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Results 451 - 500 of 688
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Miller D J - - 1988
Synopsis Pearling agents used to improve the appearance of toiletries are generally judged visually, as it is difficult to devise suitable quantitative tests. If a pearling agent is added to a stirred liquid, moving light and dark patches may be seen. A method has been developed to put this simple ...
Newberry R C - - 1988
The influence of two light intensity treatments, 180 and 6 lx, on behavior and performance of broiler chickens was examined in two experiments. The first experiment tested male chickens reared to 9 wk of age and the second experiment tested both sexes reared separately to 6 wk. Behavioral data were ...
Viemeister N F - - 1988
Intensity difference limens (DLs) were measured over a wide intensity range for 200-ms, 1-kHz gated tones and for 200-ms increments in continuous 1-kHz tones. Magnitude estimates also were obtained for the gated tones over a comparable intensity range. The discrimination data are in general agreement with those from earlier studies ...
Stoeckenius W - - 1988
We have developed a simple and rapid technique for measuring the action spectra for phototaxis of populations of microorganisms and applied it to halobacteria. A microscope with a dark-field condenser was used to illuminate the cell suspension in a sealed chamber with light of wavelength greater than 750 nm; in ...
Ben-Amotz A - - 1988
Dunaliella bardawil, a halotolerant green alga, was previously shown to accumulate high concentrations of beta-carotene when grown outdoors under defined conditions. The beta-carotene of algae cultivated under high light intensity in media containing a high salt concentration is composed of approximately 50% all-trans beta-carotene and 40% 9-cis beta-carotene. We show ...
Meddis R - - 1988
A computational model of mechanical to neural transduction at the hair cell-auditory-nerve synapse is presented. It produces a stream of events (spikes) that are precisely located in time in response to an arbitrary stimulus and is intended for use as an input to automatic speech recognition systems as well as ...
Warta, W.
We present measurements of surface recombination velocities at Si02-passivated silicon solar cells, demonstrating a strong dependence on incident light intensity even in the low-level region. This phenomenon can be described by standard Shockley-Read-Hall-Theory (SRH). The different dependence for p-type and n-type material can be explained by different capture cross sections ...
Gracely R H - - 1988
Three experiments evaluated the reliability and sensitivity of an interactive multiple random staircase (MRS) assessment of painful thermocutaneous sensations. One hundred and sixteen subjects used a 4-point category scale (no pain, mild, moderate, intense) to rate the intensity of sensations produced by 3-sec thermal stimuli applied to the volar forearm ...
Eskola H - - 1988
Despite the relatively wide use of flash-type stimuli in VEP studies, no universally accepted standards or methods of measurement for these stimuli are in existence. Several methods have been described for the determination of flash-intensities, however, the majority of these methods are not sufficiently rigorous, or are based on overly ...
Hashimoto I - - 1988
Brief air-puff stimuli were applied to the volar surface of the right hand to obtain both psychophysical and neurophysiological responses. The detection threshold (So) was first determined (0.56 kg . cm-2 +/- 0.20 kg . cm-2, mean +/- SD) and six levels of the stimulus intensities (So + 0.25 kg ...
Milne R J - - 1988
The effect of movement of the index finger on the perceived intensity of trains of electrical stimuli to the digital nerves of the same finger was studied quantitatively using a novel intramodality stimulus-matching task. Subjects consistently were able to match reliably the perceived intensity of stimuli delivered on the 'reference' ...
Chen B - - 1987
1. The factor by which increment threshold changes with changing background intensity is less if the test flash is small than if it is large. This is commonly attributed to a reduction of the area over which visual signals are integrated as light adaptation increases. 2. We propose and test ...
Davis J E - - 1987
Assimilation rate (A) versus intercellular CO(2) concentration (C(i)) relationships for leaflets of five-year-old green ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica Marsh.) trees were computed from gas exchange measurements obtained in the field with a closed-circuit, portable photosynthesis measurement system comprising an LI-6200 gas analyzer and an LI-6000 computer, (Li-Cor, Inc., Lincoln, Nebraska, USA). ...
