3,214 research outputs found
Semantic and inferencing abilities in children with communication disorders
Background: Semantic and inferencing abilities have not been fully examined in children with communication difficulties.
Aims: To investigate the inferential and semantic abilities of children with communication difficulties using newly designed tasks.
Methods & Procedures: Children with different types of communication disorder were compared with each other and with three groups of typically developing children: those of the same chronological age and two groups of younger children. In total, 25 children aged 11 years with specific language impairment and 22 children, also 11 years of age, with primary pragmatic difficulties were recruited. Typically developing groups aged 11 (n = 35; age‐match), and those aged 9 (n = 40) and 7 (n = 37; language similar) also participated as comparisons.
Outcomes & Results: For Semantic Choices, children with specific language impairment performed significantly more poorly than 9‐ and 11‐year‐olds, whilst the pragmatic difficulties group scored significantly lower than all the typically developing groups. Borderline differences between specific language impairment and pragmatic difficulties groups were found. For inferencing, children with communication impairments performed significantly below the 11‐year‐old peers, but not poorer than 9‐ and 7‐year‐olds, suggesting that this skill is in line with language ability. Six children in the pragmatic difficulties group who met diagnosis for autism performed more poorly than the other two clinical groups on both tasks, but not statistically significantly so.
Conclusions: Both tasks were more difficult for those with communication impairments compared with peers. Semantic but not inferencing abilities showed a non‐significant trend for differences between the two clinical groups and children with pragmatic difficulties performed more poorly than all typically developing groups. The tasks may relate to each other in varying ways according to type of communication difficulty
Cosmological Constraints on Neutrino Injection
We derive general constraints on the relic abundances of a long-lived
particle which mainly decays into a neutrino (and something else) at
cosmological time scales. Such an exotic particle may show up in various
particle-physics models based on physics beyond the standard model. The
constraints are obtained from big-bang nucleosynthesis, cosmic microwave
background and diffuse neutrino and photon fluxes, depending on the lifetime
and the electromagnetic and hadronic branching ratios.Comment: 33 pages, 23 figure
A New Window on Primordial non-Gaussianity
We know very little about primordial curvature perturbations on scales
smaller than about a Mpc. Measurements of the mu-type distortion of the CMB
spectrum provide the unique opportunity to probe these scales over the
unexplored range from 50 to 10^4 Mpc^-1. This is a very clean probe, in that it
relies only on well-understood linear evolution. We point out that correlations
between mu-distortion and temperature anisotropies can be used to test
Gaussianity at these very small scales. In particular the mu-T cross
correlation is proportional to the very squeezed limit of the primordial
bispectrum and hence measures fNL^loc, while mu-mu is proportional to the
primordial trispectrum and measures tauNL. We present a Fisher matrix forecast
of the observational constraints.Comment: 5 pages, one figure. v2: added clarifying comments and references,
fixed typo
NGC1600 - Cluster or Field Elliptical?
A study of the galaxy distribution in the field of the elliptical galaxy
NGC1600 has been undertaken. Although this galaxy is often classified as a
member of a loose group, all the neighbouring galaxies are much fainter and
could be taken as satellites of NGC1600. The number density profile of galaxies
in the field of this galaxy shows a decline with radius, with evidence of a
background at approximately 1.3 Mpc. The density and number density profile are
consistent with that found for other isolated early-type galaxies. NGC1600
appears as an extended source in X-rays, and the center of the X-ray emission
seems not to coincide with the center of the galaxy. The velocity distribution
of neighbouring galaxies has been measured from optical spectroscopic
observations and shows that the mean radial velocity is approximately 85 km/s
less than that of NGC1600, indicating that the centre of mass could lie outside
the galaxy. The velocity dispersion of the `group' is estimated at 429 km/s.
The inferred mass of the system is therefore of the order of 10^14 solar
masses, a value that corresponds to a large group. NGC1600 therefore shares
some similarities, but is not identical to, the `fossil clusters' detected in
X-ray surveys. Implications of this result for studies of isolated early-type
galaxies are briefly discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures and 2 table, accepted for publication in the Ap
Kinematics and Mass Profile of AWM 7
We have measured 492 redshifts (311 new) in the direction of the poor cluster
AWM~7 and have identified 179 cluster members (73 new). We use two independent
methods to derive a self-consistent mass profile, under the assumptions that
the absorption-line galaxies are virialized and that they trace an underlying
Navarro, Frenk & White (1997) dark matter profile: (1) we fit such an NFW
profile to the radial distribution of galaxy positions and to the velocity
dispersion profile; (2) we apply the virial mass estimator to the cluster. With
these assumptions, the two independent mass estimates agree to \sim 15% within
1.7 h^{-1} Mpc, the radial extent of our data; we find an enclosed mass \sim
(3+-0.5)\times 10^{14} h^{-1} M_\odot. The largest potential source of
systematic error is the inclusion of young emission-line galaxies in the mass
estimate.
