scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "Durham University published in 1995"


Book
01 Jan 1995
TL;DR: This chapter discusses vision from a biological point of view, attention, consciousness, and the coordination of behaviour in primate visual cortex, and discusses dissociations between perception and action in normal subjects.
Abstract: Prologue 1. Introduction: vision from a biological point of view 2. Visual processing in the primate visual cortex 3. 'Cortical blindness' 4. Disorders of spatial perception and the visual control of action 5. Disorders of visual recognition 6. Dissociations between perception and action in normal subjects 7. Attention, consciousness, and the coordination of behaviour 8. Epilogue: twelve years on

4,115 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the formation and evolution of galaxy clusters in the cold dark matter cosmogony were simulated using a combined N-body/Smooth Particle Hydrodynamics code.
Abstract: We present simulations of the formation and evolution of galaxy clusters in the Cold Dark Matter cosmogony. Clusters with a wide range of mass were selected from previous N-body models, and were resimulated at higher resolution using a combined N-body/Smooth Particle Hydrodynamics code. The effects of radiative cooling on the gas are neglected. While many present-day clusters are predicted to be undergoing mergers, the density profiles of those that are approximately in equilibrium are all very similar, both for the gas and for the dark matter. These profiles show no sign of a uniform density core and steepen gradually from the centre outwards. The standard $\beta$-model is a reasonable fit over most of the radius range observable in real clusters. However, the value obtained for the slope parameter $\beta_f$ increases with the outermost radius of the fit. Temperature profiles of different simulated clusters are also similar. Typically the temperature is almost uniform in the regions which emit most of the X-ray flux but drops at larger radii. The gas temperature and dark matter velocity dispersion in equilibrium clusters give values of $\beta_T\equiv \mu m_p\sigma_{DM}^2/kT$ which are consistent with unity provided an X-ray emission-weighted temperature is used. Larger values of $\beta_T$ are found in merging objects where there is a transient boost in the velocity dispersion of the system. Thus $\beta_T >1$ may be an observational indicator of merging in real clusters. The similar structure of clusters of differing mass results in scaling relations between the X-ray and dynamical properties of clusters identified at

1,129 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The phase behavior of polyisoprene-polystyrene (PI-PS) diblock copolymers has been studied near the order-disorder transition (ODT) as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The phase behavior of ten polyisoprene-polystyrene (PI-PS) diblock copolymers, spanning the composition range from 0.24 to 0.82 polyisoprene volume fraction (f PI ), has been studied near the order-disorder transition (ODT). Dynamic mechanical spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and neutron and X-ray scattering have been used to characterize phase transition temperatures and ordered state symmetries. Five distinct microstructures were observed for this chemical system : spheres, hexagonally packed cylinders (HEX), lamellae (LAM), hexagonally perforated layers (HPL), and a bicontinuous cubic phase having an Ia3d space group symmetry. The bicontinuous Ia3d phase only occurs in the vicinity of the ODT between the HEX and LAM states at compositions of 0.65 ≤ f pI ≤ 0.68 and 0.36 ≤ f pI ≤ 0.39 (prior report). Farther from the ODT, within these composition ranges, the HPL phase occurs. We did not find the ordered bicontinuous double diamond (OBDD) morphology at any composition or temperature studied, and the overall phase diagram is qualitatively different from those reported previously for PI-PS block copolymers.

963 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Browney et al. as mentioned in this paper developed an index for monitoring the trophic status of rivers based on diatom composition ('trophic diatom index', TDI) in response to the National Rivers Authority (England & Wales)'s needs under the terms of the Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive of the European Community.
Abstract: A index for monitoring the trophic status of rivers based on diatom composition ('trophic diatom index', TDI) has been developed, in response to the National Rivers Authority (England & Wales)'s needs under the terms of the Urban Wastewater Treatment Directive of the European Community. The index is based on a suite of 86 taxa selected both for their indicator value and ease of identification. When tested on a dataset from 70 sites free of significant organic pollution, this index was more highly correlated with aqueous P concentrations than previous diatom indices. However, where there was heavy organic pollution, it was difficult to separate the effects of eutrophication from other effects. For this reason, the value of TDI is supplemented by an indication of the proportion of the sample that is composed of taxa tolerant to organic pollution. The index was tested on the R. Browney, N-E. England, above and below a major sewage discharge. TDI values indicated that the effect of inorganic nutrients on the river downstream of the discharge was slight as the river was already nutrient-rich, but there was a large increase in the proportion of organic pollution-tolerant taxa. This indicates that the river was already so eutrophic upstream of the discharge that tertiary treatment to remove P would not be effective unless other aspects of the discharge were also improved.