Saunders S S - - 1987
A positive reinforcement conditioning procedure was used to train chinchillas to respond to intensity differences between successively occurring tone bursts. Intensity difference limens were measured at 0.5, 1, 4, and 8 kHz at five intensities ranging from 10- to 55-dB sensation level. The intensity difference limen decreased from approximately 8 ...
Gray L - - 1987
Signal detection analyses were applied to momentary delays in the regular peeping of newborn chicks that occur in response to acoustic stimuli. Pulsing 1000-Hz tones at various intensities were repeatedly presented to chicks at 0 and 4 days posthatch. Durations of delays on both stimulus and control (mock) trials were ...
Pusey A E - - 1987
Sex differences in dispersal distance are widespread in birds and mammals, but the predominantly dispersing sex differs consistently between the classes. There has been persistent debate over the relative importance of two factors - intrasexual competition and inbreeding avoidance - in producing sex-biased dispersal, and over the sources of the ...
Conner M T - - 1987
The effect of the range of levels of the test stimuli on ratings of sweetness intensity is demonstrated for a lime drink. The results are consistent with Poulton's (1979) suggestion that range effects can be predicted from the deviation of the mean response in a session from the mid-point of ...
Dragutinovich S - - 1987
Visual evoked potentials (VEPs) were recorded from the vertex to 5 intensities of light flashes. Measures were taken of peak-to-trough, prestimulus baseline-to-peak, and timeband amplitude for P1, N1, and P2 waveforms. Augmenting/reducing was defined by traditional (amplitude/intensity slope, monotonicity) and non-traditional (strength of the nervous system, combined amplitude response) criteria. ...
Gray L - - 1987
The development of consistent responses to multidimensional acoustic stimuli was investigated in newborn chickens. Young chicks suppress their ongoing peeps when they hear a change in an acoustic stimulus, and the amount of that suppression is related to the amount of change. Durations of suppression can thus be interpreted as ...
Cranney J - - 1987
The possibility that acoustic startle stimuli could support a conditional response (freezing) to contextual stimuli was investigated. Rats were exposed to three acoustic startle stimuli on the first day, and one on the second day. On day 1, 20 rats received naloxone pretreatment and another 20 received saline (placebo) pretreatment. ...
Hester P Y - - 1987
Two trials were conducted to evaluate the performance of male turkeys reared in either a low or high intensity lighting regimen. Turkeys were also subjected to the following four litter treatments: hardwood shavings intensively managed; hardwood shavings unmanaged; rice hulls intensively managed; and rice hulls unmanaged. Male turkeys reared in ...
Noguchi H - - 1987
When etiolated radish (Raphanus sativus var. hortensis f. gigantissimus Makino) hypocotyls were subjected to a continuous unilateral illumination with white fluorescent light at 0.05, 0.1, or 1 watt per square meter, the suppression of the growth rate on the lighted side depended on the light intensity. The growth rate at ...
Boshouwers F M - - 1987
The influence of light intensity using incandescent bulbs in a 16L:8D day:night schedule on the number and strength of movements and on total, resting and activity-related energy expenditure was investigated. Movements were classified into 10 activity levels of progressively increasing vigour. The number of movements at all activity levels was ...
Gur M - - 1987
The responses of contrast-sensitive cells in the ground squirrel LGN were studied. In most cells the response to an on-off stimulus was comprised of two components: a sustained on and a transient on-off. The sustained component amplitude was a power function of the light intensity and disappeared altogether at low ...
Tauchi M - - 1987
Electrical responses to light flashes were recorded from single red rods in dark-adapted retinas of the bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana. When the flashes were less than or equal to 50 ms in duration, plots of the peak amplitude of the responses as a function of log stimulus intensity were found to ...
Newberry R C - - 1986
The effects of light intensity on performance, activity, leg disorders and sudden death syndrome (SDS) of male chickens were examined in two experiments. In each experiment 5,600 1-day-old chicks were divided evenly between 8 light-proof floor pens and reared to 9 weeks of age on one of four light intensity ...
