195 resultados para spatial visualisation


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Simple reaction times (RTs) to auditory-somatosensory (AS) multisensory stimuli are facilitated over their unisensory counterparts both when stimuli are delivered to the same location and when separated. In two experiments we addressed the possibility that top-down and/or task-related influences can dynamically impact the spatial representations mediating these effects and the extent to which multisensory facilitation will be observed. Participants performed a simple detection task in response to auditory, somatosensory, or simultaneous AS stimuli that in turn were either spatially aligned or misaligned by lateralizing the stimuli. Additionally, we also informed the participants that they would be retrogradely queried (one-third of trials) regarding the side where a given stimulus in a given sensory modality was presented. In this way, we sought to have participants attending to all possible spatial locations and sensory modalities, while nonetheless having them perform a simple detection task. Experiment 1 provided no cues prior to stimulus delivery. Experiment 2 included spatially uninformative cues (50% of trials). In both experiments, multisensory conditions significantly facilitated detection RTs with no evidence for differences according to spatial alignment (though general benefits of cuing were observed in Experiment 2). Facilitated detection occurs even when attending to spatial information. Performance with probes, quantified using sensitivity (d'), was impaired following multisensory trials in general and significantly more so following misaligned multisensory trials. This indicates that spatial information is not available, despite being task-relevant. The collective results support a model wherein early AS interactions may result in a loss of spatial acuity for unisensory information.

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INTRODUCTION: In this study we investigated differences in the spatial recruitment of motor units (MUs) in the quadriceps when electrical stimulation is applied over the quadriceps belly versus the femoral nerve. METHODS: M-waves and mechanical twitches were evoked using over-the-quadriceps and femoral nerve stimulation of gradually increasing intensity from 22 young, healthy subjects. Spatial recruitment was investigated using recruitment curves of M-waves recorded from the vastus medialis (VM) and vastus lateralis (VL) and of twitches recorded from the quadriceps. RESULTS: At maximal stimulation intensity (Imax), no differences were found between nerve and over-the-quadriceps stimulation. At submaximal intensities, VL M-wave amplitude was higher for over-the-quadriceps stimulation at 40% Imax, and peak twitch force was greater for nerve stimulation at 60% and 80% Imax. CONCLUSIONS: For the VM, MU spatial recruitment during nerve and over-the-quadriceps stimulation of increasing intensity occurred in a similar manner, whereas significant differences were observed for the VL. Muscle Nerve, 2013.

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L'objectif de ce travail est le développement d'une méthode de caractérisation objective de la qualité d'image s'appliquant à des systèmes de mammographie analogique, utilisant un couple écran-film comme détecteur, et numérique, basé sur une technologie semi-conductrice, ceci en vue de la comparaison de leurs performances. La méthode développée tient compte de la gamme dynamique du détecteur, de la détectabilité de structures de haut contraste, simulant des microcalcifications, et de structures de bas contraste, simulant des opacités (nodules tumoraux). La méthode prend également en considération le processus de visualisation de l'image, ainsi que la réponse de l'observateur. Pour réaliser ceci, un objet-test ayant des propriétés proches de celles d'un sein comprimé, composé de différents matériaux équivalents aux tissus, allant du glandulaire à l'adipeux, et comprenant des zones permettant la simulation de structures de haut et bas contraste, ainsi que la mesure de la résolution et celle du bruit, a été développé et testé. L'intégration du processus de visualisation a été réalisée en utilisant une caméra CCD mesurant directement les paramètres de qualité d'image, à partir de l'image de l'objet-test, dans une grandeur physique commune au système numérique et analogique, à savoir la luminance arrivant sur l'oeil de l'observateur. L'utilisation d'une grandeur synthétique intégrant dans un même temps, le contraste, le bruit et la résolution rend possible une comparaison objective entre les deux systèmes de mammographie. Un modèle mathématique, simulant la réponse d'un observateur et intégrant les paramètres de base de qualité d'image, a été utilisé pour calculer la détectabilité de structures de haut et bas contraste en fonction du type de tissu sur lequel celles-ci se trouvent. Les résultats obtenus montrent qu'à dose égale la détectabilité des structures est significativement plus élevée avec le système de mammographie numérique qu'avec le système analogique. Ceci est principalement lié au fait que le bruit du système numérique est plus faible que celui du système analogique. Les résultats montrent également que la méthodologie, visant à comparer des systèmes d'imagerie numérique et analogique en utilisant un objet-test à large gamme dynamique ainsi qu'une caméra, peut être appliquée à d'autres modalités radiologiques, ainsi qu'à une démarche d'optimisation des conditions de lecture des images.<br/><br/>The goal of this work was to develop a method to objectively compare the performance of a digital and a screen-film mammography system in terms of image quality and patient dose. We propose a method that takes into account the dynamic range of the image detector and the detection of high contrast (for microcalcifications) and low contrast (for masses or tumoral nodules) structures. The method also addresses the problems of image visualization and the observer response. A test object, designed to represent a compressed breast, was constructed from various tissue equivalent materials ranging from purely adipose to purely glandular composition. Different areas within the test object permitted the evaluation of low and high contrast detection, spatial resolution, and image noise. All the images (digital and conventional) were captured using a CCD camera to include the visualization process in the image quality assessment. In this way the luminance reaching the viewer?s eyes can be controlled for both kinds of images. A global quantity describing image contrast, spatial resolution and noise, and expressed in terms of luminance at the camera, can then be used to compare the two technologies objectively. The quantity used was a mathematical model observer that calculates the detectability of high and low contrast structures as a function of the background tissue. Our results show that for a given patient dose, the detection of high and low contrast structures is significantly better for the digital system than for the conventional screen-film system studied. This is mainly because the image noise is lower for the digital system than for the screen-film detector. The method of using a test object with a large dynamic range combined with a camera to compare conventional and digital imaging modalities can be applied to other radiological imaging techniques. In particular it could be used to optimize the process of radiographic film reading.

