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Showing papers by "University of Konstanz published in 1999"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These results support a neurobiological model of language in the Hebbian tradition and provide evidence for processing differences between words and matched meaningless pseudowords, and between word classes, such as concrete content and abstract function words, and words evoking visual or motor associations.
Abstract: If the cortex is an associative memory, strongly connected cell assemblies will form when neurons in different cortical areas are frequently active at the same time. The cortical distributions of these assemblies must be a consequence of where in the cortex correlated neuronal activity occurred during learning. An assembly can be considered a functional unit exhibiting activity states such as full activation ("ignition") after appropriate sensory stimulation (possibly related to perception) and continuous reverberation of excitation within the assembly (a putative memory process). This has implications for cortical topographies and activity dynamics of cell assemblies forming during language acquisition, in particular for those representing words. Cortical topographies of assemblies should be related to aspects of the meaning of the words they represent, and physiological signs of cell assembly ignition should be followed by possible indicators of reverberation. The following postulates are discussed in detail: (1) assemblies representing phonological word forms are strongly lateralized and distributed over perisylvian cortices; (2) assemblies representing highly abstract words such as grammatical function words are also strongly lateralized and restricted to these perisylvian regions; (3) assemblies representing concrete content words include additional neurons in both hemispheres; (4) assemblies representing words referring to visual stimuli include neurons in visual cortices; and (5) assemblies representing words referring to actions include neurons in motor cortices. Two main sources of evidence are used to evaluate these proposals: (a) imaging studies focusing on localizing word processing in the brain, based on stimulus-triggered event-related potentials (ERPs), positron emission tomography (PET), and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), and (b) studies of the temporal dynamics of fast activity changes in the brain, as revealed by high-frequency responses recorded in the electroencephalogram (EEG) and magnetoencephalogram (MEG). These data provide evidence for processing differences between words and matched meaningless pseudowords, and between word classes, such as concrete content and abstract function words, and words evoking visual or motor associations. There is evidence for early word class-specific spreading of neuronal activity and for equally specific high-frequency responses occurring later. These results support a neurobiological model of language in the Hebbian tradition. Competing large-scale neuronal theories of language are discussed in light of the data summarized. Neurobiological perspectives on the problem of serial order of words in syntactic strings are considered in closing.

1,009 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The increased genetic complexity of fish might reflect their evolutionary success and diversity, and many others evolved new functions particularly during development.

787 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
30 Apr 1999-Cell
TL;DR: It is shown here that the widely conserved heat shock protein DegP (HtrA) has both general molecular chaperone and proteolytic activities, which mean that a single cellular factor can switch between two key pathways, controlling protein stability and turnover.

777 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
22 Jan 1999-Science
TL;DR: A method based on the phase separation of a macromolecular liquid to generate nanoporous polymer films is demonstrated that creates surfaces with high optical transmission.
Abstract: Optical surfaces coated with a thin layer to improve light transmission are ubiquitous in everyday optical applications as well as in industrial and scientific instruments. Discovered first in 1817 by Fraunhofer, the coating of lenses became standard practice in the 1930s. In spite of intensive research, broad-band antireflection coatings are still limited by the lack of materials with low refractive indices. A method based on the phase separation of a macromolecular liquid to generate nanoporous polymer films is demonstrated that creates surfaces with high optical transmission.

