6,567 research outputs found
Signal strength determines the nature of the relationship between perception and working memory
Neurophysiological and behavioral studies have shown that perception and memory share neural substrates and functional properties. But are perception and the active working memory of a stimulus one and the same? To address this question in the spatial domain, we compared the percept and the working memory of the position of a target stimulus embedded within a surround of moving dots. Motion in a particular direction after the target's offset biased the memory of target location in the same direction. However, motion simultaneous with a high-contrast, perceptually strong target biased the percept of target location in the opposite direction. Thus, perception and working memory can be modified by motion in qualitatively different ways. Manipulations to strengthen the memory trace had no effect on the direction of the memory bias, indicating that memory signal strength can never equal that of the percept of a strong stimulus. However, the percept of a weak stimulus was biased in the direction of motion. Thus, although perception and working memory are not inherently different, they can differ behaviorally depending on the strength of the perceptual signal. Understanding how a changing surround biases neural representations in general, and postsensory processes in particular, can help one understand past reports of spatial mislocalization
Small Scale Anisotropies of UHECRs from Super-Heavy Halo Dark Matter
The decay of very heavy metastable relics of the Early Universe can produce
ultra-high energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) in the halo of our own Galaxy. In this
model, no Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin cutoff is expected because of the short
propagation distances. We show here that, as a consequence of the hierarchical
build up of the halo, this scenario predicts the existence of small scale
anisotropies in the arrival directions of UHECRs, in addition to a large scale
anisotropy, known from previous studies. We also suggest some other observable
consequences of this scenario which will be testable with upcoming experiments,
as Auger, EUSO and OWL.Comment: Contribution given at ICRC 2001 - August 7-15, 2001 - Hambur
Perturbation theory and excursion set estimates of the probability distribution function of dark matter, and a method for reconstructing the initial distribution function
Nonlinear evolution can sometimes be modelled by a deterministic mapping from
initial to final of the local smoothed overdensity. Perturbation theory methods
base on this deterministic and local mapping and ignore the 'cloud-in-cloud'
effect, while the excursion set approach methods take this nonlocality into
account. We compared these methods using the spherical collapse mapping and
showed that, on scales where the rms fluctuation is small, both models give
similar results and they are in good agreement with numerical simulations. If
the deterministic mapping depends on quantities other than overdensity, this
will also manifest as stochasticity if the other quantities are ignored. We
considered the Zeldovich approximation and Ellipsoidal Collapse model, both
include the tidal field in the evolution. Our anaylsis shows that the change in
cell shape effect should be included on scales where the rms is of order of
unity or larger. On scales where the rms is less than 2 methods based on the
spherical collapse model allow a rather accurate reconstruction of the shape of
the initial distribution from the nonlinear field. This can be used as the
basis for constraining the statistical properties of the initial fluctuation
field. (Abridge)Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures; Figures and texts modified; accepted for
publication in MNRA
The Mass Function of Dark Halos in Superclusters and Voids
A modification of the Press-Schechter theory allowing for presence of a
background large-scale structure (LSS) - a supercluster or a void, is proposed.
The LSS is accounted as the statistical constraints in form of linear
functionals of the random overdensity field. The deviation of the background
density within the LSS is interpreted in a pseudo-cosmological sense. Using the
constraints formalism may help us to probe non-trivial spatial statistics of
haloes, e.g. edge and shape effects on boundaries of the superclusters and
voids. Parameters of the constraints are connected to features of the LSS: its
mean overdensity, a spatial scale and a shape, and spatial momenta of higher
orders. It is shown that presence of a non-virialized LSS can lead to an
observable deviation of the mass function. This effect is exploited to build a
procedure to recover parameters of the background perturbation from the
observationally estimated mass function.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figures; to be appeared in Astronomy Reports, 2014, Vol.
