Search Results
Results 201 - 250 of 535
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Ison James R - - 2005
The purpose of these experiments was to determine whether detecting brief decrements in noise level ("gaps") varies with the spectral content and bandwidth of noise in mice as it does in humans. The behavioral effect of gaps was quantified by their inhibiting a subsequent acoustic startle reflex. Gap durations from ...
Garcia-Casado Javier - - 2005
Intestinal myoelectrical activity (IMA), which determines bowel mechanical activity, is the result of two components: a low-frequency component [slow wave (SW)] that is always present, and a high-frequency component [spike bursts (SB)] which is associated with bowel contractions. Despite of the diagnostic significance of internal recordings of IMA, clinical application ...
Hattori Haroldo T - - 2005
Recently, photonic crystal band-edge structures have been analyzed in the literature. However, most devices that have been presented so far emit light in different directions. We present a modal analysis (no gain included) of a few schemes to improve the directionality of these devices, i.e., in such a way that ...
Rajan R - - 2005
This study shows that the cochlear hearing losses [temporary threshold shifts (TTSs)] induced by traumatic sound and the effect of olivocochlear (OC) pathways to the cochlea on these hearing losses depend on the context of the sound. Background atraumatic white noise (WN) has been shown to 1) exacerbate loud-pure-tone-induced TTSs, ...
Nathan H. Rice
The Wing-banded Antbird (Myrmornis torquata) is a poorly known suboscine passerine found in lowland Amazonian forests. Here, we present new information about the nest and nestlings of this enigmatic species. Our findings differ from previous observations and notes on clutch size.
Doyle L M F - - 2005
Excessive synchronization of neural activity in the beta frequency band ( approximately 20 Hz) within basal ganglia circuits might contribute to the paucity and slowness of movement in Parkinson's disease (PD). Treatment with dopaminergic drugs reduces the background level of beta frequency band synchronization in the subthalamic nucleus (STN), but ...
Henrie J Andrew - - 2005
We recorded local field potentials (LFPs) and single-unit activity simultaneously in the macaque primary visual cortex (V1) and studied their responses to drifting sinusoidal gratings that were chosen to be "optimal" for the single units. Over all stimulus conditions, the LFP spectra have much greater power in the low-frequency band ...
Portfors C V - - 2005
The inferior colliculus receives a massive convergence of inputs and in the mustached bat, this convergence leads to the creation of neurons in the inferior colliculus that integrate information across multiple frequency bands. These neurons are tuned to multiple frequency bands or are combination-sensitive; responding best to the combination of ...
Gonzalez Andino Sara L - - 2005
Response to a stimulus is faster when a subject is attending and knows beforehand how to respond. It has been suggested recently that this occurs because ongoing neuronal activity is spatially and temporally structured during states of expectancy preceding a stimulus. This mechanism is believed to mediate top-down processing, facilitating ...
Bashford James A JA - - 2005
Previous studies have shown that the intelligibility of filtered speech can be enhanced by filling stopbands with noise. The present study found that this enhancement occurred only when speech intensity was sufficiently high to degrade performance. Intelligibility decreased by about 15% when narrowband speech was increased from 45 to 65 ...
Arndt Tim - - 2005
Band formation (axial segregation) and subsequent coarsening of bidisperse mixtures in long circular tumblers is well documented for the case where the cylinder is at a single fill level and the interstitial fluid is air. However, little information is available for a range of fill levels, nor is the effect ...
Goodacre Jonathan - - 2005
Recent work on the identification and perception of fricatives has focussed on the use by listeners of spectral moments derived from the whole spectrum and there appears to be no work in the literature on the use of prominent spectral peaks. In this study, we map the response of a ...
Xiao Yanming - - 2005
A low power Ka-band Doppler radar that can detect human heartbeat and respiration signals is demonstrated. This radar system achieves better than 80% detection accuracy at the distance of 2-m with 16-&#956;W transmitted power. Indirect-conversion receiver architecture is chosen to reduce the DC offset and 1/f noise that can degrade ...