Harris D - - 1986
5 subjects matched pairs of auditory and vibrotactile stimuli on intensity, making judgments of suprathreshold magnitudes. Slope values for the 100-Hz cross-modal lingual vibrotactile stimulus-standard frequency condition were steeper than those for 250- or 400-Hz conditions. Slope values became steeper at about 25- to 30-dB SL, so frequency seems an ...
Rodriguez R - - 1986
Human auditory steady state responses were recorded in 41 normal subjects and 22 patients with hearing loss. The effect of intensity on the responses at different tonal frequencies was assessed using the sweep technique. The amplitude of the responses increases and the phase delay decreases with increasing intensity. Both the ...
Klingensmith P M - - 1986
The reduced lameness observed in turkeys reared in a high intensity step-up (HISU) lighting programme as compared to a low intensity step-down (LISD) lighting regimen cannot be explained by differences in the inorganic matrix of the bone, because the proportions of bone ash, bone ash calcium, and bone ash phosphorus ...
Terry K L - - 1986
In order to predict the potential benefit associated with mixing devices designed to introduce periodic light modulations in dense cultures of microalgae, it is necessary to develop a quantitative understanding of the relationship between the frequency of the modulations and the resulting photosynthetic efficiency enhancement. To explore this relationship, the ...
Cacace A T - - 1986
Short-term poststimulatory effects on the N1 component of the auditory-nerve compound action potential (CAP) were investigated in Mongolian gerbils. Some effects of conditioner level, conditioner frequency and probe level were assessed. In most cases, poststimulatory decrements occurred. The decrements were independent of probe intensity when the conditioner was close in ...
Nozzolillo C - - 1986
Lentil seedlings (Lens culinaris Medic.) were grown out-of-doors, in a shaded greenhouse or in a controlled environment chamber (15 degrees C, 14 hr day under a bank of incandescent and fluorescent lights). Bright light promoted branching of seedlings and inhibited internode elongation. Internodes formed after transfer of plants from high ...
Smith R L - - 1985
Adaptation of auditory-nerve responses was investigated by applying increments and decrements in intensity to an ongoing tonal background. The change in firing rate produced by a change in intensity was obtained as a function of the time delay from the onset of the background to the onset of the change ...
Newberry R C - - 1985
The effects of light treatment and strain on movement, spacial distribution, activity, and incidence of leg disorders of 4 to 10-week-old male chickens were examined in two experiments. In both, an alternating light treatment, in which high-intensity light alternated from one side of the barn to the other against a ...
Jacobson R C - - 1985
The inter-relationship between stimulus intensity and inter-stimulus interval (ISI) on pain-related evoked vertex potentials was studied. Sixteen subjects were tested with 4 stimulus intensities at 4 different ISIs forming 16 averaged event-related potentials for each subject. Data were analyzed in 2 ways: first by multiple regression analysis of peak-to-peak amplitudes ...
O'Donohue W T - - 1985
The effects of two levels of stimulus intensity (medium and high) and two levels of stimulus variability (varied stimuli and constant stimuli) on the habituation of subjective and physiological sexual arousal were investigated in a 2 X 2 factorial design. Forty male volunteers served as subjects. It was hypothesized that, ...
Gibson D J - - 1985
Rate versus level functions were recorded for responses to best-frequency (BF) tones of 116 cochlear nucleus units and 53 auditory-nerve fibers in the presence of interrupted tone backgrounds and continuous noise backgrounds of various intensities. The backgrounds shifted the dynamic ranges of rate-level functions to higher test intensities, so in ...
Marshall A E - - 1985
The brain stem auditory evoked-response was measured from a group of 24 healthy dogs under conditions suitable for clinical diagnostic use. The waveforms were identified, and analysis of amplitude ratios, latencies, and interpeak latencies were done. The group was subdivided into subgroups based on tranquilization, nontranquilization, sex, and weight. Differences ...
