2,639 research outputs found
Investigating Gaze of Children with ASD in Naturalistic Settings.
BACKGROUND: Visual behavior is known to be atypical in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD). Monitor-based eye-tracking studies have measured several of these atypicalities in individuals with Autism. While atypical behaviors are known to be accentuated during natural interactions, few studies have been made on gaze behavior in natural interactions. In this study we focused on i) whether the findings done in laboratory settings are also visible in a naturalistic interaction; ii) whether new atypical elements appear when studying visual behavior across the whole field of view.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Ten children with ASD and ten typically developing children participated in a dyadic interaction with an experimenter administering items from the Early Social Communication Scale (ESCS). The children wore a novel head-mounted eye-tracker, measuring gaze direction and presence of faces across the child's field of view. The analysis of gaze episodes to faces revealed that children with ASD looked significantly less and for shorter lapses of time at the experimenter. The analysis of gaze patterns across the child's field of view revealed that children with ASD looked downwards and made more extensive use of their lateral field of view when exploring the environment.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The data gathered in naturalistic settings confirm findings previously obtained only in monitor-based studies. Moreover, the study allowed to observe a generalized strategy of lateral gaze in children with ASD when they were looking at the objects in their environment
Light-ion production in the interaction of 96 MeV neutrons with oxygen
Double-differential cross sections for light-ion (p, d, t, He-3 and alpha)
production in oxygen, induced by 96 MeV neutrons are reported. Energy spectra
are measured at eight laboratory angles from 20 degrees to 160 degrees in steps
of 20 degrees. Procedures for data taking and data reduction are presented.
Deduced energy-differential and production cross sections are reported.
Experimental cross sections are compared to theoretical reaction model
calculations and experimental data at lower neutron energies in the literature.
The measured proton data agree reasonably well with the results of the model
calculations, whereas the agreement for the other particles is less convincing.
The measured production cross sections for protons, deuterons, tritons and
alpha particles support the trends suggested by data at lower energies.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Measurement of the Absolute np Scattering Differential Cross Section at 194 MeV
We describe a double-scattering experiment with a novel tagged neutron beam
to measure differential cross sections for np back-scattering to better than 2%
absolute precision. The measurement focuses on angles and energies where the
cross section magnitude and angle-dependence constrain the charged pion-nucleon
coupling constant, but existing data show serious discrepancies among
themselves and with energy-dependent partial wave analyses (PWA). The present
results are in good accord with the PWA, but deviate systematically from other
recent measurements.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Bergman kernel and complex singularity exponent
We give a precise estimate of the Bergman kernel for the model domain defined
by where
is a holomorphic map from to ,
in terms of the complex singularity exponent of .Comment: to appear in Science in China, a special issue dedicated to Professor
Zhong Tongde's 80th birthda
Unraveling the consecutive recombination events in the human IGK locus
In addition to the classical Vkappa-Jkappa, Vkappa-kappa deleting element
(Kde), and intron-Kde gene rearrangements, atypical recombinations
involving Jkappa recombination signal sequence (RSS) or intronRSS elements
can occur in the Igkappa (IGK) locus, as observed in human B cell
malignancies. In-depth analysis revealed that atypical
JkappaRSS-intronRSS, Vkappa-intronRSS, and JkappaRSS-Kde recombinations
not only occur in B cell malignancies, but rather reflect physiological
gene rearrangements present in normal human B cells as well. Excision
circle analysis and recombination substrate assays can discriminate
between single-step vs multistep rearrangements. Using this combined
approach, we unraveled that the atypical Vkappa-intronRSS and
JkappaRSS-Kde pseudohybrid joints most probably result from ongoing
recombination following an initial aberrant JkappaRSS-intronRSS signal
joint formation. Based on our observations in normal and malignant human B
cells, a model is presented to describe the sequential (classical and
atypical) recombination events in the human IGK locus and their estimated
relative frequencies (0.2-1.0 vs < 0.03). The initial JkappaRSS-intronRSS
signal joint formation (except for Jkappa1RSS-intronRSS) might be a side
event of an active V(D)J recombination mechanism, but the subsequent
formation of Vkappa-intronRSS and JkappaRSS-Kde pseudohybrid joints can
represent an alternative pathway for IGK allele inactivation and allelic
exclusion, in addition to classical Ckappa deletions. Although usage of
this alternative pathway is limited, it seems essential for inactivation
of those IGK alleles that have undergone initial aberrant recombinations,
which might otherwise hamper selection of functional Ig L chain proteins
Light-ion production in the interaction of 96 MeV neutrons with silicon
Double-differential cross sections for light-ion (p, d, t, He-3 and alpha)
production in silicon, induced by 96 MeV neutrons are reported. Energy spectra
are measured at eight laboratory angles, ranging from 20 degrees to 160 degrees
in steps of 20 degrees. Procedures for data taking and data reduction are
presented. Deduced energy-differential, angle-differential and production cross
sections are reported. Experimental cross sections are compared to theoretical
reaction model calculations and experimental data in the literature.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, added wrap-around correction (see section 4.3)
leading to changed cross-sections and figures, accepted Phys. Rev.
Measurement of the Absolute Differential Cross Section for np Elastic Scattering at 194 MeV
A tagged medium-energy neutron beam has been used in a precise measurement of
the absolute differential cross section for np back-scattering. The results
resolve significant discrepancies within the np database concerning the angular
dependence in this regime. The experiment has determined the absolute
normalization with 1.5% uncertainty, suitable to verify constraints of
supposedly comparable precision that arise from the rest of the database in
partial wave analyses. The analysis procedures, especially those associated
with evaluation of systematic errors in the experiment, are described in detail
so that systematic uncertainties may be included in a reasonable way in
subsequent partial wave analysis fits incorporating the present results.Comment: 22 pages, 21 figures, submitted for publication in Physical Review
Incremental QBF Solving
We consider the problem of incrementally solving a sequence of quantified
Boolean formulae (QBF). Incremental solving aims at using information learned
from one formula in the process of solving the next formulae in the sequence.
Based on a general overview of the problem and related challenges, we present
an approach to incremental QBF solving which is application-independent and
hence applicable to QBF encodings of arbitrary problems. We implemented this
approach in our incremental search-based QBF solver DepQBF and report on
implementation details. Experimental results illustrate the potential benefits
of incremental solving in QBF-based workflows.Comment: revision (camera-ready, to appear in the proceedings of CP 2014,
LNCS, Springer
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