Search Results
Results 401 - 450 of 842
< 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 >
Dalton P - - 2000
Sensory adaptation allows organisms to reach behavioral equilibrium with the ambient environment and respond primarily to changes in stimulation. Given its functional significance, it is not surprising that adaptation in the olfactory system exhibits many of the same characteristics as adaptation in other sensory systems, including vision. Repeated or prolonged ...
Gregorius H R - - 2000
The development of an individual's phenotype is influenced by environmental factors (the modifying environment) which may differ from those factors (the adaptive environment) that decide on the adaptational value of the developed phenotype. The shapes of adaptationally optimal norms of reaction are therefore essentially determined by associations between these two ...
Montgomery J - - 2000
The radiation of notothenioid fishes provides an excellent system to explore issues of evolution and adaptation. Most studies emphasize adaptation to the extreme Antarctic environment; however, recent work provides cogent examples of disaptation or evolutionary loss of function. The nature and extent of regressive change is revealed by subsequent adaptive ...
Bernhard N - - 2000
Continuous presentation of an olfactory stimulus causes a decrement of the chemotaxis response in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. However, the differences between the learning process of habituation (a readily reversible decrease in behavioral response) and other types of olfactory plasticity such as adaptation (a decrement in response due to sensory ...
Brenner N - - 2000
Adaptation is a widespread phenomenon in nervous systems, providing flexibility to function under varying external conditions. Here, we relate an adaptive property of a sensory system directly to its function as a carrier of information about input signals. We show that the input/output relation of a sensory system in a ...
Light Fields,Heinrich Muller,Andre Hinkenjann
A general mesh type for representing the light field of a three-dimensional scene of (directional) diffusely and specularly reflecting surfaces, and anisotropically diffuse light sources is presented. The light field is represented by a piecewise linear function. The mesh emerges as a product of surface cells, but is more adaptive ...
Snippe H P - - 2000
A model is presented for the early (retinal) stages of temporal processing of light inputs in the visual system. The model consists of a sequence of three adaptation processes, with two instantaneous nonlinearities in between. The three adaptation processes are, in order of processing of the light input: a divisive ...
Sebastián-Gallés N - - 2000
Perceptual adaptation to time-compressed speech was analyzed in two experiments. Previous research has suggested that this adaptation phenomenon is language specific and takes place at the phonological level. Moreover, it has been proposed that adaptation should only be observed for languages that are rhythmically similar. This assumption was explored by ...
Vybíral S - - 2000
Thermoregulation in control subjects and cold-adapted winter swimmers was examined during 1 h of cold water immersion (13 C). It was found that the thermoregulatory functions of winter swimmers differ from those of non-cold-adapted subjects. As evident from the relationship between rectal temperature and the magnitude of cold thermogenesis, in ...
Crawford C - - 2000
Evolutionary psychology focuses on the study of adaptations. Its practitioners put little credence in the study of reproductive success in recent and current environments, and argue for an information-processing, cost-benefit conception of adaptation. Because ancestral and current environments differ, it is necessary to distinguish between innate and operational adaptations and ...
Uusitalo R O - - 2000
In the first visual synapse of the insect compound eye, both the presynaptic and postsynaptic signals are graded, nonspiking changes in membrane voltage. The synapse exhibits tonic transmitter release (even in dark) and strong adaptation to long-lasting light backgrounds, leading to changes also in the dynamics of signal transmission. We ...
Theunissen M J - - 2000
Although sensory adaptation, the gradual loss of sensation during prolonged stimulation, has been demonstrated in laboratory taste experiments, a comparable loss of taste intensity is not experienced in real-life eating situations. This discrepancy may be due to differences in the proximal stimuli or to differences in the ways the taste ...
Teghtsoonian R - - 2000
When a tone or broad-band noise sweeps smoothly from a moderate intensity to a low one, the loudness at the end of the sweep is far less than what would be predicted from its intensity. The accelerated reduction in loudness, which was first reported by Canévet (1986) and confirmed in ...
Foulkes A J - - 2000
The time-course of human adaptation to spatial perturbations of visuomotor function (e.g. with prisms) is very short. However, it is not clear how rapid the adaptation to other aspects of perturbed feedback is. In this paper we report the adaptation to delayed visual feedback. Three groups of six subjects tracked ...
van Donkelaar P - - 2000
The hypothesis that oculomotor smooth pursuit (SP) adaptation is accompanied by alterations in velocity perception was tested by assessing coherence thresholds, using random-dot kinematograms before and after the adaptation paradigm. The results showed that the sensitivity to coherent motion at 10 deg/sec (the initial target velocity during adaptation) was reduced ...
Orr H A - - 2000
Adaptation is characterized by the movement of a population toward a many-character optimum, movement that results in an increase in fitness. Here I calculate the rate at which fitness increases during adaptation and describe the curve giving fitness versus time as a population approaches an optimum in Fisher's model of ...
Di Lorenzo P M - - 2000
Adaptation of the tongue to NaCl, HCl, quinine or sucrose was used as a tool to study the stability and organization of response profiles in the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS). Taste responses in the NTS were recorded in anesthetized rats before and after adaptation of the tongue to ...