677 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
08 Jul 1999-Nature
TL;DR: Comparisons of behavioural and electrophysiological indices of spatial tuning within central and peripheral auditory space in congenitally blind and normally sighted but blindfolded adults test the hypothesis that the effects of visual deprivation might be more pronounced for processing peripheral sounds.
Abstract: Despite reports of improved auditory discrimination capabilities in blind humans1,2,3 and visually deprived animals4, there is no general agreement as to the nature or pervasiveness of such compensatory sensory enhancements5. Neuroimaging studies have pointed out differences in cerebral organization between blind and sighted humans6,7,8,9,10,11,12, but the relationship between these altered cortical activation patterns and auditory sensory acuity remains unclear. Here we compare behavioural and electrophysiological indices of spatial tuning within central and peripheral auditory space in congenitally blind and normally sighted but blindfolded adults to test the hypothesis (raised by earlier studies of the effects of auditory deprivation on visual processing13,14) that the effects of visual deprivation might be more pronounced for processing peripheral sounds. We find that blind participants displayed localization abilities that were superior to those of sighted controls, but only when attending to sounds in peripheral auditory space. Electrophysiological recordings obtained at the same time revealed sharper tuning of early spatial attention mechanisms in the blind subjects. Differences in the scalp distribution of brain electrical activity between the two groups suggest a compensatory reorganization of brain areas in the blind that may contribute to the improved spatial resolution for peripheral sound sources.

639 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the magnetic and superconducting properties of the hybrid ruthenate-cuprate compound (RuSr) were investigated by means of zero-field muon-spin rotation (ZF-\ensuremath{\mu}SR) and dc magnetization measurements.
Abstract: We have investigated the magnetic and the superconducting properties of the hybrid ruthenate-cuprate compound ${\mathrm{RuSr}}_{2}{\mathrm{GdCu}}_{2}{\mathrm{O}}_{8}$ by means of zero-field muon-spin rotation (ZF-\ensuremath{\mu}SR) and dc magnetization measurements. The dc-magnetization data established that this material exhibits ferromagnetic order of the Ru moments [\ensuremath{\mu}(Ru)\ensuremath{\approx}1 ${\ensuremath{\mu}}_{B}]$ below ${T}_{C}=133$ K and becomes superconducting at a much lower temperature ${T}_{c}=16$ K. The ZF-\ensuremath{\mu}SR experiments indicate that the ferromagnetic phase is homogeneous on a microscopic scale and accounts for most of the sample volume. They also suggest that the magnetic order is not significantly modified at the onset of superconductivity.

497 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a two-dimensional system of colloidal particles with absolutely calibrated magnetic interaction is used to investigate static and dynamic properties at the 2D crystal to liquid phase transition, in perfect agreement with the theory of Kosterlitz and Thouless.
Abstract: A novel two-dimensional system of colloidal particles with absolutely calibrated magnetic interaction is used to investigate static and dynamic properties at the 2D crystal to liquid phase transition. We observe two successive transitions from the solid to the liquid phase with an intermediate hexatic phase, in perfect agreement with the theory of Kosterlitz and Thouless. The absolute values of the transition temperatures are given, and we demonstrate that they depend neither on the system size nor on the cooling rate.

463 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Zn is sequestered in a soluble form predominantly in the epidermal vacuoles in T. caerulescens leaves and that mesophyll cells are able to tolerate up to at least 60 mM Zn in their sap.
Abstract: Cellular compartmentation of Zn in the leaves of the hyperaccumulator Thlaspi caerulescens was investigated using energy-dispersive x-ray microanalysis and single-cell sap extraction. Energy-dispersive x-ray microanalysis of frozen, hydrated leaf tissues showed greatly enhanced Zn accumulation in the epidermis compared with the mesophyll cells. The relative Zn concentration in the epidermal cells correlated linearly with cell length in both young and mature leaves, suggesting that vacuolation of epidermal cells may promote the preferential Zn accumulation. The results from single-cell sap sampling showed that the Zn concentrations in the epidermal vacuolar sap were 5 to 6.5 times higher than those in the mesophyll sap and reached an average of 385 mm in plants with 20,000 μg Zn g−1 dry weight of shoots. Even when the growth medium contained no elevated Zn, preferential Zn accumulation in the epidermal vacuoles was still evident. The concentrations of K, Cl, P, and Ca in the epidermal sap generally decreased with increasing Zn. There was no evidence of association of Zn with either P or S. The present study demonstrates that Zn is sequestered in a soluble form predominantly in the epidermal vacuoles in T. caerulescens leaves and that mesophyll cells are able to tolerate up to at least 60 mm Zn in their sap.