Rossi G - - 1985
Four acoustic reflex parameters (latency, duration, amplitude, recruitment time) in response to stimuli lasting 1 000 to 50 msec with an initial intensity of 95 dB SPL p.e. were studied in four sets of experiments. In each set of experiments, each halving of the stimulus duration was accompanied by a ...
Yates G K - - 1985
Guinea pig auditory ganglion cell responses to 100-ms duration tone bursts were recorded over a range of stimulus intensities. The responses, recorded in the form of peristimulus/poststimulus time histograms, were analysed by reduction into two phases. The first phase was a rapid exponential adaptation from an initial onset response; the ...
Schweitzer D - - 1985
Spectrometric investigations were carried out in normal human maculae and optic discs and in those with pathological findings (50 eyes in total). Reflection spectra were measured by illumination of various points of the fundus, using a highly sensitive photon-counting technique. It is necessary to distinguish diffusely reflected light from regularly ...
Crow T - - 1985
Psychophysical experiments examined the control of phototactic behavior by light intensity in the nudibranch mollusk Hermissenda by measuring the time that Hermissenda remained in an illuminated area. This measure of phototactic behavior exhibits a closer correspondence to changes in test light intensity than other previously examined measures of phototaxis. Changing ...
Babkoff H - - 1984
The dynamic changes in the latency of the components of the auditory brainstem evoked potentials (ABEP) were analyzed and correlated with the psychophysical magnitude estimates of the stimuli evoking the potentials. This study included the reanalysis of the results originally reported by Pratt and Sohmer (1977, Electroencephalogr. Clin. Neurol., 43, ...
Megela-Simmons A - - 1984
Male bullfrogs will vocalize in response to playbacks of the mating (advertisement) calls of conspecifics. This behavior was studied in response to playbacks of bullfrog mating calls presented at six different sound intensity levels. The lowest sound intensity level tested (50 dB SPL) was insufficient to evoke calling from any ...
Chatrian G E - - 1984
The summating potential (SP) and the auditory nerve compound action potential (AP) of the electrocochleogram were recorded from the external auditory meatus (EAM) of 10 normal subjects in response to alternating rarefaction and condensation clicks at 90-120 dB pe SPL. Both logarithmic and power functions suggested a similar strength of ...
Westerman L A - - 1984
The peristimulatory adaptation of auditory nerve responses in Mongolian gerbil was studied. Constant-intensity tone bursts were used as stimuli. The time decay of the firing rate following the response peak at stimulus onset was described by fitting two exponentially-decaying components and a constant term to the resulting peri-stimulus-time histograms. The ...
Prescott J - - 1984
Auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) were recorded to 4 intensities of tones (70, 80, 90, 100 dB) in 22 normal subjects. Augmenting (generally increasing amplitude with increasing stimulus intensity) and reducing (a levelling off or decrease in amplitude with increasing stimulus intensity) were found to occur at both central (Cz, C3, ...
Poulos D A - - 1984
The effect of indenting the skin at different rates on the perceived intensity of the stimulus was studied by indenting the skin of the fingertip with two triangular waveforms, given as a pair. The subjects were asked to judge which member of the pair was more intense. Perceived intensity was ...
Das Graças De Souza D - - 1984
Five rats were submitted to a signaled free-operant avoidance contingency. Throughout the experiment, shock intensity was varied from 0.1 to 8.0 mA, with shock duration constant at 200 milleseconds. Results indicate: (a) an all-or-none effect of shock intensity on response and shock rates, on percentage of shocks avoided, and on ...
Bolanowski S J SJ - - 1984
The mechanisms by which pacinian corpuscles, isolated from cat mesentery, transduce mechanical stimuli have been measured for directly applied sinusoidal deformations. Stimulus-response relationships were measured as follows: intensity characteristics, which relate the receptor-potential magnitude or the neural firing rate to stimulus intensity; amplitude-frequency characteristics, which relate the stimulus amplitude to ...
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