697 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors use N-body simulations to investigate the structure of dark halos in the standard Cold Dark Matter cosmogony, and they find that the density of a halo correlates strongly with the halo mass.
Abstract: We use N-body simulations to investigate the structure of dark halos in the standard Cold Dark Matter cosmogony. Halos are excised from simulations of cosmologically representative regions and are resimulated individually at high resolution. We study objects with masses ranging from those of dwarf galaxy halos to those of rich galaxy clusters. The spherically averaged density profiles of all our halos can be fit over two decades in radius by scaling a simple ``universal'' profile. The characteristic overdensity of a halo, or equivalently its concentration, correlates strongly with halo mass in a way which reflects the mass dependence of the epoch of halo formation. Halo profiles are approximately isothermal over a large range in radii, but are significantly shallower than $r^{-2}$ near the center and steeper than $r^{-2}$ near the virial radius. Matching the observed rotation curves of disk galaxies requires disk mass-to-light ratios to increase systematically with luminosity. Further, it suggests that the halos of bright galaxies depend only weakly on galaxy luminosity and have circular velocities significantly lower than the disk rotation speed. This may explain why luminosity and dynamics are uncorrelated in observed samples of binary galaxies and of satellite/spiral systems. For galaxy clusters, our halo models are consistent both with the presence of giant arcs and with the observed structure of the intracluster medium, and they suggest a simple explanation for the disparate estimates of cluster core radii found by previous authors. Our results also highlight two shortcomings of the CDM model. CDM halos are too concentrated to be consistent with the halo parameters inferred for dwarf irregulars, and the predicted abundance of galaxy halos is larger than the observed abundance of galaxies.

660 citations


Patent
19 Sep 1995
TL;DR: In this article, a light emitting diode (LED) is characterized by an extended lifetime, which consists of a conductive silicon carbide substrate (21), an ohmic contact (22) to the substrate, conductive buffer layer (23), and a double heterostructure (24) including a p-n junction on the buffer layer in which the active (25) and heterostructures layers (26, 27) are selected from the group consisting of binary Group III nitrides and ternary Group III compounds having the formula AxB1-x
Abstract: A light emitting diode (20) emits in the blue portion of the visible spectrum and is characterized by an extended lifetime. The light emitting diode comprises a conductive silicon carbide substrate (21); an ohmic contact (22) to the silicon carbide substrate; a conductive buffer layer (23) on the substrate and selected from the group consisting of gallium nitride, aluminum nitride, indium nitride, ternary Group III nitrides having the formula AxB1-xN, where A and B are Group III elements and where x is zero, one, or a fraction between zero and one, and alloys of silicon carbide with such ternary Group III nitrides; and a double heterostructure (24) including a p-n junction on the buffer layer in which the active (25) and heterostructure layers (26, 27) are selected from the group consisting of binary Group III nitrides and ternary Group III nitrides.

537 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the Hamiltonian and Lagrangian formalism of free κ-relativistic particles with their four-moment constrained to the mass shell is considered.

455 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The activation of the sphingomyelinase/ceramide pathway in HDF is due to senescence and supports the hypotheses that senescENCE represents a distinct program of cell development that can be differentiated from quiescence.

