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Showing papers by "University of Pittsburgh published in 1981"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results from sorting tasks and protocols reveal that experts and novices begin their problem representations with specifiably different problem categories, and completion of the representations depends on the knowledge associated with the categories.

5,091 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an approximate analytic solution for the radiative transfer equation describing particulate surface light scattering, taking into account multiple scattering and mutual shadowing, was derived for the interpretation of reflectance spectroscopy of laboratory surfaces and the photometry of solar system objects.
Abstract: An approximate analytic solution is derived for the radiative transfer equation describing particulate surface light scattering, taking into account multiple scattering and mutual shadowing. Analytical expressions for the following quantities are found: bidirectional reflectance, radiance coefficient and factor, the normal, Bond, hemispherical, and physical albedos, integral phase function and phase integral, and limb-darkening profile. Scattering functions for mixtures can be calculated, as well as corrections for comparisons of experimental transmission or reflection spectra with observational planetary spectra. The theory should be useful for the interpretation of reflectance spectroscopy of laboratory surfaces and the photometry of solar system objects.

1,816 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that changes in the frequency or amplitude of hypophysiotropic stimulation have profound effects on plasma gonadotropin levels as well as on FSH to LH ratios in the circulation.
Abstract: In adult ovariectomized rhesus monkeys bearing hypothalamic lesions which reduced circulating LH and FSH to undetectable levels, sustained elevated gonadotropin concentrations were reestablished by the intermittent administration of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) at the rate of 1 microgram/min for 6 min once every hour. The effects of varying either the frequency or the amplitude of these GnRH pulses on gonadotropin secretion were examined in such animals. Increasing the frequency of GnRH administration from the physiological one pulse per h to two, three, or five pulses h while maintaining a constant infusion rate and pulse duration resulted in gradual declines in plasma gonadotropin concentrations. These declines were most profound at the highest frequencies and the consequence of reduced pituitary responses to individual GnRH pulses. Decreasing the frequency of GnRH pulses from one per h to one every 3 h led to variable declines in plasma LH levels, but circulating FSH invariably rose. Reducing the GnRH infusion rate from 1 to 0.1 mg/min while maintaining constant frequency and pulse duration resulted in abrupt declines in plasma LH and FSH to immeasurable levels, although pulsatile increments in circulating GnRH concentrations without a concomitant reduction in plasma LH concentrations, which remained unchanged. An infusion rate of 0.5 microgram/min resulted in unstable plasma LH and FSH levels. These results demonstrate that changes in the frequency or amplitude of hypophysiotropic stimulation have profound effects on plasma gonadotropin levels as well as on FSH to LH ratios in the circulation. The physiological implications of these observations are discussed.

624 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The proximity of visceral afferents and efferents in the sacral cord probably reflects the existence of polysynaptic rather than monosynaptic connections since electrophysiological studies revealed that both the defecation and micturition reflexes occurred with very long central delays.
Abstract: Electrophysiological and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) techniques have provided new insights into the organization of the sacral parasympathetic reflex pathways to the large intestine and urinary bladder. The innervation of the two organs arises from separate groups of sacral preganglionic cells: (1) a dorsal band of cells in laminae V and VI providing an input to the intestine; and (2) a lateral band of cells in lamina VII providing an input to the bladder. These two groups of cells were separated by an interband region containing tract cells and interneurons. Neurons in the interband region received a visceral afferent input and exhibited firing correlated with the activity of intestine and urinary bladder. It seems reasonable therefore to consider the interband region as a third component of the sacral parasympathetic nucleus. Anterograde transport of HRP revealed that visceral afferents from the intestine and bladder projected into the parasympathetic nucleus. Most of the projections were collaterals from afferent axons in Lissauer's tract that passed in lamina I laterally and medially around the dorsal horn. These afferent collaterals were located in close proximity to preganglionic perikarya and dendrites in laminae I, V and VI. The proximity of visceral afferents and efferents in the sacral cord probably reflects the existence of polysynaptic rather than monosynaptic connections since electrophysiological studies revealed that both the defecation and micturition reflexes occurred with very long central delays (45-70 msec). The reflex pathways mediating defecation and micturition in cats with an intact neuraxis were markedly different. Defecation was dependent upon a spinal reflex with unmyelinated (C-fiber) peripheral afferent and efferent limbs. On the other hand, micturition was mediated by a spinobulbospinal pathway with myelinated peripheral afferent (A-fiber) and efferent axons (B-fiber). Transection of the spinal cord at T12-L2 blocked the micturition reflex but only transiently depressed the defecation reflex. In chronic spinal cats the micturition reflex recovered 1-2 weeks after spinalization; however, in these animals bladder-to-bladder micturition reflexes were elicited by C-fiber rather than A-fiber afferents. The C-fiber afferent-evoked reflex was weak or undetectable in animals with an intact neuraxis. Transection of the spinal cord also changed the micturition reflex in neonatal kittens (age 5-28 days). In neonates with an intact neuraxis bladder-to-bladder reflexes occurred via a long latency spinobulbospinal pathway (325-430 msec). The long latency is attributable to the slow conduction velocity in immature unmyelinated peripheral and central axons. In chronic spinal kittens (3-7 days after spinalization) the long latency reflex was abolished and a shorter latency (90-150 msec) bladder reflex was unmasked. The emergence of this spinal pathway may reflect axonal sprouting and the formation of new reflex connections within the sacral parasympathetic nucleus.

