488 research outputs found
On a periodic dividend barrier strategy in the dual model with continuous monitoring of solvency
postprin
Nutrição e produção de máteria seca de milho submetido a calagem e adubação sulfatada.
A calagem é uma prática indispensável para obtenção de altos rendimentos das culturas, em solos tropicais ácidos. Objetivou-se avaliar a nutrição e produção de matéria seca de milho, em solo submetido a calagem estimada por três métodos de cálculo e adubação sulfatada. O experimento foi desenvolvido em casa-de-vegetação, em tubos de PVC, com uma planta por tubo. Utilizou-se Latossolo Vermelho distrófico (LVd), sob vegetação nativa. Foi aplicado calcário dolomítico, tipo filler, nas doses de 4,2 Mg ha-1; 6,7 Mg ha-1; e 8,0 Mg ha-1, calculadas pelo método do alumínio trocável, cálcio e magnésio; método da elevação da saturação por bases; e método do tampão SMP, respectivamente, além do tratamento sem aplicação de calcário, combinados com três doses de S (10 mg dm-3, 30 mg dm-3 e 60 mg dm-3), mais o tratamento sem adição de enxofre. As plantas de milho foram colhidas aos 45 dias após a semeadura, sendo separada a parte aérea do sistema radicular. O método mais eficiente de recomendação de calagem para o milho foi o método da elevação da saturação por bases. A aplicação de doses de enxofre não teve efeito no desenvolvimento do milho, até o estádio avaliado
Distinct Contributions of Median Raphe Nucleus to Contextual Fear Conditioning and Fear-Potentiated Startle
Ascending 5-HT projections from the
median raphe nucleus (MRN), probably to the
hippocampus, are implicated in the acquisition
of contextual fear (background stimuli), as
assessed by freezing behavior. Foreground cues
like light, used as a conditioned stimulus (CS) in
classical fear conditioning, also cause freezing
through thalamic transmission to the amygdala.
As the MRN projects to the hippocampus and
amygdala, the role of this raphe nucleus in fear
conditioning to explicit cues remains to be
explained. Here we analyzed the behavior of
rats with MRN electrolytic lesions in a
contextual conditioning situation and in a fear-potentiated
startle procedure. The animals
received MRN electrolytic lesions either before
or on the day after two consecutive training
sessions in which they were submitted to 10
conditioning trials, each in an experimental
chamber (same context) where they. received
foot-shocks (0.6 mA, 1 sec) paired to a 4-sec
light CS. Seven to ten days later, the animals
were submitted to testing sessions for assessing
conditioned fear when they were placed for five
shocks, and the duration of contextual freezing
was recorded. The animals were then submitted
to a fear-potentiated startle in response to a 4-sec
light-CS, followed by white noise (100 dB, 50 ms). Control rats (sham) tested in the same
context showed more freezing than did rats
with pre- or post-training MRN lesions. Startle
was clearly potentiated in the presence of light CS in the sham-lesioned animals. Whereas pretraining
lesions reduced both freezing and fear-potentiated
startle, the post-training lesions
reduced only freezing to context, without
changing the fear-potentiated startle. In a
second experiment, neurotoxic lesions of the
MRN with local injections of N-methyl-D-aspartate
or the activation of 5-HT1A somatodendritic
auto-receptors of the MRN by
microinjections of the 5-HT1A receptor agonist
8-hydroxy- 2-(di-n-propylamino)tetralin (8-OH-DPAT)
before the training sessions also reduced
the amount of freezing and the fear-potentiated
startle. Freezing is a prominent response of
contextual fear conditioning, but does not seem
to be crucial for the enhancement of the startle
reflex by explicit aversive cues. As fear-potentiated
startle may be produced in posttraining
lesioned rats that are unable to freeze
to fear contextual stimuli, dissociable systems
seem to be recruited in each condition. Thus,
contextual fear and fear-potentiated startle are
conveyed by distinct 5-HT-mediated circuits of
the MRN
Risk Theory with Affine Dividend Payment Strategies
We consider a classical compound Poisson risk model with affine dividend payments. We illustrate how both by analytical and probabilistic techniques closed-form expressions for the expected discounted dividends until ruin and the Laplace transform of the time to ruin can be derived for exponentially distributed claim amounts. Moreover, numerical examples are given which compare the performance of the proposed strategy to classical barrier strategies and illustrate that such affine strategies can be a noteworthy compromise between profitability and safety in collective risk theory
«La relation de limitation et d’exception dans le français d’aujourd’hui : excepté, sauf et hormis comme pivots d’une relation algébrique »
L’analyse des emplois prépositionnels et des emplois conjonctifs d’ “excepté”, de “sauf” et d’ “hormis” permet d’envisager les trois prépositions/conjonctions comme le pivot d’un binôme, comme la plaque tournante d’une structure bipolaire. Placées au milieu du binôme, ces prépositions sont forcées par leur sémantisme originaire dûment métaphorisé de jouer le rôle de marqueurs d’inconséquence systématique entre l’élément se trouvant à leur gauche et celui qui se trouve à leur droite. L’opposition qui surgit entre les deux éléments n’est donc pas une incompatibilité naturelle, intrinsèque, mais extrinsèque, induite. Dans la plupart des cas (emplois limitatifs), cette opposition prend la forme d’un rapport entre une « classe » et le « membre (soustrait) de la classe », ou bien entre un « tout » et une « partie » ; dans d’autres (emplois exceptifs), cette opposition se manifeste au contraire comme