58, No. 6, pp. 386-39
Self-consistency of the Excursion Set Approach
The excursion set approach provides a framework for predicting how the
abundance of dark matter halos depends on the initial conditions. A key
ingredient of this formalism comes from the physics of halo formation: the
specification of a critical overdensity threshold (barrier) which protohalos
must exceed if they are to form bound virialized halos at a later time. Another
ingredient is statistical, as it requires the specification of the appropriate
statistical ensemble over which to average when making predictions. The
excursion set approach explicitly averages over all initial positions, thus
implicitly assuming that the appropriate ensemble is that associated with
randomly chosen positions in space, rather than special positions such as peaks
of the initial density field. Since halos are known to collapse around special
positions, it is not clear that the physical and statistical assumptions which
underlie the excursion set approach are self-consistent. We argue that they are
at least for low mass halos, and illustrate by comparing our excursion set
predictions with numerical data from the DEUS simulations.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Flame resistant elastic elastomeric fiber
Compositions exhibit elastomeric properties and possess various degrees of flame resistance. First material polyurethane, incorporates halogen containing polyol and is flame resistant in air; second contains spandex elastomer with flame retardant additives; and third material is prepared from fluorelastomer composition of copolymer of vinylidene fluoride and hexafluoropropylene
Dynamic Perceptual Changes in Audiovisual Simultaneity
Background: The timing at which sensory input reaches the level of conscious perception is an intriguing question still awaiting an answer. It is often assumed that both visual and auditory percepts have a modality specific processing delay and their difference determines perceptual temporal offset.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Here, we show that the perception of audiovisual simultaneity can change flexibly and fluctuates over a short period of time while subjects observe a constant stimulus. We investigated the mechanisms underlying the spontaneous alternations in this audiovisual illusion and found that attention plays a crucial role. When attention was distracted from the stimulus, the perceptual transitions disappeared. When attention was directed to a visual event, the perceived timing of an auditory event was attracted towards that event.
Conclusions/Significance: This multistable display illustrates how flexible perceived timing can be, and at the same time offers a paradigm to dissociate perceptual from stimulus-driven factors in crossmodal feature binding. Our findings suggest that the perception of crossmodal synchrony depends on perceptual binding of audiovisual stimuli as a common event
Non-flammable elastomeric fiber from a fluorinated elastomer and containing an halogenated flame retardant
Flame retardant elastomeric compositions are described comprised of either spandex type polyurethane having incorporated into the polymer chain halogen containing polyols, conventional spandex type polyurethanes in physical admixture with flame retardant additives, or fluoroelastomeric resins in physical admixture with flame retardant additives. Methods are described for preparing fibers of the flame retardant elastomeric materials and articles of manufacture comprised of the flame retardant clastomeric materials and non elastic materials such as polybenzimidazoles, fiberglass, nylons, etc
The Pairwise Peculiar Velocity Dispersion of Galaxies: Effects of the Infall
We study the reliability of the reconstruction method which uses a modelling
of the redshift distortions of the two-point correlation function to estimate
the pairwise peculiar velocity dispersion of galaxies. In particular, the
dependence of this quantity on different models for the infall velocity is
examined for the Las Campanas Redshift Survey. We make extensive use of
numerical simulations and of mock catalogs derived from them to discuss the
effect of a self-similar infall model, of zero infall, and of the real infall
taken from the simulation. The implications for two recent discrepant
determinations of the pairwise velocity dispersion for this survey are
discussed.Comment: minor changes in the discussion; accepted for publication in ApJ; 8
pages with 2 figures include
On the Distribution of Haloes, Galaxies and Mass
The stochasticity in the distribution of dark haloes in the cosmic density
field is reflected in the distribution function which gives
the probability of finding haloes in a volume with mass density
contrast . We study the properties of this function using
high-resolution -body simulations, and find that is
significantly non-Poisson. The ratio between the variance and the mean goes
from (Poisson) at to (sub-Poisson) at
to (super-Poisson) at . The mean bias
relation is found to be well described by halo bias models based on the
Press-Schechter formalism. The sub-Poisson variance can be explained as a
result of halo-exclusion while the super-Poisson variance at high
may be explained as a result of halo clustering. A simple phenomenological
model is proposed to describe the behavior of the variance as a function of
. Galaxy distribution in the cosmic density field predicted by
semi-analytic models of galaxy formation shows similar stochastic behavior. We
discuss the implications of the stochasticity in halo bias to the modelling of
higher-order moments of dark haloes and of galaxies.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, Latex using MN2e style. Minor changes. Accepted
for publication in MNRA
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