461 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The widespread rostrocaudal extent of the pelvic primary afferent projection is consistent with the necessity for the integration of somatic and autonomatic elements from various levels of the lumbo‐sacral‐coccygeal spinal cord in the performance of pelvic visceral functions.
Abstract: The central distribution of visceral primary afferent fibers from the pelvic nerve of the cast and the relationship of these fibers to preganglionic neurons of the sacral parasympathetic neurons (SPN) have been studied. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) applied to the cut pelvic nerve was detected ipsilaterally in preganglionic neurons and dorsal root ganglion cells (segments S1-S3), and in central afferent projections to Lissauer's tract (LT), the dorsal columns, the dorsolateral funiculus, and spinal gray matter. The afferent projections were strongest in the region of the SPN (S1-S3) but extended far beyond its limits (e.g., LT was labeled from L4 to Cx7). In the transverse plane, collateral fiber bundles formed a thin shell around the dorsal horn predominantly within lamina I and expanded into terminal fields in the gray matter. The more prominent lateral collateral projection (LCP) extended into laminae V and VI, whereas the medial one (MCP) ended in the dorsal commissure. In longitudinal planes these projections exhibited a periodicity with an interval of approximately 200 micrometer. The distribution of afferent collateral projections overlaps the regions where many preganglionic neurons and their dendritic extensions are located, and also areas known to contain interneurons involved in visceral pathways. A differential distribution of afferents within the SPN was noted where a higher intensity was observed in proximity to those neurons located in laminae V and VI, which innervate the colon, and a lower intensity near neurons located in Lamina VII which innervate the bladder. This is consistent with the known spinal control of colon reflexes and the supraspinal control of bladder reflexes. The widespread rostrocaudal extent of the pelvic primary afferent projection is consistent with the necessity for the integration of somatic and autonomic elements from various levels of the lumbo-sacral-coccygeal spinal cord in the performance of pelvic visceral functions.

449 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experimental, angiographic, and clinical studies that pertain to the origin, growth, and rupture of aneurysms are reviewed, finding that intramural thrombosis may be stimulated by minor leaks and is dependent upon the physical characteristics of anuerysms.
Abstract: Pathological and hemodynamic concepts regarding the origin, growth, and rupture of intracranial saccular aneurysms are reviewed. Aneurysms form as a result of an interplay between hemodynamic factors, such as axial stream impingement and the water hammer effect, and structural weaknesses at apices of arterial bifurcations, such as congenital and acquired medial defects, funnel-shaped dilatations, and areas of thinning. Hypertension and time aid the formation of aneurysms. Unknown factors in women and in some families also play a role. Enlargement of aneurysms results from an interplay between mechanical factors, such as self-excitation and resonance, that produce structural fatigue and pathological processes of repair of the aneurysmal wall. Rupture of aneurysms is caused by the same hemodynamic factors that effect growth and is also influenced by extramural pressure. Pathologically, a major rupture may be preceded by fibrinous and leukocytic infiltration of the wall, bleb formation, and a minor hemorrhage. Such minor leaks can be followed by healing and growth. Aneurysms that escape major hemorrhage or heal successfully after a hemorrhage can grow to giant proportions, but remain susceptible to rupture despite their size, unless they become completely thrombosed. Intramural thrombosis may be stimulated by minor leaks and is dependent upon the physical characteristics of aneurysms. Experimental, angiographic, and clinical studies that pertain to the origin, growth, and rupture of aneurysms are also reviewed.