Sakowitz Oliver Werner - - 2005
Perception of the external world is based on complex neural processes allowing for combination of sensory experiences from different modalities. Audiovisual (AV) integration is discussed in this paper on the basis of the intersensory component (IC), which is the part of the multisensory-evoked potential that is not explained by linear ...
Apoux Frédéric - - 2004
The relative importance of temporal information in broad spectral regions for consonant identification was assessed in normal-hearing listeners. For the purpose of forcing listeners to use primarily temporal-envelope cues, speech sounds were spectrally degraded using four-noise-band vocoder processing Frequency-weighting functions were determined using two methods. The first method consisted of ...
Henning G B - - 2004
Difficulties arise in measuring masking by Mach bands because very-low-contrast signals distort the bands. [J. Opt. Soc. Am. A 17, 1147 (2000).] Adding narrow luminance increments (bright bars) in the dark Mach band widens the dark band; adding decrements (dark bars) narrows the dark band, and conversely in the bright ...
Vinogradov A P - - 2004
A simple approach to the problem of light localization in one-dimensional system is presented. The role of the Bragg reflection in one-dimensional localization of light is discussed. Contrary to the existent viewpoint, we show that the origin of band gaps of regular crystals and the localization due to disorder have ...
Faria A J P AJ - - 2004
When the offset of a visual stimulus (GAP condition) precedes the onset of a target, saccadic reaction times are reduced in relation to the condition with no offset (overlap condition) - the GAP effect. However, the existence of the GAP effect for manual responses is still controversial. In two experiments ...
Lyzenga J - - 2004
Experiment 1 measured pure-tone frequency difference limens (DLs) at 1 and 4 kHz. The stimuli had two steady-state portions, which differed in frequency for the target. These portions were separated by a middle section of varying length, which consisted of a silent gap, a frequency glide, or a noise burst ...
Angelini L - - 2004
We study the phase-synchronization properties of systolic and diastolic arterial pressure in healthy subjects. We find that delays in the oscillatory components of the time series depend on the frequency bands that are considered, in particular we find a change of sign in the phase shift going from the very ...
Fuh Andy - - 2004
This letter addresses a dye-doped planar cholesteric cell as a one-dimensional photonic crystal, which can be lased at the band edges of the photonic band gap. The effect of the composition of the material and the thickness of a cholesteric cell (CLC) on the lasing action, and the photo-control of ...
Buss Emily - - 2004
The goal of the present research was to determine how well observers utilize cues to consonant identification from different spectral regions that occur asynchronously as opposed to synchronously across frequency; such an ability would be useful for processing speech in the context of a spectro-temporally complex masker (e.g., competing speech). ...
Lister Jennifer - - 2004
The difficulty that older listeners experience understanding conversational speech may be related to their limited ability to use information present in the silent intervals (i.e., temporal gaps) between dynamic speech sounds. When temporal gaps are present between nonspeech stimuli that are spectrally invariant (e.g., noise bands or sinusoids), older listeners ...
Romanov S G - - 2004
An anisotropic photonic crystal light source has been realized by impregnation of a thin film latex opal with brightly luminescent CdTe nanocrystals. Its photoluminescence along a given direction has been studied as a function of excitation power. An increase of the photoluminescence saturation threshold in the directional photonic band gap ...
Koenderink A Femius - - 2003
Any photonic crystal is in practice periodic with some inevitable fabricational imperfections. We have measured angle-resolved transmission of photons that are multiply scattered by this disorder in strongly photonic crystals. Peculiar non-Lambertian distributions occur as a function of frequency: due to internal diffraction, wide angular ranges of strongly reduced diffuse ...
