23 resultados para Teorema de Sturm
Resumo:
El estudio aristotélico del tiempo (Phys. IV, 10-14), centrado en su definición del mismo como "número del movimiento según el antes y el después", presenta una sorprendente ausencia: en él no halla aplicación, como cabría esperar, la definición previamente dada del movimiento como "acto de la potencia en cuianto tal". Sin embargo, se muestra que la epistemología aristotélica permitiría esperar una (al aplicación. Asimismo, para mostrar quedicha aplicación sería posible, se ofrece una prueba, partiendo de la definición de movimiento, del teorema "lo que se mueve, se mueve de algo a algo", básico para la defiinición del tiempo como número del movimiento.
Resumo:
Treball final de carrera basat en el reconeixement de punts clau en imatges mitjançant l'algorisme Random Ferns.
Resumo:
En este art\'\i culo se presenta, con una gran variedad de ejemplos, unm\'etodo para sacar ra\'\i ces cuadradas exactas. Este m\'etodo se present\'opor primera vez hace 15 a\~nos con el nombre de ley Costeana, pero adiferencia de ahora se enfatiza en el hecho que puede ser implementadoen el curso de cuarto de primaria, al cual asiste la autora (primer autor)de este articulo.
Resumo:
En el presente documento se describe un ejercicio de simulación orientado a facilitar la comprensión y asimilación del funcionamiento de la votación por mayoría y la regla de Borda. El ejercicio consiste en proponer a los alumnos que escojan entre dos proyectos (un programa de becas y una ampliación de las aulas de estudio) que presuntamente se van a realizar en la facultad en la que estudian. Para determinar qué proyecto se debería llevar a cabo se utiliza las reglas de la mayoría y Borda. Los alumnos deben responder a diversas rondas de votaciones donde el orden de la votación o agenda ha sido determinada por el instructor. El ejercicio es útil para exponer y debatir las cuestiones que se explican en un curso estándar de Hacienda Pública sobre el uso de la regla de la mayoría y la regla de Borda, como por ejemplo, la existencia de ciclos en los resultados de una votación, la posibilidad de condicionar el resultado de las votaciones mediante la manipulación de la agenda, el comportamiento estratégico, la formación de coaliciones, las propiedades del teorema de Arrow y la eficiencia de la(s) diferentes alternativas escogidas. El ejercicio se enmarca como parte de las actividades realizadas por el Grupo de Innovación Docente (GID-HAL) de la Universidad de Barcelona.
Resumo:
This study makes an attempt to capture some of the aesthetic ideas prospering in the latter half of the eighteenth century and investigates in what way these are possibly being manifested in different musical aspects in Beethoven's early work, and most specifically in his eight sonata, often referred to as the Pathétique sonata. Beginning the first chapter with an introduction to aesthetic notions in Beethoven's age, the second chapter is mostly concerned with anecdotes regarding the Pathétique sonata. Further the third chapter exhibits possible influences between Cherubini, Beethoven and Wagner, and the last three chapters treat different musical and aesthetic aspects like Beethoven's relation to the C minor tonality, the German Sturm und Drang movement, and finally some parallels that can be found between literature and music.
Resumo:
The Nucleus accumbens (Nacc) has been proposed to act as a limbic-motor interface. Here, using invasive intraoperative recordings in an awake patient suffering from obsessive-compulsive disease (OCD), we demonstrate that its activity is modulated by the quality of performance of the subject in a choice reaction time task designed to tap action monitoring processes. Action monitoring, that is, error detection and correction, is thought to be supported by a system involving the dopaminergic midbrain, the basal ganglia, and the medial prefrontal cortex. In surface electrophysiological recordings, action monitoring is indexed by an error-related negativity (ERN) appearing time-locked to the erroneous responses and emanating from the medial frontal cortex. In preoperative scalp recordings the patient's ERN was found to be signifi cantly increased compared to a large (n = 83) normal sample, suggesting enhanced action monitoring processes. Intraoperatively, error-related modulations were obtained from the Nacc but not from a site 5 mm above. Importantly, crosscorrelation analysis showed that error-related activity in the Nacc preceded surface activity by 40 ms. We propose that the Nacc is involved in action monitoring, possibly by using error signals from the dopaminergic midbrain to adjust the relative impact of limbic and prefrontal inputs on frontal control systems in order to optimize goal-directed behavior.
Resumo:
Implantation of deep brain stimulation (DBS) electrodes via stereotactic neurosurgery has become a standard procedure for the treatment of Parkinson's disease. More recently, the range of neuropsychiatric conditions and the possible target structures suitable for DBS have greatly increased. The former include obsessive compulsive disease, depression, obesity, tremor, dystonia, Tourette's syndrome and cluster-headache. In this article we argue that several of the target structures for DBS (nucleus accumbens, posterior inferior hypothalamus, nucleus subthalamicus, nuclei in the thalamus, globus pallidus internus, nucleus pedunculopontinus) are located at strategic positions within brain circuits related to motivational behaviors, learning, and motor regulation. Recording from DBS electrodes either during the operation or post-operatively from externalized leads while the patient is performing cognitive tasks tapping the functions of the respective circuits provides a new window on the brain mechanisms underlying these functions. This is exemplified by a study of a patient suffering from obsessive-compulsive disease from whom we recorded in a flanker task designed to assess action monitoring processes while he received a DBS electrode in the right nucleus accumbens. Clear error-related modulations were obtained from the target structure, demonstrating a role of the nucleus accumbens in action monitoring. Based on recent conceptualizations of several different functional loops and on neuroimaging results we suggest further lines of research using this new window on brain functions.
Resumo:
The ventral striatum / nucleus accumbens has been implicated in the craving for drugs and alcohol which is a major reason for relapse of addicted people. Craving might be induced by drug-related cues. This suggests that disruption of craving-related neural activity in the nucleus accumbens may significantly reduce craving in alcohol-dependent patients. Here we report on preliminary clinical and neurophysiological evidence in three male patients who were treated with high frequency deep brain stimulation of the nucleus accumbens bilaterally. All three had been alcohol dependent for many years, unable to abstain from drinking, and had experienced repeated relapses prior to the stimulation. After the operation, craving was greatly reduced and all three patients were able to abstain from drinking for extended periods of time. Immediately after the operation but prior to connection of the stimulation electrodes to the stimulator, local field potentials were obtained from the externalized cables in two patients while they performed cognitive tasks addressing action monitoring and incentive salience of drug related cues. LFPs in the action monitoring task provided further evidence for a role of the nucleus accumbens in goal-directed behaviors. Importantly, alcohol related cue stimuli in the incentive salience task modulated LFPs even though these cues were presented outside of the attentional focus. This implies that cue-related craving involves the nucleus accumbens and is highly automatic.