408 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article defined instrumental help-seeking as an active, complex social-cognitive activity that is essential to learning and achievement, and proposed a heuristic model of the helpseeking process.

379 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Gastrointestinal transit time as well as serum estradiol and progesterone levels were measured in 15 normally menstruating women twice during their menstrual cycle, once in the follicular phase and onset of menses at the expected time documenting ovulatory cycles.

373 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The current review critically discusses definition of utilization and methods for detecting utilization and five "clusters" of variables have been found to affect utilization.
Abstract: An area of concernfor evaluation research is the extent to which evaluations are utilized in policy and program development and change. The current review critically discusses definition of utilization and methodsfor detecting utilization. Five "clusters" of variables have been found to affect utilization. These are: (1) the relevance of evaluation to the needs of potential users; (2) extent of communication between potential users and producers of evaluations; (3) translation of evaluations into their implicationsforpolicy and programs; (4) credibility or trust placed in evaluations; and (5) commitment or advocacy by individual users.

362 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Reinforcement was rated as more acceptable than the other treatments which followed in order, positive practice, time out, and medication, and the presence of undesirable side effects markedly influenced acceptability ratings.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A one-year naturalistic follow-up of the 35 subjects who completed the protocol revealed that although many of the patients had a variable clinical course, both original treatment groups remained generally well and none of the between-group differences were significant.
Abstract: Using a controlled, clinical-trial format, 44 nonpsychotic, nonbipolar, depressed outpatients were treated with cognitive therapy or imipramine hydrochloride over a 12-week period. Although both interventions were associated with significant reductions in levels of depression, the cognitive-therapy patients showed greater symptomatic improvement and a higher treatment-completion rate. A one-year naturalistic follow-up of the 35 subjects who completed the protocol revealed that although many of the patients had a variable clinical course, both original treatment groups remained generally well. Self-rated depressive symptomatology was significantly lower for those who, one year earlier, had completed cognitive therapy than for those who had been in the clinical trial's pharmacotherapy cell. While there were several other interesting trends in favor of the cognitive-therapy patients, none of the between-group differences were significant. The pragmatic and clinical implications of the followup results are discussed.



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Blood volume determinations were made in 12 unselected neurosurgical patients with intracranial disease who fulfilled the laboratory criteria for SIADH and ten patients had significant decreases in their red blood cell mass, plasma volume, and total blood volume.
Abstract: ✓ Patients with intracranial disorders are prone to develop hyponatremia with inability to prevent the loss of sodium in their urine. This was originally referred to as “cerebral salt wasting,” but more recently is thought to be secondary to the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH). Blood volume determinations were made in 12 unselected neurosurgical patients with intracranial disease who fulfilled the laboratory criteria for SIADH. Ten of the 12 patients had significant decreases in their red blood cell mass, plasma volume, and total blood volume. The finding of a decreased blood volume in patients who fulfill the laboratory criteria for SIADH is better explained by the original concepts of cerebral salt wasting than by SIADH. The primary defect may be the inability of the kidney to conserve sodium.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The role of grain boundaries in corrosion product scales as short-circuit transport paths for the outward diffusion of metal and the inward ingress of oxygen, sulfur and carbon needs to be clarified.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using a blood alcohol level > 200 mg/dl in a clinically “non-intoxicated” individual as the cut-off level for defining one as a suspect chronic alcohol user, the data would suggest that such individuals not uncommonly have blood alcohol levels as high as 290 ± 9mg/dl.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated symmetry properties of solutions of systems of semilinear elliptic equations, using the maximum principle and the device of moving parallel planes to a critical position and then showing that the solution is symmetric about the limiting plane.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the theoretical bidirectional reflectance expression derived by Hapke (1981) is studied experimentally and it is shown that the expression describes satisfactorily the measured angular scattering and spectral properties of a cobalt glass powder in which the two properties vary greatly with wavelength.
Abstract: Aspects of the theoretical bidirectional reflectance expression derived by Hapke (1981) are studied experimentally, and it is shown that the expression describes satisfactorily the measured angular scattering and spectral properties of a cobalt glass powder in which the two properties vary greatly with wavelength. The theoretical reflectance function also describes measured distributions of intensity across the surfaces of planets, except near the sunlit limb, where the macroscopic roughness influences the brightness.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: OCP has a variable course because there were patients in all stages who did not progress and the acute manifestations of OCP may cause rapid shrinkage of the conjunctiva and may be suppressed systemic corticosteroids.