449 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors found that the stereotype of women is equally available to individuals with and without chronic goals, and the discriminant validity of the concept of egalitarian goals was established, showing that stereotype activation is controlled by chronic egalitarian goals.
Abstract: This research shows stereotype activation is controlled by chronic egalitarian goals. In the first 2 studies it was found that the stereotype of women is equally available to individuals with and without chronic goals, and the discriminant validity of the concept of egalitarian goals was established. In the next 2 experiments, differences in stereotype activation as a function of this individual difference were found. In Study 3, participants read attributes following stereotypical primes. Facilitated response times to stereotypical attributes were found for nonchronics but not for chronics. This lack of facilitation occurred at stimulus onset asynchronies (SOAs) where effortful correction processes could not operate, demonstrating preconscious control of stereotype activation due to chronic goals. In Study 4, inhibition of the stereotype was found at an SOA where effortful processes of stereotype suppression could not operate. The data reveal that goals are activated and used preconsciously to prevent stereotype activation, demonstrating both the controllability of stereotype activation and the implicit role of goals in cognitive control.

442 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse tax competition between two unequal size countries trying to attract a foreign-owned monopolist and show that in equilibrium the large country receives the investment and may even be able to charge a positive tax, if the difference in the sizes of the national markets is sufficiently great.

435 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
30 Sep 1999-Nature
TL;DR: It is shown that the mean resistance of Daphnia genotypes to dietary cyanobacteria increased significantly during this eutrophication of Lake Constance, which has implications for the ways that ecosystems respond to nutrient enrichment through the impact of grazers on primary production.
Abstract: Natural selection can lead to rapid changes in organisms, which can in turn influence ecosystem processes1 A key factor in the functioning of lake ecosystems is the rate at which primary producers are eaten, and major consumers, such as the zooplankton Daphnia2, can be subject to strong selection pressures when phytoplankton assemblages change Lake Constance in central Europe experienced a period of eutrophication (the biological effects of an input of plant nutrients) during the 1960s–70s3, which caused an increase4 in the abundance of nutritionally poor or even toxic5 cyanobacteria By hatching long-dormant eggs6 of Daphnia galeata found in lake sediments, we show that the mean resistance of Daphnia genotypes to dietary cyanobacteria increased significantly during this eutrophication This rapid evolution of resistance has implications for the ways that ecosystems respond to nutrient enrichment through the impact of grazers on primary production