We investigate the behavior of the surface term correction to the virial mass
estimator under several assumptions about the velocity anisotropy profile,
still within the context of the NFW model, and remark on the sensitivity of
derived mass profiles to outliers. We find that one must have data out to a
large radius in order to determine the mass robustly, and that the surface term
correction is unreliable at small radii.Comment: LaTeX, 5 tables, 7 figures, appeared as 2000 AJ 119 44; typos and Eq.
9 corrected; results are unaffecte
Observations of the Hubble Deep Field with the Infrared Space Observatory V. Spectral energy distributions starburst models and star formation history
We have modelled the spectral energy distributions of the 13 Hubble Deep Field (HDF) galaxies reliably detected by the Infrared Space Observatoiy (ISO). For two galaxies the emission detected by ISO is consistent with being starlight or the infrared 'cirrus' in the galaxies. For the remaining 11 galaxies there is a clear mid-infrared excess, which we interpret as emission from dust associated with a strong starburst. 10 of these galaxies are spirals or interacting pairs, while the remaining one is an elliptical with a prominent nucleus and broad emission lines. We give a new discussion of how the star formation rate can be deduced from the far-infrared luminosity, and derive star formation rates for these galaxies of 8-1000ø M¿ yr-1, where ø takes account of the uncertainty in the initial mass function. The HDF galaxies detected by ISO are clearly forming stars at a prodigious rate compared with nearby normal galaxies. We discuss the implications of our detections for the history of star and heavy element formation in the Universe. Although uncertainties in the calibration, reliability of source detection, associations and starburst models remain, it is clear that dust plays an important role in star formation out to redshift 1 at least
Velocity Dispersions of CNOC Clusters and the Evolution of the Cluster Abundance
We present the results of the analysis of the internal velocity dispersions,
\sigma_v, for the CNOC sample of distant galaxy clusters, based on an
interlopers removal algorithm, which is different from that originally applied
by Carlberg et al. (1996, C96). We find that the resulting \sigma_v values are
consistent within <10% with the original C96 estimates. This result points in
favor of a substantial robustness of currently applied methods for optical
studies of the internal cluster dynamics. The resulting distribution of
velocity dispersions is used to trace the redshift evolution of the cluster
abundance with the aim of constraining the matter density parameter, \Omega_m.
We find that constraints on \Omega_m are very sensitive to the adopted value of
\sigma_8, as obtainable from the local cluster abundance: as \sigma_8 varies
from 0.5 to 0.6 (for Omega_m=1), the best fitting Omega_m varies in the range
0.3-1.0.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, LateX, uses apj.sty, ApJ, corrected
some typo
Two Galaxy Clusters: A3565 and A3560
We report 102 new redshifts and magnitudes for a sample of galaxies to RF ~
15.5 mag in a 2.17 deg x 2.17 deg region centered on the galaxy IC 4296, the
most luminous member of the A3565 cluster. Up to the limiting magnitude we find
29 cluster members, and measure a velocity dispersion of 228 km/s. The
estimated total mass for this system is ~ 3.0 x h**-1 10**13 Msun (where h =
H0/100 km/s/Mpc), and its dynamical properties are quite typical of poor
clusters presenting X-ray emission. We also find that galaxies with absorption
lines are more concentrated towards the center of the cluster, while systems
with emission lines are mainly located in the outer parts. The small velocity
dispersion of the cluster, coupled to the known presence of an interacting pair
of galaxies, and the large extent of the brightest cluster galaxy, could
indicate that galaxy formation through mergers may still be underway in this
system. The surveyed region also contains galaxies belonging to the Shapley
Concentration cluster A3560. Within 30 arc min of the cluster center, we detect
32 galaxies, for which we measure a velocity dispersion of 588 km/s and a mass
of ~2 x h**-1 10**14 Msun. However, because our sample is restricted to
galaxies brighter than M*, these values should be considered only as rough
estimates.Comment: 33 pages, including 6 tables and 9 postscript figures. Uses AAS Latex
macros. Postscript file and ASCII versions of Tables 4 and 6 are available at
http://www.dan.on.br/other_surveys/a3565.html. Scheduled for September 1999
issue of The Astronomical Journa
Quasar Luminosity Functions from Joint Evolution of Black Holes and Host Galaxies
We show that our previously proposed anti-hierarchical baryon collapse
scenario for the joint evolution of black holes and host galaxies predicts
quasar luminosity functions at redshifts 1.5<z<6 and local properties in nice
agreement with observations. In our model the quasar activity marks and
originates the transition between an earlier phase of violent and heavily
dust-enshrouded starburst activity promoting rapid black hole growth, and a
later phase of almost passive evolution; the former is traced by the
submillimeter-selected sources, while the latter accounts for the high number
density of massive galaxies at substantial redshifts z>1.5, the population of
Extremely Red Objects, and the properties of local ellipticals.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, uses REVTeX 4 + emulateapj.cls and apjfonts.sty.
Version revised following referee's comments. Accepted on Ap
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