Rousseau S - - 2000
Normal subjects were first light adapted to a standard photopic background and a control photopic ERG was obtained. The subjects were then light adapted to a brighter background for 5 min at the end of which the luminance was returned to the control background and ERGs were taken at regular ...
Howard C M - - 2000
The time course of recovery of spatial resolution following adaptation to a uniform field was measured for test probes presented at lower illuminance than the adapting field. Six observers were tested in a Maxwellian-view system using 20 degrees adapting fields of 1.6-2.6 log photopic trolands. Test stimuli were 7 degrees, ...
Collier J - - 2000
Most accounts of functionality are based in etiology, either design or selection. In this paper I give an account of function as serving autonomy, which is the closure of self-maintaining processes, including those interacting with the environment. Autonomy is inherently dynamic, being based entirely on interacting processes, whose organization constitutes ...
Hegemann S - - 2000
The phase of the translational linear VOR (LVOR) can be adaptively modified by exposure to a visual-vestibular mismatch. We extend here our earlier work on LVOR phase adaptation, and discuss the role of the oculomotor neural integrator. Ten subjects were oscillated laterally at 0.5 Hz, 0.3 g peak acceleration, while ...
Ojha P C - - 2000
We present a method for enumerating linear threshold functions of n-dimensional binary inputs, for neural nets. Our starting point is the geometric lattice L(n) of hyperplane intersections in the dual (weight) space. We show how the hyperoctahedral group O(n+1), the symmetry group of the (n+1)-dimensional hypercube, can be used to ...
Pearson K G - - 2000
Motor systems can adapt rapidly to changes in external conditions and to switching of internal goals. They can also adapt slowly in response to training, alterations in the mechanics of the system, and any changes in the system resulting from injury. This article reviews the mechanisms underlying short- and long-term ...
Werner A - - 2000
The time-course of chromatic adaptation was determined as a function of the spectral content of the adaptation-light and of image-contrast. The adaptation-lights varied along the chromatic cardinal axes or one of their intermediate axes in an equiluminant plane in colour-space. We found an asymmetry in the initial time-course of adaptation ...
Yamada M - - 1999
The spectral characteristics of cone-driven horizontal cells of H1 subtype (H1 HCs) receiving main synaptic input from red-sensitive cones were studied in light- and dark-adapted retinae of carp. The spectral sensitivity profile of H1 HCs in dark-adapted retinae was practically the same as the absorption spectrum of red-sensitive cones. Light-adaptation ...
Lang C E - - 1999
We evaluated the role of the cerebellum in adapting anticipatory muscle activity during a multijointed catching task. Individuals with and without cerebellar damage caught a series of balls of different weights dropped from above. In Experiment 1 (light-heavy-light), each subject was required to catch light balls (baseline phase), heavy balls ...
Yoo S S - - 1999
Adaptively limiting image acquisition to areas of interest will allow more efficient data acquisition time for in-depth characterization of areas of brain activation. We designed and implemented an adaptive image acquisition scheme that uses a multiresolution-based strategy to zoom into the regions of cortical activity. Real-time pulse prescription and data ...
Matteo Carandini,David J. Heeger,J. ...
INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................................ 3 2 THE LINEAR MODEL OF SIMPLE CELLS................................................................................................. 5 2.1 VISUAL STIMULI IN SPACE-TIME .................................................................................................................. 5 2.2 SPATIOTEMPORAL WEIGHTING FUNCTIONS ................................................................................................... 5 2.3 A NONLINEARITY: LIGHT ADAPTATION ........................................................................................................ 6 2.4 ANOTHER NONLINEARITY: RECTIFICATION...
Clifford C W - - 1999
During adaptation to a moving pattern, perceived speed decreases. Thus we know that the adapted visual system does not simply code the absolute speed of a stimulus. We hypothesised that adaptation to a moving stimulus serves to optimise coding of changes in speed at the expense of maintaining an accurate ...
Groenendijk D - - 1999
Adaptation to toxicants in animal populations is influenced primarily by two counteracting forces. First, the intensity and duration of peak concentrations of toxicants is responsible for the actual level of selection pressure on the population. Second, the process of adaptation can be disrupted by gene flow as a result of ...
Störtkuhl K F - - 1999
Olfactory adaptation is shown to occur in Drosophila, at both behavioral and physiological levels. In a behavioral paradigm, the extent of adaptation is shown to depend on the dose and duration of the adapting stimulus. Half-maximal adaptation occurred after 15 sec of exposure to an odor, and recovery occurred with ...
Clifford C W - - 1999
PURPOSE: The retina codes variations in luminance by adapting to and hence discounting, the mean luminance. During adaptation to a moving pattern, perceived speed decreases. Thus we know that the adapted visual system does not simply code the absolute speed of a stimulus. We hypothesize that adaptation to a moving ...
Schraudolph N N - - 1999
In the predictability minimization approach, input patterns are fed into a system consisting of adaptive, initially unstructured feature detectors. There are also adaptive predictors constantly trying to predict current feature detector outputs from other feature detector outputs. Simultaneously, however, the feature detectors try to become as unpredictable as possible, resulting ...