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The topography of gamma band spectral power and event-related potentials in human EEG associated with perceptual switching effected by rotating ambiguous (bistable) figures support the notion that formation of a visual percept may involve oscillations in a distributed neuronal assembly.
Abstract: Neuronal oscillations in the gamma band (above 30 Hz) have been proposed to be a possible mechanism for the visual representation of objects. The present study examined the topography of gamma band spectral power and event-related potentials in human EEG associated with perceptual switching effected by rotating ambiguous (bistable) figures. Eleven healthy human subjects were presented two rotating bistable figures: first, a face figure that allowed perception of a sad or happy face depending on orientation and therefore caused a perceptual switch at defined points in time when rotated, and, second, a modified version of the Rubin vase, allowing perception as a vase or two faces whereby the switch was orientation-independent. Nonrotating figures served as further control stimuli. EEG was recorded using a high-density array with 128 electrodes. We found a negative event-related potential associated with the switching of the sad–happy figure, which was most pronounced at central prefrontal sites. Gamma band activity (GBA) was enhanced at occipital electrode sites in the rotating bistable figures compared with the standing stimuli, being maximal at vertical stimulus orientations that allowed an easy recognition of the sad and happy face or the vase–faces, respectively. At anterior electrodes, GBA showed a complementary pattern, being maximal when stimuli were oriented horizontally. The findings support the notion that formation of a visual percept may involve oscillations in a distributed neuronal assembly.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the processing of nouns and verbs in the intact brain using behavioral measures, stimulus-triggered event-related potentials and high-frequency electrocortical responses in the gamma band.
Abstract: Lesion evidence indicates that words from different lexical categories, such as nouns and verbs, may have different cortical counterparts. In this study, processing of nouns and verbs was investigated in the intact brain using (i) behavioral measures, (ii) stimulus-triggered event-related potentials and (iii) high-frequency electrocortical responses in the gamma band. Nouns and verbs carefully matched for various variables, including word frequency, length, arousal and valence, were presented in a lexical decision task while electrocortical responses were recorded. In addition, information about cognitive processing of these stimuli was obtained using questionnaires and reaction times. As soon as ~200 ms after stimulus onset, event-related potentials disclosed electrocortical differences between nouns and verbs over widespread cortical areas. In a later time window, 500‐800 ms after stimulus onset, there was a significant difference between high-frequency responses in the 30 Hz range. Difference maps obtained from both event-related potentials and high-frequency responses revealed strong betweencategory differences of signals recorded above motor and visual cortices. Behavioral data suggest that these different physiological responses are related to semantic associations (motor or visual) elicited by these word groups. Our results are consistent with a neurobiological model of language representation postulating cell assemblies with distinct cortical topographies as biological counterparts of words. Assemblies representing nouns referring to visually perceived objects may include neurons in visual cortices, and assemblies representing action verbs may include additional neurons in motor, premotor and prefrontal cortices. Event-related potentials and high-frequency responses are proposed to indicate two different functional states of cell assemblies: initial full activation (‘ignition’) and continuous reverberatory activity.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The rotating stimulus elicited higher gamma band power as compared to the standing stimulus at electrode locations, which may be related to the activity of underlying cortical structures specialized for motion processing.