LeBeau Fiona E N - - 2003
In recent years, several key studies have shed new light on the roles of electrical signaling via gap junctions between neurons in the adult brain. In particular, it is now clear that electrical signaling is important, if not essential, for the generation of a wide variety of different network interactions ...
Supin Alexander Ya - - 2003
Rippled-density resolution of a rippled sound spectrum (probe band) in both the presence and absence of another band (masker) was studied as a function of sound level in normal listeners. The resolvable ripple density in the probe band was measured by finding the highest ripple density at which an interchange ...
Ozaki Isamu - - 2003
OBJECTIVE: To investigate spatiotemporal features of the isofrequency bands for 400 and 4000 Hz tones in human auditory cortex and on the hemispheric differences in the arrangement of isofrequency bands. METHODS: We recorded auditory evoked magnetic fields (AEFs) to 400 or 4000 Hz tone pips presented at right or left ...
Bowen G Peter - - 2003
Temporal acuity for acoustic transients in rats with bilateral auditory cortex lesions (n = 6) was compared with that of sham-surgery control rats (n = 4), using a standard gap-detection method. A comparison of sensitivity to quiet gaps in noise and dark gaps in light tested for a cross-modal effect ...
Williams David - - 2003
The speed with which one reacts to an imperative signal depends on the extent to which preceding cues predict that command. When reliable warning cues are available, the processing of the imperative stimulus can be favoured and responses partially pre-prepared, leading to shorter reaction times. Here we seek evidence for ...
Hofer Sonja B - - 2003
Synchronous envelope fluctuations in different frequency ranges of an acoustic background enhance the detection of signals in background noise. This effect, termed comodulation masking release (CMR), is attributed to both processing within one frequency channel of the auditory system and comparisons across separate frequency channels. Here we present data on ...
Ison James R - - 2003
The persistence of afferent activity at stimulus offset was examined in mice as a function of age (experiment 1) and noise level (experiment 2), using a procedure devised by von Bekesy to study the physiological decay of afferent activity. Noise offset was presented from 1 to 10 ms (the temporal ...
Chigrin Dmitry - - 2003
Dielectric periodic media can possess a complex photonic band structure with allowed bands displaying strong dispersion and anisotropy. We show that for some frequencies the form of iso-frequency contours mimics the form of the first Brillouin zone of the crystal. A wide angular range of flat dispersion exists for such ...
Siegel Markus - - 2003
During the past decade, numerous studies have demonstrated stimulus-specific synchronization of neuronal activity in the gamma-frequency range. However, it appears that the different analyses are based on widely different assumptions about which frequency range to investigate. Therefore, the term "gamma-synchronization" refers to an inhomogeneous spectrum of definitions and corresponding frequency ...
Kwong Kevin S C - - 2003
An acoustical technique has been developed for early screening of developmental dysplasia of the hip (DDH) in neonates by comparing the sound transmitted across the hips while a vibratory force was applied to the sacrum. The baseline for 90 normal neonates has been established and tests in the frequency bands ...
Costantino Santiago - - 2003
In this work we present the concept of wide band interferometry as opposed to white-light interferometry to introduce a thickness measurement method that gains precision when the bandwidth is reduced to an adequate compromise in order to avoid the distortions arising from the material dispersion. The use of the widest ...
Bulychev A A - - 2003
A scanning pH-microprobe was used to study pH patterns near the surface of Chara corallina cells at various light intensities and during light-induced transitions from homogeneous pH distribution to alternating pH bands. In the irradiance (PAR) range 4-400 micromol quanta m(-2) s(-1), the sustained pH profiles consisted of alternating acid ...
Dal Negro Luca - - 2003
The propagation of light in nonperiodic quasicrystals is studied by ultrashort pulse interferometry. Samples consist of multilayer dielectric structures of the Fibonacci type and are realized from porous silicon. We observe mode beating and strong pulse stretching in the light transport through these systems, and a strongly suppressed group velocity ...