Kidd R - - 1999
The evolution of the human foot presents an obfuscation: explanations for its occurrence and the exact nature of mechanisms of change are still not fully understood. This article outlines a model of adaptation from a primitive ape foot and presents this as a hypothesis. Evidence substantiating the hypothesis is then ...
Field D P - - 1999
In the present study, we explored adaptation to prism-displaced dynamic and static events under conditions of minimal information. Many of our interactions with the world are dynamic and involve reaching for or intercepting moving objects. The consequences (or feedback) of those interactions entail the presence or absence of physical contact ...
Fenn A J - - 1999
It has previously been reported in phantoms, that an adaptive radiofrequency phased array can generate deep focused heating distributions without overheating the skin and superficial healthy tissues. The present study involves adaptive microwave phased array hyperthermia tests in animals (rabbits) with and without tumours. The design of the adaptive phased ...
Powers R K - - 1999
Spike-frequency adaptation is the continuous decline in discharge rate in response to a constant stimulus. We have described three distinct phases of adaptation in rat hypoglossal motoneurones: initial, early and late. The initial phase of adaptation is over in one or two intervals, and is primarily due to summation of ...
Bhadra R - - 1998
Cultures of C. roseus transgenic ("hairy") root clones LBE-6-1 and LBE-4-2 were adapted with periodic daily illumination to investigate the effect of light on growth and nutrient utilization, and the accumulation of the indole alkaloids. Light-adapted roots appeared green and had radially thickened morphology compared with dark-grown controls. Their growth ...
Menees S M - - 1998
The effect of spatial frequency adaptation on detection response time was studied using 2-D Gabor functions as stimuli. On the basis of pilot studies, it was expected that reaction time to a given spatial frequency at a low contrast would increase following adaptation to that spatial frequency at a high ...
Schrater P R - - 1998
Adaptation to a moving visual pattern induces shifts in the perceived motion of subsequently viewed moving patterns. Explanations of such effects are typically based on adaptation-induced sensitivity changes in spatio-temporal frequency tuned mechanisms (STFMs). An alternative hypothesis is that adaptation occurs in mechanisms that independently encode direction and speed (DSMs). ...
Welch R B - - 1998
In two experiments, we examined the possibility that the human vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) is subject to dual adaptation (the ability to adapt to a sensory rearrangement more rapidly and/or more completely after repeated experience with it) and adaptive generalization (the ability to adapt more readily to a novel sensory rearrangement ...
Kono R - - 1998
We evaluated the characteristics of phoria adaptation for vertically induced retinal disparity. An adaptive change in the fusion-free ocular alignment, phoria adaptation, was measured with a computer-aided mirror haploscope at 10, 30, and 60 minutes after the start of wearing of a 3-prism-diopter base up prism by 35 normal subjects ...
Mangum C P - - 1998
Historically, the discipline of comparative physiology and biochemistry has had two major goals: (1) elucidation of mechanisms and their adaptative significance, and (2) understanding of the evolution of mechanisms and adaptations. In general, the first goal has dominated the field. In a mechanistic/adaptational approach, the diversity of organisms is an ...
Lane S D - - 1998
Individuals vary in their ability to adapt to changes in environmental conditions. In the present study, two laboratory experiments investigated components of adaptation in subjects with and without a history of substance dependence. In each of two experiments, the subjects were exposed to conditions that required changing response patterns between ...
Werner J - - 1998
Cold adaptation aims primarily at a better economy, i.e., preservation of energy often at the cost of a lower mean body temperature during cold stress, whereas heat adaptation whether achieved by exposure to a hot environment or by endogenous heat produced by muscle exercise, often brings about a higher efficiency ...
Lenormand T - - 1998
The extent to which an organism is locally adapted in an environmental pocket depends on the selection intensities inside and outside the pocket, on migration, and on the size of the pocket. When two or more loci are involved in this local adaptation, measuring their frequency gradients and their linkage ...
Dawson M R - - 1998
Computational models of attentional processing typically view the "attentional spotlight" as a winner-take-all network whose focus can be shifted serially about a display if required. As a result, lateral inhibition is assumed in these models to be an important mechanism involved in visual search. On the basis of this assumption, ...
Weiler R - - 1998
Ambient light conditions affect the morphology of synaptic elements within the cone pedicle and modulate the spatial properties of the horizontal cell receptive field. We describe here that the effects of retinoic acid on these properties are similar to those of light adaptation. Intraorbital injection of retinoic acid into eyes ...
Shinn-Cunningham B G - - 1998
A series of experiments was performed in which subjects were trained to interpret auditory localization cues arising from locations different from their normal spatial positions. The exact pattern of mean response to these alterations (as a function of time) was examined in order to begin to develop a quantitative model ...
Weber K D - - 1998
The present study characterizes a previously reported adaptive phenomenon in a somatosensory-motor system involved in directional control of locomotor trajectory through foot contact with the floor. We call this the "podokinetic" (PK) system. Podokinetic adaptation was induced in six subjects by stepping in-place over the axis of a horizontally rotating ...
< 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 >