453 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the formation of galaxies is studied by using $N$-body/hydrodynamics simulations to investigate how baryons collect at the centre of dark matter halos.
Abstract: We study the formation of galaxies by using $N$-body/hydrodynamics simulations to investigate how baryons collect at the centre of dark matter halos. We treat the dark matter as a collisionless fluid and the baryons as an ideal gas. We include the effects of gravity, pressure gradients, hydrodynamical shocks, and radiative energy losses, but we neglect star formation. Our initial conditions assume a flat universe dominated by cold dark matter with a mean baryon abundance of 10\% by mass. Typical halos form through the merging of a few smaller systems which had themselves formed in a similar manner at higher redshift. The gas collects at the bottom of dark matter potential wells as soon as these are properly resolved by our simulations. There it settles into cold, tightly bound disks, and it remains cold during subsequent evolution. As their halos coalesce, these disks merge on a timescale that is consistent with dynamical friction estimates based on their {\it total} (gas + surrounding dark matter) mass. Both the merger rates of the disks and their mass spectrum are in remarkably good agreement with recent analytic models that describe the evolution of {\it dark halos} in a hierarchical universe. This very simple model of galaxy formation suffers from serious shortcomings. It predicts that most baryons should be locked up in galaxies, whereas in the real universe most baryons are thought to lie outside visible galaxies. In addition, it predicts the specific angular momentum of a disk to be only about 20\% that of its surrounding halo, corresponding to a radius smaller than that of observed spiral galaxy disks.

390 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A. A. GIBSON*, R. N. THOMPSON, O. H. LEONARDOS, A. P. DICKIN and J. G. MITCHELL as discussed by the authors
Abstract: S. A. GIBSON*, R. N. THOMPSON, O. H. LEONARDOS, A. P. DICKIN AND J. G. MITCHELL 'DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES, UNIVERSITY OF DURHAM, SOUTH ROAD, DURHAM DHi 3LE, UK "DEPARTMENTO DE GEOQUIMICA E RECURSOS MINERAIS, INSTITUTO DE GEOCIENCIAS, UNIVERSIDADE DE BRASILIA, 70910 BRASILIA DF, BRAZIL 'DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY, McMASTER UNIVERSITY, is8o MAIN STREET WEST, HAMILTON, ONTARIO, CANADA L8S 4M1 'DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICS, THE UNIVERSITY, NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE NEi 7RU, UK.

360 citations


Patent
02 Oct 1995
TL;DR: In this paper, a method of producing light emitting diodes from silicon carbide with increased external efficiency is described, which includes directing a beam of laser light at one surface of a portion of silicon carbides, and in which the laser light is sufficient to vaporize the silicon carbIDE that it strikes to thereby define a cut in the carbide portion.
Abstract: A method of producing light emitting diodes from silicon carbide with increased external efficiency is disclosed which includes directing a beam of laser light at one surface of a portion of silicon carbide, and in which the laser light is sufficient to vaporize the silicon carbide that it strikes to thereby define a cut in the silicon carbide portion; and then dry etching the silicon carbide portion to remove by-products generated when the laser light cuts the silicon carbide portion. The resulting wafer and diode structure are also dislcosed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of trading in the FTSE-100 Stock Index Futures on the volatility of the underlying spot market was examined using the GARCH family of techniques.
Abstract: This paper examines the impact of trading in the FTSE-100 Stock Index Futures on the volatility of the underlying spot market. To examine the relationship between information and volatility (as subject neglected in previous studies) the GARCH family of techniques is used. The results suggest that futures trading has led to increased volatility, but that the nature of volatility has not changed post-futures. The finding of price changes being integrated pre-futures, but being stationary post-futures, implies that the introduction of futures has improved the speed and quality of information flowing to the spot market.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The radical nature of NO cannot account for its cytotoxicity, but its reaction with superoxide to form peroxynitite and highly reactive hydroxyl radicals may be important in this context.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors tested the contact hypothesis of the own-race bias in face recognition using a cross-cultural design and found that although on the whole subjects recognized own race faces more accurately and more confidently than they recognized other-race faces, the own race bias was significantly smaller among the high-contact subjects than it was among the low-contac...
Abstract: Although previous studies have demonstrated that faces of one's own race are recognized more accurately than are faces of other races, the theoretical basis of this effect is not clearly understood at present. The experiment reported in this paper tested the contact hypothesis of the own-race bias in face recognition using a cross-cultural design. Four groups of subjects were tested for their recognition of distinctive and typical own-race and other-race faces: (1) black Africans who had a high degree of contact with white faces, (2) black Africans who had little or no contact with white faces, (3) white Africans who had a high degree of contact with black faces, and (4) white Britons who had little contact with black faces. The results showed that although on the whole subjects recognized own-race faces more accurately and more confidently than they recognized other-race faces, the own-race bias in face recognition was significantly smaller among the high-contact subjects than it was among the low-contac...