Journal ArticleDOI
29 Jul 1999-Nature
TL;DR: By comparing the haem arrangement of this nitrite reductase with that of other multihaem cytochromes, this work has been able to identify a family of proteins in which the orientation of haem groups is conserved whereas structure and function are not.
Abstract: The enzyme cytochrome c nitrite reductase catalyses the six-electron reduction of nitrite to ammonia as one of the key stepsin the biological nitrogen cycle1, where it participates inthe anaerobic energy metabolism of dissimilatory nitrate ammonification2. Here we report on the crystal structure of this enzyme from the microorganism Sulfurospirillum deleyianum, which we solved by multiwavelength anomalous dispersion methods. We propose a reaction scheme for the transformation of nitrite based on structural and spectroscopic information. Cytochrome c nitrite reductase is a functional dimer, with 10 close-packed haem groups of type c and an unusual lysine-coordinated high-spin haem at the active site. By comparing the haem arrangement of this nitrite reductase with that of other multihaem cytochromes, we have been able to identify a family of proteins in which the orientation of haem groups is conserved whereas structure and function are not.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that NO can decide the shape of cell death by lowering intracellular ATP below the level required to allow the coordinated execution of apoptosis.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The β2GPI structure reveals potential autoantibody‐binding sites and supports mutagenesis studies where Trp316 and CKNKEKKC have been found to be essential for the phospholipid‐binding capacity of β2 GPI.
Abstract: The high affinity of human plasma beta2-glycoprotein I (beta(2)GPI), also known as apolipoprotein-H (ApoH), for negatively charged phospholipids determines its implication in a variety of physiological pathways, including blood coagulation and the immune response. beta(2)GPI is considered to be a cofactor for the binding of serum autoantibodies from antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) and correlated with thrombosis, lupus erythematosus and recurrent fetal loss. We solved the beta(2)GPI structure from a crystal form with 84% solvent and present a model containing all 326 amino acid residues and four glycans. The structure reveals four complement control protein modules and a distinctly folding fifth C-terminal domain arranged like beads on a string to form an elongated J-shaped molecule. Domain V folds into a central beta-spiral of four antiparallel beta-sheets with two small helices and an extended C-terminal loop region. It carries a distinct positive charge and the sequence motif CKNKEKKC close to the hydrophobic loop composed of residues LAFW (313-316), resulting in an excellent counterpart for interactions with negatively charged amphiphilic substances. The beta(2)GPI structure reveals potential autoantibody-binding sites and supports mutagenesis studies where Trp316 and CKNKEKKC have been found to be essential for the phospholipid-binding capacity of beta(2)GPI.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Treatment of the embryonic nigral cell suspension with Ac–YVAD–cmk mitigated DNA fragmentation and reduced apoptosis in transplants and increased survival of dopaminergic neurons grafted to hemiparkinsonian rats, and thereby substantially improved functional recovery.
Abstract: Transplantation of embryonic nigral tissue ameliorates functional deficiencies in Parkinson disease. The main practical constraints of neural grafting are the shortage of human donor tissue and the poor survival of dopaminergic neurons grafted into patients, which is estimated at 5-10% (refs. 3,4). The required amount of human tissue could be considerably reduced if the neuronal survival was augmented. Studies in rats indicate that most implanted embryonic neurons die within 1 week of transplantation, and that most of this cell death is apoptotic. Modified peptides, such as acetyl-tyrosinyl-valyl-alanyl-aspartyl-chloro-methylketone (Ac-YVAD-cmk), that specifically inhibit proteases of the caspase family effectively block apoptosis in a plethora of experimental paradigms, such as growth factor withdrawal, excitotoxicity, axotomy, cerebral ischemia and brain trauma. Here we examined the effects of caspase inhibition by Ac-YVAD-cmk on cell death immediately after donor tissue preparation and on long-term graft survival. Treatment of the embryonic nigral cell suspension with Ac-YVAD-cmk mitigated DNA fragmentation and reduced apoptosis in transplants. It also increased survival of dopaminergic neurons grafted to hemiparkinsonian rats, and thereby substantially improved functional recovery.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new method for observing cell/substrate contacts of living cells in culture based on the optical excitation of surface plasmons is developed, which obtained a cell/ substrate distance of 160 +/- 10 nm for most parts of the cells.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Several features of the MCT nonergodicity transition in this system agree qualitatively with experimental observations on the colloidal gel transition, suggesting that the gel transition is caused by a low temperature extension of the glass transition.
Abstract: Colloidal gel and glass transitions are investigated using the idealized mode coupling theory (MCT) for model systems characterized by short-range attractive interactions. Results are presented for adhesive hard sphere and hard core attractive Yukawa systems. According to MCT, the former system shows a critical glass transition concentration that increases significantly with introduction of a weak attraction. For the latter attractive Yukawa system, MCT predicts low temperature nonergodic states that extend to the critical and subcritical region. Several features of the MCT nonergodicity transition in this system agree qualitatively with experimental observations on the colloidal gel transition, suggesting that the gel transition is caused by a low temperature extension of the glass transition. The range of the attraction is shown to govern the way the glass transition line traverses the phase diagram relative to the critical point, analogous to findings for the fluid-solid freezing transition.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Emotional processing enhanced gamma band power at right frontal electrodes regardless of the particular valence as compared to processing neutral pictures, suggesting that the extended distribution of specific activity in the gamma band may be the signature of cell assemblies with members in limbic, temporal and frontal neocortical structures that differ in spatial distribution depending on the particular type of emotional processing.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review summarizes the advantages of chronic low‐frequency stimulation for studying activity‐induced changes in phenotype, and its potential for investigating regulatory mechanisms of gene expression and the potential clinical relevance or utility of the technique is considered.
Abstract: The model of chronic low-frequency stimulation for the study of muscle plasticity was developed over 30 years ago. This protocol leads to a transformation of fast, fatigable muscles toward slower, fatigue-resistant ones. It involves qualitative and quantitative changes of all elements of the muscle fiber studied so far. The multitude of stimulation-induced changes makes it possible to establish the full adaptive potential of skeletal muscle. Both functional and structural alterations are caused by orchestrated exchanges of fast protein isoforms with their slow counterparts, as well as by altered levels of expression. This remodeling of the muscle fiber encompasses the major, myofibrillar proteins, membrane-bound and soluble proteins involved in Ca2+ dynamics, and mitochondrial and cytosolic enzymes of energy metabolism. Most transitions occur in a coordinated, time-dependent manner and result from altered gene expression, including transcriptional and posttranscriptional processes. This review summarizes the advantages of chronic low-frequency stimulation for studying activity-induced changes in phenotype, and its potential for investigating regulatory mechanisms of gene expression. The potential clinical relevance or utility of the technique is also considered.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The arguments presented here support the view that in neuronal death, individual, intricately interconnected pathways self-amplify or delete each other in an inflationary process, which results in the many shapes of cell death.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The greater the coverage of the surface of the volume conductor, the more the average reference approaches the ideal inactive reference, and this polar average reference effect (PARE) is illustrated.

