7,972 research outputs found
Enacting Productive Dialogue: Addressing the Challenge that Non-Human Cognition Poses to Collaborations Between Enactivism and Heideggerian Phenomenology
This chapter uses one particular proposal for interdisciplinary collaboration – in this case, between early Heideggerian phenomenology and enactivist cognitive science – as an example of how such partnerships may confront and negotiate tensions between the perspectives they bring together. The discussion begins by summarising some of the intersections that render Heideggerian and enactivist thought promising interlocutors for each other. It then moves on to explore how Heideggerian enactivism could respond to the challenge of reconciling the significant differences in the ways that each discourse seeks to apply the structures it claims to uncover
Inner retinal inhibition shapes the receptive field of retinal ganglion cells in primate
The centre-surround organisation of receptive fields is a feature of most retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and is critical for spatial discrimination and contrast detection. Although lateral inhibitory processes are known to be important in generating the receptive field surround, the contribution of each of the two synaptic layers in the primate retina remains unclear. Here we studied the spatial organisation of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic inputs onto ON and OFF ganglion cells in the primate retina. All RGCs showed an increase in excitation in response to stimulus of preferred polarity. Inhibition onto RGCs comprised two types of responses to preferred polarity: some RGCs showed an increase in inhibition whilst others showed removal of tonic inhibition. Excitatory inputs were strongly spatially tuned but inhibitory inputs showed more variable organisation: in some neurons they were as strongly tuned as excitation, and in others inhibitory inputs showed no spatial tuning. We targeted one source of inner retinal inhibition by functionally ablating spiking amacrine cells with bath application of tetrodotoxin (TTX). TTX significantly reduced the spatial tuning of excitatory inputs. In addition, TTX reduced inhibition onto those RGCs where a stimulus of preferred polarity increased inhibition. Reconstruction of the spatial tuning properties by somatic injection of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic conductances verified that TTX-mediated inhibition onto bipolar cells increases the strength of the surround in RGC spiking output. These results indicate that in the primate retina inhibitory mechanisms in the inner plexiform layer sharpen the spatial tuning of ganglion cells. © 2013 The Physiological Society
Validation of the Italian version of the Burn Specific Health Scale-Brief
Introduction A growing awareness of psychological and functional impairment due to burns have led to the development of specific instruments to evaluate Quality of Life in this population, such as the Burn Specific Health Scale - Brief (BSHS-B), whose psychometric properties have been consistently verified. The aim of this study was to translate the BSHS-B into Italian and to investigate its reliability and validity. Methods Translation procedures were carried out according to accepted standards. Internal reliability was assessed using Cronbach's alpha coefficient. Concurrent validity was evaluated through correlations between the BSHS-B and the Short-Form 36 Health Survey (SF-36), the Self-report Clinical Inventory (SCL-90), and the Body Uneasiness Test (BUT). Results The overall Cronbach's alpha value for the scale was 0.887. Significant correlations were found between the Italian BSHS-B domains, the SF-36 subscales (Spearman's rho: 0.184-0.414), and several SCL-90 subscales (Spearman's rho: -0.173 to -0.477). Furthermore, the affect and relationship domain and the skin domain of the BSHS-B negatively correlated with the compulsive self-monitoring and depersonalization subscales of the BUT. Conclusion The Italian translation of BSHS-B has shown satisfactory internal consistency, criterion validity, and convergent validity, supporting its application in routine clinical practice as well as in international studies. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd and ISBI
Probabilistic abstract interpretation: From trace semantics to DTMC’s and linear regression
In order to perform probabilistic program analysis we need to consider probabilistic languages or languages with a probabilistic semantics, as well as a corresponding framework for the analysis which is able to accommodate probabilistic properties and properties of probabilistic computations. To this purpose we investigate the relationship between three different types of probabilistic semantics for a core imperative language, namely Kozen’s Fixpoint Semantics, our Linear Operator Semantics and probabilistic versions of Maximal Trace Semantics. We also discuss the relationship between Probabilistic Abstract Interpretation (PAI) and statistical or linear regression analysis. While classical Abstract Interpretation, based on Galois connection, allows only for worst-case analyses, the use of the Moore-Penrose pseudo inverse in PAI opens the possibility of exploiting statistical and noisy observations in order to analyse and identify various system properties
Classical and Quantum Solitons in the Symmetric Space Sine-Gordon Theories
We construct the soliton solutions in the symmetric space sine-Gordon
theories. The latter are a series of integrable field theories in
1+1-dimensions which are associated to a symmetric space F/G, and are related
via the Pohlmeyer reduction to theories of strings moving on symmetric spaces.
We show that the solitons are kinks that carry an internal moduli space that
can be identified with a particular co-adjoint orbit of the unbroken subgroup H
of G. Classically the solitons come in a continuous spectrum which encompasses
the perturbative fluctuations of the theory as the kink charge becomes small.