Wagner Eva - - 2003
Hearing thresholds for white-noise stimuli and temporal gap-detection thresholds in six Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) were determined in a GO/NOGO procedure using the method of constant stimuli. Gerbils were offspring of animals collected in the field and only bred in captivity for four generations or less. Hearing thresholds for 800 ...
Lakshminarayanan Kala - - 2003
We investigated the effect of various spectral manipulations on the identification of sentential prosody. Two main categories of prosody--affective (happy, angry, sad) and linguistic (statement, question, continuation)--were studied. Thirty-six subjects were presented with stimuli that were recorded by a female native speaker of American English. The stimuli were digitally manipulated ...
Gescheider George A - - 2003
The ability of observers to detect temporal gaps in bursts of sinusoids or bursts of band-limited noise was measured to assess the temporal acuity of Pacinian (P) and non-Pacinian (NP) tactile information processing channels. The P channel was isolated by delivering high frequency sinusoids or high frequency noise through a ...
Nyikos L - - 2003
Here we investigate the temporal properties of recurrent seizure-like events (SLEs) in a low-[Mg(2+)] model of experimental epilepsy. Simultaneous intra- and extracellular electric signals were recorded in the CA3 region of rat hippocampal slices whereby cytosolic [Ca(2+)] transients were imaged by fluorescence detection. Recurrence pattern analysis was applied to give ...
Phillips D P - - 2002
Temporal gap detection thresholds were obtained from six listeners using an adaptive tracking method and constant spectrum-level noises. In separate blocks of trials, the markers bounding the gap were systematically varied in their spectral overlap or separation (expressed in equivalent rectangular bandwidths, ERBs). In the same listeners, gap thresholds were ...
Liu Lei - - 2002
BACKGROUND: Pixel nonlinearity of a cathode-ray tube (CRT) display can cause differences between the actual image and the nominal image. One of the discrepancies, the anisotropy of interactions between neighboring pixels on the same raster line and between neighboring raster lines, may have an impact on the CRT-based visual acuity ...
Arbogast Tanya L - - 2002
The effect of spatial separation of sources on the masking of a speech signal was investigated for three types of maskers, ranging from energetic to informational. Normal-hearing listeners performed a closed-set speech identification task in the presence of a masker at various signal-to-noise ratios. Stimuli were presented in a quiet ...
Moore Brian C J - - 2002
The threshold for detecting a narrow-band noise signal in one or more masking noise bands is higher when the signal and masker bands have the same envelope (correlated condition) than when they have independent envelopes (uncorrelated condition). This comodulation detection difference (CDD) might be caused by perceptual grouping of the ...
Paula Bartemucci
We characterized the abundance, size and spatial patterning of canopy gaps, as well as gap-forming processes and light availability in boreal, sub-boreal, northern temperate and subalpine old-growth forests of northwestern British Columbia. The proportion of area in canopy gaps ranged from 32% in northern temperate forests to 73% in subalpine ...
Herdman Anthony T - - 2002
Auditory steady-state responses (ASSRs) were elicited by simultaneously presenting multiple AM (amplitude-modulated) tones with carrier frequencies of 500, 1000, 2000, and 4000 Hz and modulation frequencies of 77, 85, 93, and 102 Hz, respectively. Responses were also evoked by separately presenting single 500- or 2000-Hz AM tones. The objectives of ...
Langendijk Erno H A - - 2002
The contribution of spectral cues to human sound localization was investigated by removing cues in 1/2-, 1- or 2-octave bands in the frequency range above 4 kHz. Localization responses were given by placing an acoustic pointer at the same apparent position as a virtual target. The pointer was generated by ...
Kwon Bom Jun - - 2002
Comodulation masking release (CMR) refers to an improvement in the detection threshold of a signal masked by noise with coherent amplitude fluctuation across frequency, as compared to noise without the envelope coherence. The present study tested whether such an advantage for signal detection would facilitate the identification of speech phonemes. ...
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