34 resultados para Gaucelm Faidit, fl. 1156-1209.
Resumo:
It has been shown that it is possible to generate perceptual illusions of ownership in immersive virtual reality (IVR) over a virtual body seen from first person perspective, in other words over a body that visually substitutes the person's real body. This can occur even when the virtual body is quite different in appearance from the person's real body. However, investigation of the psychological, behavioral and attitudinal consequences of such body transformations remains an interesting problem with much to be discovered. Thirty six Caucasian people participated in a between-groups experiment where they played a West-African Djembe hand drum while immersed in IVR and with a virtual body that substituted their own. The virtual hand drum was registered with a physical drum. They were alongside a virtual character that played a drum in a supporting, accompanying role. In a baseline condition participants were represented only by plainly shaded white hands, so that they were able merely to play. In the experimental condition they were represented either by a casually dressed dark-skinned virtual body (Casual Dark-Skinned - CD) or by a formal suited light-skinned body (Formal Light-Skinned - FL). Although participants of both groups experienced a strong body ownership illusion towards the virtual body, only those with the CD representation showed significant increases in their movement patterns for drumming compared to the baseline condition and compared with those embodied in the FL body. Moreover, the stronger the illusion of body ownership in the CD condition, the greater this behavioral change. A path analysis showed that the observed behavioral changes were a function of the strength of the illusion of body ownership towards the virtual body and its perceived appropriateness for the drumming task. These results demonstrate that full body ownership illusions can lead to substantial behavioral and possibly cognitive changes depending on the appearance of the virtual body. This could be important for many applications such as learning, education, training, psychotherapy and rehabilitation using IVR.
Resumo:
Recientemente, MARTÍN-BLANCO & CARRASCO [Anales Jará Bot. Madrid 58(2): 355. 2001] enmendaban una cita anterior de Delphinium fissum subsp. sordidum de Ciudad Real, pero sin aclarar la identidad de la recolección. Explicaban que la planta -perenne, sin duda- no podía ser identificada como D. pentagynum ni como D. emarginatum subsp nevadense, los dos únicos táxones perennes del género entre los recopilados en Flora iberica [BLANCHÉ & MOLERO in CASTROVIEJO & al. (eds.), Fl. Iber. 1:242-251.1986]. Dudas similares habían sido expresadas anteriormente al atribuir a D. fissum subsp. sordidum una población de Almorchón (Badajoz) finalmente publicadas bajo este nombre [BLANCHÉ, Collect. Bot. {Barcelona) 16(1): 230-231.1985]. Todas estas interpretaciones se deben a la misma causa: las muestras estudiadas no tenían fruto ni, por ende, semillas.
Resumo:
Hace unos años, se publicó en esta misma sección una nota sobre Veronica rosea (Soriano, 1996), en la que se anticipaba el tratamiento de este taxón en la checklist de la fl ora del norte de Marruecos (Valdés & al. 2002; Soriano, 2002). Entre otras cosas, se formalizaba en ella la descripción de V. rosea subsp. atlantica var. macrantha, propuesta por Pau como V. rosea var. macrantha y distribuida por Font Quer en el Iter maroccanum de 1930, aunque sin la diagnosis correspondiente.
Resumo:
This paper provides a spatial and temporal multi-scale approach of European submarine canyons. We fi rst present the long-term geologic view of European margins as related to controls on submarine canyon development. Then we discuss the extent to which submarine canyon systems resemble river systems because both essentially form drainage networks. Finally, we deal with the hortest-term, highestresolution scale to get a fl avor of the current functioning and health of modern submarine canyons in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea. Submarine canyons are unique features of the seafl oor whose existence was known by European fi shermen centuries ago, especially for those canyons that have their heads at short distance from shoreline. Popular names given to specifi c canyons in the different languages spoken in European coastal communities refer to the concepts of a"deep" or"trench." In the old times it was also common thinking that submarine canyons where so deep that nobody could measure their depth or even that they had no bottom. Submarine canyons are just one of the seven different types of seafl oor valleys identifi ed by Shepard (1973) in his pioneering morphogenetic classifi cation. Shepard (1973) defined submarine canyons as"steep-walled, sinuous valleys, with V-shaped cross sections, and relief comparable even to the largest of land canyons; tributaries are found in most of the canyons and rock outcrops abound on their walls." Canyons are features typical of continental slopes with their upper reaches and heads cut into the continental shelf.