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Nov 1981-Nature
TL;DR: Investigation of Lower Pleistocene sites at Chesowanja have yielded in situ Oldowan and Oldowan-like stone artefacts, evidence of fire and a fragmentary ‘robust’ australopithecine cranium.
Abstract: Recent investigations of Lower Pleistocene sites at Chesowanja have yielded in situ Oldowan and Oldowan-like stone artefacts, evidence of fire and a fragmentary 'robust' australopithecine cranium. Burnt clay found at one artefact locality dated to >1.42±0.07 Myr is the earliest known evidence of fire associated with a hominid occupation site.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results are interpreted as showing that the neural generator of the second peak of the BSEP is the intracranial portion of the auditory nerve and not, as was earlier assumed, the cochlear nucleus.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An investigation is presented in which a computer simulation model (DIAGNOSER) is used to develop and test predictions for behavior of subjects in a task of medical diagnosis and found form of diagnostic reasoning was similar for all subjects trained in medicine and for the simulation model.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that CS-evoked representations of events can substitute for those events themselves in the formation of new associations as well as stimulate specificity of aversions established in rats.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Heart rate data collection and quantification guidelines are provided for the collection, quantification, and analysis of heart rate data.
Abstract: Publication guidelines are provided for the collection, quantification, and analysis of heart rate data.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The observation that estrogen administration stimulates the release of oxytocin and estrogen-stimulated neurophysin provides additional evidence that this Neurophysin is the oxytoc in-neurophysin of man.
Abstract: RIA for the measurement of oxytocin in human plasma is described. Extraction of oxytocin from larger peptides in plasma used acetone precipitation with a 75% +/- 2 SEM recovery of oxytocin. Nonspecific binding of the assay was less than 4%, and the minimum level of detection was 0.2 microunits/tube. No cross-reactivity was noted with neurophysins, arginine, or lysine vasopressin. The mean basal level (+/- SEM) of oxytocin in men was 1.80 +/- 0.07 microunits/ml and was not different in normal women (1.71 +/- 0.07 microunits/ml). Changes in posture had no effect on the levels of oxytocin. Samples obtained every 15 min over 4 h showed no pulsatile secretion of oxytocin. In women chronically receiving estrogen as an oral contraceptive, oxytocin was greater than normal, (4.59 +/- 0.51 microunits/ml; P less than 0.01). Estrogen-stimulated neurophysin was also elevated (8.45 +/- 1.99 ng/ml; P less than 0.005). Acute ingestion of estrogen caused an increase in the level of oxytocin in plasma by 12 h and a concomitant elevation of estrogen-stimulated neurophysin. When the neurophysin was isolated from plasma obtained from a subject after ingestion of estrogen, the neurophysin from plasma comigrated on a polyacrylamide gel with a human pituitary standard of estrogen-stimulated neurophysin. In the studies in which neurophysin was elevated, the correlation between the level of oxytocin and the level of estrogen-stimulated neurophysin in plasma was significant (P less than 0.01). The observation that estrogen administration stimulates the release of oxytocin and estrogen-stimulated neurophysin provides additional evidence that this neurophysin is the oxytocin-neurophysin of man.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an image smoothing scheme for improving the quality of noisy pictures is presented, which is an iterative scheme employing a 3 × 3 mask in which the weighting coefficients are the normalized gradient inverse between the center pixel and its neighbors.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An analysis of the geometries of one hundred O-H⋯O hydrogen bonds observed by neutron diffraction in 24 crystal structures showed the following results as discussed by the authors : Twenty-five of the hydrogen bonds can be described as bifurcated, indicating that this form of association is more common than previously supposed.