of this protein, AHK5 also appears to co-localise to the plasma membrane. Although AHK5 is expressed at low levels in guard cells, we identify a unique role for AHK5 in stomatal signalling. Arabidopsis mutants lacking AHK5 show reduced stomatal closure in response to H2O2, which is reversed by complementation with the wild type gene. Over-expression of AHK5 results in constitutively less stomatal closure. Abiotic stimuli that generate endogenous H2O2, such as darkness, nitric oxide and the phytohormone ethylene, also show reduced stomatal closure in the ahk5 mutants. However, ABA caused closure, dark adaptation induced H2O2 production and H2O2 induced NO synthesis in mutants. Treatment with the bacterial pathogen associated molecular pattern (PAMP) flagellin, but not elf peptide, also exhibited reduced stomatal closure and H2O2 generation in ahk5 mutants. Significance: Our findings identify an integral signalling function for AHK5 that acts to integrate multiple signals via H2O2 homeostasis and is independent of ABA signalling in guard cells

    Illusions of Visual Motion Elicited by Electrical Stimulation of Human MT Complex

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    Human cortical area MT+ (hMT+) is known to respond to visual motion stimuli, but its causal role in the conscious experience of motion remains largely unexplored. Studies in non-human primates demonstrate that altering activity in area MT can influence motion perception judgments, but animal studies are inherently limited in assessing subjective conscious experience. In the current study, we use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), intracranial electrocorticography (ECoG), and electrical brain stimulation (EBS) in three patients implanted with intracranial electrodes to address the role of area hMT+ in conscious visual motion perception. We show that in conscious human subjects, reproducible illusory motion can be elicited by electrical stimulation of hMT+. These visual motion percepts only occurred when the site of stimulation overlapped directly with the region of the brain that had increased fMRI and electrophysiological activity during moving compared to static visual stimuli in the same individual subjects. Electrical stimulation in neighboring regions failed to produce illusory motion. Our study provides evidence for the sufficient causal link between the hMT+ network and the human conscious experience of visual motion. It also suggests a clear spatial relationship between fMRI signal and ECoG activity in the human brain
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