une attaque de front portée par un « tout » à un autre « tout ». De plus, l’inconséquence induite mise en place par la préposition/conjonction paraît, en principe, tout à fait insurmontable. Dans l’assertion « les écureuils vivent partout, sauf en Australie » (que l’on peut expliciter par « Les écureuils vivent partout, sauf [qu’ils ne vivent pas] en Australie »), la préposition semble en effet capable d’impliquer le prédicat principal avec signe inverti, et de bâtir sur une telle implication une sorte de sous énoncé qui, à la rigueur, est totalement inconséquent avec celui qui le précède (si « les écureuils ne vivent pas en Australie », le fait qu’ils « vivent partout » est faux). Néanmoins, l’analyse montre qu’alors que certaines de ces oppositions peuvent enfin être dépassées, d’autres ne le peuvent pas. C’est, respectivement, le cas des relations limitatives et des relations exceptives. La relation limitative, impliquant le rapport « tout » - « partie », permet de résoudre le conflit dans les termes d’une somme algébrique entre deux sous énoncés pourvus de différent poids informatif et de signe contraire. Les valeurs numériques des termes de la somme étant déséquilibrées, le résultat est toujours autre que zéro. La relation exceptive, au contraire, qui n’implique pas le rapport « tout » - « partie », n’est pas capable de résoudre le conflit entre deux sous énoncés pourvus du même poids informatif et en même temps de signe contraire : les valeurs numériques des termes de la somme étant symétriques et égales, le résultat sera toujours équivalent à zéro
Existence and Optimality of -Non-adjacent Forms with an Algebraic Integer Base
We consider digital expansions in lattices with endomorphisms acting as base.
We focus on the -non-adjacent form (-NAF), where each block of
consecutive digits contains at most one non-zero digit. We prove that for
sufficiently large and an expanding endomorphism, there is a suitable digit
set such that each lattice element has an expansion as a -NAF.
If the eigenvalues of the endomorphism are large enough and is
sufficiently large, then the -NAF is shown to minimise the weight among all
possible expansions of the same lattice element using the same digit system
Water and Us: tales and hands-on laboratories to educate about sustainable and nonconflictual water resources management
Climate change and water security are among the grand challenges of the 21st century, but literacy on these matters among high-school students is often unsystematic and/or detached from the real world. This study aims to introduce the educational objectives, methods, and early results of “Water and Us”, a three-module initiative that can contribute to advancing water education in a warming climate by focusing on the natural and anthropogenic water cycle, climate change, and emerging water conflicts. The method of Water and Us revolves around storytelling to aid understanding and generate new knowledge, learning by doing, a flipped-classroom environment, and a constant link to examples from the real world (such as ongoing droughts across the world or seeds of conflict regarding transnational river basins). Water and Us was established in 2021–2022 and, during that school year, involved ≥200 students as part of a proof of concept to test the complete didactic approach using small-scale experiments. Results from ≥40 h of proof-of-concept events confirmed the effectiveness of this approach with respect to conveying the essential elements of the natural and anthropogenic water cycle, the most commonly recurring concepts related to climate change and water as well as the possible conflicts and solutions related to water scarcity in a warming climate. The Water and Us team remains interested in networking with colleagues and potential recipients to upscale and further develop this work.</p
Specialized active leprosy search strategies in an endemic area of the Brazilian Amazon identifies a hypermutated Mycobacterium leprae strain causing primary drug resistance
INTRODUCTION: Leprosy, an infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium leprae, remains a public health concern in endemic countries, particularly in Brazil. In this study, we conducted an active surveillance campaign in the hyperendemic city of Castanhal in the northeastern part of the state of Pará using clinical signs and symptoms combined with serological and molecular tools to diagnose new cases and to identify drug resistance of circulating M. leprae strains and their distribution in the community. METHODS: During an active surveillance of one week, we enrolled 318 individuals using three different strategies to enroll subjects for this study: (i) an active survey of previously treated cases from 2006 to 2016 found in the Brazil National Notifiable Disease Information System database (n = 23) and their healthy household contacts (HHC) (n = 57); (ii) an active survey of school children (SC) from two primary public schools in low-income neighborhoods (n = 178), followed by visits to the houses of these newly diagnosed SC (n = 7) to examine their HHC (n = 34) where we diagnosed additional new cases (n = 6); (iii) and those people who spontaneously presented themselves to our team or the local health center with clinical signs and/or symptoms of leprosy (n = 6) with subsequent follow-up of their HHC when the case was confirmed (n = 20) where we diagnosed two additional cases (n = 2). Individuals received a dermato-neurological examination, 5 ml of peripheral blood was collected to assess the anti-PGL-I titer by ELISA and intradermal earlobe skin scrapings were taken from HHC and cases for amplification of the M. leprae RLEP region