Journal ArticleDOI
K. Bennett1
TL;DR: Legacy systems may be defined informally as "large software systems that the authors don't know how to cope with but that are vital to their organization".
Abstract: Legacy systems may be defined informally as "large software systems that we don't know how to cope with but that are vital to our organization". Legacy software was written years ago using outdated techniques, yet it continues to do useful work. Migrating and updating this baggage from our past has technical and nontechnical challenges, ranging from justifying the expense in dealing with outside contractors to using program understanding and visualization techniques. >

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that activity timing, diet and habitat have each played a role in the evolutionary radiation of mammalian sensory systems, but with varying effects in the different taxa.
Abstract: How brains have evolved in response to particular selection pressures is illuminated by ecological correlates of differences in brain structure among contemporary species. The focus of most comparative studies has been on the overall size of brains relative to body size, hence ignoring the ways in which selection operates on specific neural systems. Here we investigate evolutionary radiations in the size of visual and olfactory brain structures within three orders of mammals: primates, bats and insectivores. The comparative relationships within these three orders show both similarities and differences. After removal of the allometric effect of overall brain size, the sizes of different structures within each sensory modality are positively correlated in all three orders. Correlations between visual and olfactory structures, however, are negative in primates, negative but non-significant in insectivores, and positive in bats. In both primates and insectivores, nocturnal lineages tend to have larger olfactory structures than do diurnal or partly diurnal lineages, and among the primates diurnal lineages have larger striate visual cortexes. Hence the apparent trade-off between vision and olfaction in primates seems to be related to the divergence of nocturnal and diurnal forms. However, negative correlations between visual and olfactory structures were also found when nocturnal strepsirhines and diurnal haplorhines were analysed separately, suggesting that ecological variables in addition to activity timing may be significant. Indeed, there were also associations with diet: frugivory was associated with enlargements of the geniculostriate visual system in diurnal primates, enlargements of olfactory structures in nocturnal primates, and possibly enlargements of both in bats. Further ecological associations were found within insectivores: aquatic lineages had smaller olfactory structures than in their non-aquatic counterparts, and fossorial lineages had smaller optic nerves than in non-fossorial forms. We conclude that activity timing, diet and habitat have each played a role in the evolutionary radiation of mammalian sensory systems, but with varying effects in the different taxa. Some of the associations between ecology and sensory systems suggest alternative explanations for correlates of overall brain size, which have in the past commonly been interpreted in terms of selection on intelligence.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that polyaniline films have slightly different electrical conductivities, reflecting differences in their chemical structure and layer morphology, and the conductivity was found to depend on the gas ambient.
Abstract: Thin films of polyaniline have been deposited by spinning, evaporation and by the Langmuir-Blodgett technique. The films are shown to possess slightly different in-plane electrical conductivities, reflecting differences in their chemical structure and layer morphology. The conductivity is found to depend on the gas ambient. All types of polyaniline films are sensitive to H2S and NOx at concentrations down to 4 ppm. However, only spun and evaporated films are responsive to SO2.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Clinical studies are underway to evaluate the efficacy of the glutathione-repleting agents, L-2-oxothiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid (OTC) and N-acetylcysteine (NAC), in HIV-infected patients.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A transgenic tobacco line which expresses high levels of GNA has been shown to have enhanced resistance to M. persicae in leaf disc and whole plant bioassays, demonstrating the potential for extending transgenic plant technology to the control of sap-sucking insect pests.
Abstract: The range of sap-sucking insect pests to which GNA, (the mannose specific lectin from snowdrops (Galanthus nivalis) has been shown to be insecticidal in artificial diets has been extended to include the peach potato aphid (Myzus persicae). A gene construct for constitutive expression of GNA from the CaMV35S gene promoter has been introduced into tobacco plants. A transgenic tobacco line which expresses high levels of GNA has been shown to have enhanced resistance toM. persicae in leaf disc and whole plant bioassays,demonstrating the potential for extending transgenic plant technology to the control of sap-sucking insect pests.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the impact of nurse-coordinated intervention delivered to patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus between office visits to primary care physicians.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To examine the impact of a nurse-coordinated intervention delivered to patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus between office visits to primary care physicians.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the energy levels of the A = 18 and 19 nuclei were compared, with an emphasis on the review of material leading to information about the structure of the two nuclei.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A brief discussion of the growing significance for human geographers of "citizenship" as both a source of concepts and a focus for substantive research can be found in this paper, where various papers and commentaries in this issue are framed by a brief discussion.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the surface brightness profiles of late-type spiral galaxies are best fit by two exponentials and the ratio of bulge and disk scale lengths takes on a restricted range of values and is uncorrelated with Hubble type.