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Capsule The analysis of 635 papers about the diet of the European Barn Owl Tyto alba showed that 83 751 birds were captured out of 3.44 million prey items (2.4%). Birds were more frequently captured on islands than mainland, in southern than northern Europe and in eastern than western Europe. Between 1860 and 2012, the consumption of birds decreased in northern and eastern Europe. Among avian prey, the House Sparrow Passer domesticus, the most frequently captured bird (65.7%), decreased in frequency during the last 150 years in eastern Europe.

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AimOur aim was to understand the interplay of heterogeneous climatic and spatial landscapes in shaping the distribution of nuclear microsatellite variation in burrowing parrots, Cyanoliseus patagonus. Given the marked phenotypic differences between populations of burrowing parrots we hypothesized an important role of geographical as well climatic heterogeneity in the population structure of this species. LocationSouthern South America. MethodsWe applied a landscape genetics approach to investigate the explicit patterns of genetic spatial autocorrelation based on both geography and climate using spatial principal component analysis (sPCA). This necessitated a novel statistical estimation of the species climatic landscape, considering temperature- and precipitation-based variables separately to evaluate their weight in shaping the distribution of genetic variation in our model system. ResultsGeographical and climatic heterogeneity successfully explained molecular variance in burrowing parrots. sPCA divided the species distribution into two main areas, Patagonia and the pre-Andes, which were connected by an area of geographical and climatic transition. Moreover, sPCA revealed cryptic and conservation-relevant genetic structure: the pre-Andean populations and the transition localities were each divided into two groups, each management units for conservation. Main conclusionssPCA, a method originally developed for spatial genetics, allowed us to unravel the genetic structure related to spatial and climatic landscapes and to visualize these patterns in landscape space. These novel climatic inferences underscore the importance of our modified sPCA approach in revealing how climatic variables can drive cryptic patterns of genetic structure, making the approach potentially useful in the study of any species distributed over a climatically heterogeneous landscape.

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The role of competition for light among plants has long been recognized at local scales, but its potential importance for plant species' distribution at larger spatial scales has largely been ignored. Tree cover acts as a modulator of local abiotic conditions, notably by reducing light availability below the canopy and thus the performance of species that are not adapted to low-light conditions. However, this local effect may propagate to coarser spatial grains. Using 6,935 vegetation plots located across the European Alps, we fit Generalized Linear Models (GLM) for the distribution of 960 herbs and shrubs species to assess the effect of tree cover at both plot and landscape grain sizes (~ 10-m and 1-km, respectively). We ran four models with different combinations of variables (climate, soil and tree cover) for each species at both spatial grains. We used partial regressions to evaluate the independent effects of plot- and landscape-scale tree cover on plant communities. Finally, the effects on species' elevational range limits were assessed by simulating a removal experiment comparing the species' distribution under high and low tree cover. Accounting for tree cover improved model performance, with shade-tolerant species increasing their probability of presence at high tree cover whereas shade-intolerant species showed the opposite pattern. The tree cover effect occurred consistently at both plot and landscape spatial grains, albeit strongest at the former. Importantly, tree cover at the two grain sizes had partially independent effects on plot-scale plant communities, suggesting that the effects may be transmitted to coarser grains through meta-community dynamics. At high tree cover, shade-intolerant species exhibited elevational range contractions, especially at their upper limit, whereas shade-tolerant species showed elevational range expansions at both limits. Our findings suggest that the range shifts for herb and shrub species may be modulated by tree cover dynamics.

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