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Sep 1999-Science
TL;DR: A microscopic method was developed that uses elastic optical waveguides to visualize and measure forces locally exerted by single appressoria of C. graminicola, and found the force exerted was about 17 micronewtons.
Abstract: Many plant pathogenic fungi, such as the cereal pathogen Colletotrichum graminicola, differentiate highly specialized infection structures called appressoria, which send a penetration peg into the underlying plant cell. Appressoria have been shown to generate enormous turgor pressure, but direct evidence for mechanical infection of plants by fungi is lacking. A microscopic method was developed that uses elastic optical waveguides to visualize and measure forces locally exerted by single appressoria. By this method, the force exerted by appressoria of C. graminicola was found to be about 17 micronewtons.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated in vivo that the WC proteins are assembled in a white collar complex and that wc‐1 undergoes a change in mobility due to light‐induced phosphorylation events and could play a role in the transient expression of blue‐light‐regulated genes.
Abstract: Mutations in either white collar-1 (wc-1) or white collar-2 (wc-2) lead to a loss of most blue-light-induced phenomena in Neurospora crassa. Sequence analysis and in vitro experiments show that WC-1 and WC-2 are transcription factors regulating the expression of light-induced genes. The WC proteins form homo- and heterodimers in vitro; this interaction could represent a fundamental step in the control of their activity. We demonstrate in vivo that the WC proteins are assembled in a white collar complex (WCC) and that WC-1 undergoes a change in mobility due to light-induced phosphorylation events. The phosphorylation level increases progressively upon light exposure, producing a hyperphosphorylated form that is degraded and apparently replaced in the complex by a newly synthesized WC-1. WC-2 is unmodified and also does not change quantitatively in the time frame examined. Light-dependent phosphorylation of WC-1 also occurs in a wc-2 mutant, suggesting that a functional WC-2 is dispensable for this light-specific event. These results suggest that light-induced phosphorylation and degradation of WC-1 could play a role in the transient expression of blue-light-regulated genes. Our findings suggest a mechanism by which WC-1 and WC-2 mediate light responses in Neurospora.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Quantification of substrate consumption, sulphide formation and formed cell mass revealed that naphthalene was completely oxidized with sulphate as the electron acceptor.
Abstract: Incubation of marine sediment in anoxic, sulphate-rich medium in the presence of naphthalene resulted in the enrichment of sulphate-reducing bacteria. Pure cultures with short, oval cells (1.3 by 1.3-1.9 microm) were isolated that grew with naphthalene as the only organic carbon source and electron donor for sulphate reduction to sulphide. One strain, NaphS2, was characterized. It affiliated with completely oxidizing sulphate-reducing bacteria of the delta-subclass of the Proteobacteria, as revealed by 16S rRNA sequence analysis. 2-Naphthoate, benzoate, pyruvate and acetate were used in addition to naphthalene. Quantification of substrate consumption, sulphide formation and formed cell mass revealed that naphthalene was completely oxidized with sulphate as the electron acceptor.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the prosodic and voice quality techniques which speakers use in reported dialogues to contextualize their point of view towards the reconstructed utterances are analyzed based on data of informal German conversations (dinner table conversations, coffee break chats and telephone interactions) among friends and family members.