We show that the solitons can be quantized by allowing the collective
coordinates to be time-dependent to yield a form of quantum mechanics on the
co-adjoint orbit. The quantum states correspond to symmetric tensor
representations of the symmetry group H and have the interpretation of a fuzzy
geometric version of the co-adjoint orbit. The quantized finite tower of
soliton states includes the perturbative modes at the base.Comment: 53 pages, additional comments and small errors corrected, final
journal versio
"Freshwater killer whales": beaching behavior of an alien fish to hunt land birds
The behavioral strategies developed by predators to capture and kill their prey are fascinating, notably for predators that forage for prey at, or beyond, the boundaries of their ecosystem. We report here the occurrence of a beaching behavior used by an alien and large-bodied freshwater predatory fish (Silurus glanis) to capture birds on land (i.e. pigeons, Columbia livia). Among a total of 45 beaching behaviors observed and filmed, 28% were successful in bird capture. Stable isotope analyses (δ¹³C and δ¹⁵N) of predators and their putative prey revealed a highly variable dietary contribution of land birds among individuals. Since this extreme behavior has not been reported in the native range of the species, our results suggest that some individuals in introduced predator populations may adapt their behavior to forage on novel prey in new environments, leading to behavioral and trophic specialization to actively cross the water-land interface
Simplifying one-loop amplitudes in superstring theory
We show that 4-point vector boson one-loop amplitudes, computed in ref.[1] in
the RNS formalism, around vacuum configurations with open unoriented strings,
preserving at least N=1 SUSY in D=4, satisfy the correct supersymmetry Ward
identities, in that they vanish for non MHV configurations (++++) and (-+++).
In the MHV case (--++) we drastically simplify their expressions. We then study
factorisation and the limiting IR and UV behaviour and find some unexpected
results. In particular no massless poles are exposed at generic values of the
modular parameter. Relying on the supersymmetric properties of our bosonic
amplitudes, we extend them to manifestly supersymmetric super-amplitudes and
compare our results with those obtained in the D=4 hybrid formalism, pointing
out difficulties in reconciling the two approaches for contributions from N=1,2
sectors.Comment: 38 pages plus appendice
GCA in 2d
We make a detailed study of the infinite dimensional Galilean Conformal
Algebra (GCA) in the case of two spacetime dimensions. Classically, this
algebra is precisely obtained from a contraction of the generators of the
relativistic conformal symmetry in 2d. Here we find quantum mechanical
realisations of the (centrally extended) GCA by considering scaling limits of
certain 2d CFTs. These parent CFTs are non-unitary and have their left and
right central charges become large in magnitude and opposite in sign. We
therefore develop, in parallel to the usual machinery for 2d CFT, many of the
tools for the analysis of the quantum mechanical GCA. These include the
representation theory based on GCA primaries, Ward identities for their
correlation functions and a nonrelativistic Kac table. In particular, the null
vectors of the GCA lead to differential equations for the four point function.
The solution to these equations in the simplest case is explicitly obtained and
checked to be consistent with various requirements.Comment: 45 pages; v2: 47 pages. Restructured introduction, minor corrections,
added references. Journal versio
The Stokes Phenomenon and Quantum Tunneling for de Sitter Radiation in Nonstationary Coordinates
We study quantum tunneling for the de Sitter radiation in the planar
coordinates and global coordinates, which are nonstationary coordinates and
describe the expanding geometry. Using the phase-integral approximation for the
Hamilton-Jacobi action in the complex plane of time, we obtain the
particle-production rate in both coordinates and derive the additional
sinusoidal factor depending on the dimensionality of spacetime and the quantum
number for spherical harmonics in the global coordinates. This approach
resolves the factor of two problem in the tunneling method.Comment: LaTex 10 pages, no figur
On-shell Recursion in String Theory
We prove that all open string theory disc amplitudes in a flat background
obey Britto-Cachazo-Feng-Witten (BCFW) on-shell recursion relations, up to a
possible reality condition on a kinematic invariant. Arguments that the same
holds for tree level closed string amplitudes are given as well. Non-adjacent
BCFW-shifts are related to adjacent shifts through monodromy relations for
which we provide a novel CFT based derivation. All possible recursion relations
are related by old-fashioned string duality. The field theory limit of the
analysis for amplitudes involving gluons is explicitly shown to be smooth for
both the bosonic string as well as the superstring. In addition to a proof a
less rigorous but more powerful argument based on the underlying CFT is
presented which suggests that the technique may extend to a much more general
setting in string theory. This is illustrated by a discussion of the open
string in a constant B-field background and the closed string on the level of
the sphere.Comment: 36 + 9 pages text, one figure, v3: added discussion on relation to
old-fashioned factorization, typos corrected, published versio
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