by qPCR. RESULTS: Anti-PGL-I positivity was highest in the new leprosy case group (52%) followed by the treated group (40.9%), HHC (40%) and lowest in SC (24.6%). RLEP qPCR from SSS was performed on 124 individuals, 22 in treated cases, 24 in newly diagnosed leprosy cases, and 78 in HHC. We detected 29.0% (36/124) positivity overall in this sample set. The positivity in treated cases was 31.8% (7/22), while in newly diagnosed leprosy cases the number of positives were higher, 45.8% (11/23) and lower in HHC at 23.7% (18/76). Whole genome sequencing of M. leprae from biopsies of three infected individuals from one extended family revealed a hypermutated M. leprae strain in an unusual case of primary drug resistance while the other two strains were drug sensitive. DISCUSSION: This study represents the extent of leprosy in an active surveillance campaign during a single week in the city of Castanhal, a city that we have previously surveyed several times during the past ten years. Our results indicate the continuing high transmission of leprosy that includes fairly high rates of new cases detected in children indicating recent spread by multiple foci of infection in the community. An unusual case of a hypermutated M. leprae strain in a case of primary drug resistance was discovered. It also revealed a high hidden prevalence of overt disease and subclinical infection that remains a challenge for correct clinical diagnosis by signs and symptoms that may be aided using adjunct laboratory tests, such as RLEP qPCR and anti-PGL-I serology
Perceptions of the targets and sources of COVID-19 threat are structured by group memberships and responses are influenced by identification with humankind
This research was supported by a grant from the German Research Foundation awarded to RvD, NMJ, and JAH (DI 848/15-1 and HA 6455/4-1). Data collection for this study was supported by a grant from the association of friends and supporters (Freunde & Förderer) at Goethe University.The purpose of this study was to investigate which social groups are perceived as a threat target and which are perceived as a threat source during the COVID-19 outbreak. In a German sample (N = 1454) we examined perceptions of social groups ranging from those that are psychologically close and smaller (family, friends, neighbors) to those that are more distal and larger (people living in Germany, humankind). We hypothesized that psychologically closer groups would be perceived as less affected by COVID-19 as well as less threatening than more psychologically distal groups. Based on social identity theorizing, we also hypothesized that stronger identification with humankind would change these patterns. Furthermore, we explored how these threat perceptions relate to adherence to COVID-19 health guidelines. In line with our hypotheses, latent random-slope modelling revealed that psychologically distal and larger groups were perceived as more affected by COVID-19 and as more threatening than psychologically closer and smaller groups. Including identification with humankind as a predictor into the threat target model resulted in a steeper increase in threat target perception patterns, whereas identification with humankind did not predict differences in threat source perceptions. Additionally, an increase in threat source perceptions across social groups was associated with more adherence to health guidelines, whereas an increase in threat target perceptions was not. We fully replicated these findings in a subgroup from the original sample (N = 989) four weeks later. We argue that societal recovery from this and other crises will be supported by an inclusive approach informed by a sense of our common identity as human beings.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
A trouble shared is a trouble halved : the role of family identification and identification with humankind in well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic
This research was supported by a grant from the German Research Foundation awarded to RvD, NMJ, and JAH (DI 848/15-1 and HA 6455/4-1). The data collection for this study was supported by a grant from the association of friends and supporters (Freunde & Förderer) at Goethe University.The COVID-19 pandemic has triggered health-related anxiety in ways that undermine peoples’ mental and physical health. Contextual factors such as living in a high-risk area might further increase the risk of health deterioration. Based on the Social Identity Approach, we argue that social identities can not only be local that are characterized by social interactions, but also be global that are characterized by a symbolic sense of togetherness and that both of these can be a basis for health. In line with these ideas, we tested how identification with one’s family and with humankind relates to stress and physical symptoms while experiencing health-related anxiety and being exposed to contextual risk factors. We tested our assumptions in a representative sample (N = 974) two-wave survey study with a 4-week time lag. The results show that anxiety at Time 1 was positively related to stress and physical symptoms at Time 2. Feeling exposed to risk factors related to lower physical health, but was unrelated to stress. Family identification and identification with humankind were both negatively associated with subsequent stress and family identification was negatively associated with subsequent physical symptoms. These findings suggest that for social identities to be beneficial for mental health, they can be embodied as well as symbolic.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
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