72 research outputs found
Kimberley Research Station progress report, 1964 : soil fertility and plant nutrition
BEFORE 1963, very little work, other than that described in Burvill\u27s original report, had been done on the analysis of Ord soils, nor had their fertility status been clearly defined
Enhanced Syllable Discrimination Thresholds in Musicians
Speech processing inherently relies on the perception of specific, rapidly changing spectral and temporal acoustic features. Advanced acoustic perception is also integral to musical expertise, and accordingly several studies have demonstrated a significant relationship between musical training and superior processing of various aspects of speech. Speech and music appear to overlap in spectral and temporal features; however, it remains unclear which of these acoustic features, crucial for speech processing, are most closely associated with musical training. The present study examined the perceptual acuity of musicians to the acoustic components of speech necessary for intra-phonemic discrimination of synthetic syllables. We compared musicians and non-musicians on discrimination thresholds of three synthetic speech syllable continua that varied in their spectral and temporal discrimination demands, specifically voice onset time (VOT) and amplitude envelope cues in the temporal domain. Musicians demonstrated superior discrimination only for syllables that required resolution of temporal cues. Furthermore, performance on the temporal syllable continua positively correlated with the length and intensity of musical training. These findings support one potential mechanism by which musical training may selectively enhance speech perception, namely by reinforcing temporal acuity and/or perception of amplitude rise time, and implications for the translation of musical training to long-term linguistic abilities.Grammy FoundationWilliam F. Milton Fun
Beat synchronization across the lifespan: intersection of development and musical experience
Rhythmic entrainment, or beat synchronization, provides an opportunity to understand how multiple systems operate together to integrate sensory-motor information. Also, synchronization is an essential component of musical performance that may be enhanced through musical training. Investigations of rhythmic entrainment have revealed a developmental trajectory across the lifespan, showing synchronization improves with age and musical experience. Here, we explore the development and maintenance of synchronization in childhood through older adulthood in a large cohort of participants (N = 145), and also ask how it may be altered by musical experience. We employed a uniform assessment of beat synchronization for all participants and compared performance developmentally and between individuals with and without musical experience. We show that the ability to consistently tap along to a beat improves with age into adulthood, yet in older adulthood tapping performance becomes more variable. Also, from childhood into young adulthood, individuals are able to tap increasingly close to the beat (i.e., asynchronies decline with age), however, this trend reverses from younger into older adulthood. There is a positive association between proportion of life spent playing music and tapping performance, which suggests a link between musical experience and auditory-motor integration. These results are broadly consistent with previous investigations into the development of beat synchronization across the lifespan, and thus complement existing studies and present new insights offered by a different, large cross-sectional sample
Evidence for Shared Cognitive Processing of Pitch in Music and Language
Language and music epitomize the complex representational and computational capacities of the human mind. Strikingly similar in their structural and expressive features, a longstanding question is whether the perceptual and cognitive mechanisms underlying these abilities are shared or distinct – either from each other or from other mental processes. One prominent feature shared between language and music is signal encoding using pitch, conveying pragmatics and semantics in language and melody in music. We investigated how pitch processing is shared between language and music by measuring consistency in individual differences in pitch perception across language, music, and three control conditions intended to assess basic sensory and domain-general cognitive processes. Individuals’ pitch perception abilities in language and music were most strongly related, even after accounting for performance in all control conditions. These results provide behavioral evidence, based on patterns of individual differences, that is consistent with the hypothesis that cognitive mechanisms for pitch processing may be shared between language and music.National Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research Fellowship ProgramEunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (U.S.) (Grant 5K99HD057522
Pigeonpea nutrition and its improvement
Pigeonpea (Cajanus cajan [L.] Millsp.), known by several
vernacular and names such as red gram, tuar, Angola
pea. yellow dhal and oil dhal, is one of the major grain legume crops of
the tropics and sub-tropics. It is a crop of small holder dryland
fmmers because it can grow well under subsistence level of agriculture
and provides nutritive food, fodder, and fuel wood. It also improves soil
by fixing atmospheric nitrogen. India by far is the largest pigeonpea producer
it is consumed as decorticated split peas, popularly called as
'dhaL' In other countries, its consumption as whole dty and green
vegetable is popular. Its foliage is used as fodder and milling by-products
[onn an excellent feed for domestic animals. Pigeonpea seeds contain
about 20-22% protein and appreciable amounts of essential amino.acids
and minerals. DehuHing and boiling treatments of seeds get rid of the
most antinutritional factors as tannins and enzyme inhibitors. Seed
storage causes considerable losses in the quality of this legume. The seed
protein of pigeonpea has been successfully enhanced by breeding from
20-22% to 28-30%. Such lines also agronomically performed well and
have acceptable and color. The high-protein lines were found nutritionally superior to the cultivars because they would provide more
quantities of utilizable protein and sulfur-containing amino acids
Kimberley Research Station progress report, 1964 : agronomy of pasture and fodder crops
EARLIER reports mentioned the wide range of pasture and fodder plants tried at Kimberley Research Station since the station began (Anon. 1958; Anon. 1960).
In an attempt to classify the performance of many of these plants,together with more recently introduced species and varieties, several hundred legumes and grasses were planted in the nursery , on Cununurra clay during 1963 and 1964
Minimum-Weight Design of Thin-Walled Cylinders Subject to Flexural and Torsional Stiffness Constraints
We consider the problem of determining the cross-sectional shape of a thin-walled cylinder of constant (unknown) wall thickness and given contour length that uses the least possible material to achieve prescribed minimum stiffness in torsion and bending. The corresponding variational problem is shown to belong to a class with nonadditive functionals whose Euler equation is an integrodifferential equation. Cross-sectional shapes are presented for various stiffness ratios and compared with circular and elliptical cylinders.</jats:p
Subcortical neural synchrony and absolute thresholds predict frequency discrimination independently
The neural mechanisms of pitch coding have been debated for more than a century. The two main mechanisms are coding based on the profiles of neural firing rates across auditory nerve fibers with different characteristic frequencies (place-rate coding), and coding based on the phase-locked temporal pattern of neural firing (temporal coding). Phase locking precision can be partly assessed by recording the frequency-following response (FFR), a scalp-recorded electrophysiological response that reflects synchronous activity in subcortical neurons. Although features of the FFR have been widely used as indices of pitch coding acuity, only a handful of studies have directly investigated the relation between the FFR and behavioral pitch judgments. Furthermore, the contribution of degraded neural synchrony (as indexed by the FFR) to the pitch perception impairments of older listeners and those with hearing loss is not well known. Here, the relation between the FFR and pure-tone frequency discrimination was investigated in listeners with a wide range of ages and absolute thresholds, to assess the respective contributions of subcortical neural synchrony and other age-related and hearing loss-related mechanisms to frequency discrimination performance. FFR measures of neural synchrony and absolute thresholds independently contributed to frequency discrimination performance. Age alone, i.e., once the effect of subcortical neural synchrony measures or absolute thresholds had been partialed out, did not contribute to frequency discrimination. Overall, the results suggest that frequency discrimination of pure tones may depend both on phase locking precision and on separate mechanisms affected in hearing loss
Minimum-Weight Design of Thin-Walled Cylinders Subject to Flexural and Torsional Stiffness Constraints
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