Abstract: We combine deep optical and IR photometry for 326 spiral galaxies from two recent galaxy samples and report that the surface brightness profiles of late-type spirals are best fit by two exponentials. Moreover, the ratio of bulge and disk scale lengths takes on a restricted range of values and is uncorrelated with Hubble type. This suggests a scale-free Hubble sequence for late-type spirals. Careful numerical simulations ensure that our results are not affected by seeing or resolution effects. Many of these galaxies show spiral structure continuing into the central regions with a previously undetected small bar and slowly changing colors between the inner disk and the bulge. We invoke secular dynamical evolution and interpret the nature of disk central regions in the context of gas inflow via angular-momentum transfer and viscous transport. In this scenario, galaxy morphologies in late-type spirals are not imprinted at birth but are the result of evolution.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although grey seals are known to range over very large areas outside the breeding season, site fidelity of adults and philopatry of pups for these breeding colonies must be sufficiently common to have effects, through genetic drift, at the sub‐population level.
Abstract: Eight highly variable microsatellite loci were used to examine the genetic variability and differentiation of grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) at two widely spaced British breeding colonies. Samples were collected from adults and pups on the island of North Rona, off the north-west coast of Scotland, and on the Isle of May, situated at the mouth of the Firth of Forth on the east coast Highly significant differences in allele frequencies between these two sites were found for all eight loci, indicating considerable genetic differentiation. Thus, although grey seals are known to range over very large areas outside the breeding season, site fidelity of adults and philopatry of pups for these breeding colonies must be sufficiently common to have effects, through genetic drift, at the sub-population level. Migration rate was estimated using Wrighf's fixation index (FST), Slatkin's private alleles model and the new statistic, RST, which is analogous to (FST) but which takes into account the process of microsatellite mutation. An almost 8-fold discrepancy between the values we obtained provides cautionary evidence that microsatellite loci may contravene one or more of the assumptions on which these methods are based.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors suggest that women may engage in low-key intrasexual strategies in addition to epigamic strategies in order to protect heterosexual relationships from takeover by rival women.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ras interaction with two distinct domains of Raf-1 may be important in Ras-mediated activation of Raf kinase activity, and the ability of two distinct Raf fragments to interact with Ras is compared.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the relationship between present climate and the distribution in Europe of the aggressively invasive exotic Fallopia japonica is described by fitting a response surface based on three bioclimatic variables: mean temperature of the coldest month, the annual temperature sum > 5 °C, and the ratio of actual to potential evapotranspiration.
Abstract: . The relationship between present climate and the distribution in Europe of the aggressively invasive exotic Fallopia japonica is described by fitting a response surface based on three bioclimatic variables: mean temperature of the coldest month, the annual temperature sum > 5 °C, and the ratio of actual to potential evapotranspiration. The close fit between the observed and simulated distributions suggests that the species' European distribution is climatically determined. The response surface also provides a simulation of the extent of the area of native distribution of F. japonica in Southeast Asia that is generally accurate, confirming the robustness of the static correlative model upon which it is based. Simulations of the potential distribution of F. japonica under two alternative 2 x CO2 climate change scenarios indicate the likelihood of considerable spread into higher latitudes and possible eventual exclusion of the species from central Europe. However, despite the robustness of the response surface with present-day climate, the reliability of these simulations as forecasts is likely to be limited because no account is taken of the direct effects of CO2 and their interaction with the species' physiological responses to climate. Similarly, no account is taken of the potential impact of interactions with ‘new’ species as ecosystems change in composition in response to climate change. Nevertheless, the simulations indicate both the possible magnitude of the impacts of forecast climate changes and the regions that may be susceptible to invasion by F. japonica.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that carotid atherosclerosis is a risk factor for hemispheric stroke in patients undergoing CPB.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a combination of gluon and sea quark distributions at small x that is significantly different from those of existing parton sets is presented, and two new global fits to deepinelastic and related data are performed.