900 resultados para non-human animals
Resumo:
Hanuman langur is one of the widely distributed and extensively studied non-human diurnal primates in India. Until recently it was believed to be a single species - Semnopithecus entellus. Recent molecular and morphological studies suggest that the Hanuman langurs consists of at least three species S. entellus, S. hypoleucos and S. priam. Furthermore, morphological studies suggested that both S. hypoleucos and S. priam have at least three subspecies in each. We explored the use of ecological niche modeling (ENM) to confirm the validity of these seven taxa and an additional taxon S. johnii belonging to the same genus. MaxEnt modeling tool was used with 19 bioclimatic, 12 vegetation and 6 hydrological environmental layers. We reduced total environmental variables to 14 layers after testing for collinearity and an independent test for model prediction was done using ENMTools. A total of 196 non-overlapping data points from primary and secondary sources were used as inputs for ENM. Results showed eight distinct ecological boundaries, corroborating the eight taxa mentioned above thereby confirming validity of these eight taxa. The study, for the first time provided ecological variables that determined the ecological requirements and distribution of members of the Hanuman langur species complex in the Indian peninsula.
Resumo:
Hanuman langur is one of the widely distributed and extensively studied non-human diurnal primates in India. Until recently it was believed to be a single species - Semnopithecus entellus. Recent molecular and morphological studies suggest that the Hanuman langurs consists of at least three species S. entellus, S. hypoleucos and S. priam. Furthermore, morphological studies suggested that both S. hypoleucos and S. priam have at least three subspecies in each. We explored the use of ecological niche modeling (ENM) to confirm the validity of these seven taxa and an additional taxon S. johnii belonging to the same genus. MaxEnt modeling tool was used with 19 bioclimatic, 12 vegetation and 6 hydrological environmental layers. We reduced total environmental variables to 14 layers after testing for collinearity and an independent test for model prediction was done using ENMTools. A total of 196 non-overlapping data points from primary and secondary sources were used as inputs for ENM. Results showed eight distinct ecological boundaries, corroborating the eight taxa mentioned above thereby confirming validity of these eight taxa. The study, for the first time provided ecological variables that determined the ecological requirements and distribution of members of the Hanuman langur species complex in the Indian peninsula.
Resumo:
Zebrafish (Danio rerio) embryos are transparent and advantageous for studying early developmental changes due to ex utero development, making them an appropriate model for studying gene expression changes as a result of molecular targeting. Zebrafish embryos were injected with a previously reported G-quadruplex selective ligand, and the phenotypic changes were recorded. We report marked discrepancies in the development of intersegmental vessels. In silico analysis determined that the putative G-quadruplex motif occur in the upstream promoter region of the Cdh5 (N-cadherin) gene. A real-time polymerase chain reaction-based investigation indicated that in zebrafish, CDH-2 (ZN-cad) was significantly downregulated in the ligand-treated embryos. Biophysical characterization of the interaction of the ligand with the G-quadruplex motif found in this promoter yielded strong binding and stabilization of the G-quadruplex with this ligand. Hence, we report for the first time the phenotypic impact of G-quadruplex targeting with a ligand in a vertebrate organism. This study has unveiled not only G-quadruplex targeting in non-human animal species but also the potential that G-quadruplexes can provide a ready tool for understanding the phenotypic effects of targeting certain important genes involved in differentiation and developmental processes in a living eukaryotic organism.
Resumo:
Primates exhibit laterality in hand usage either in terms of (a) hand with which an individual solves a task or while solving a task that requires both hands, executes the most complex action, that is, hand preference, or (b) hand with which an individual executes actions most efficiently, that is, hand performance. Observations from previous studies indicate that laterality in hand usage might reflect specialization of the two hands for accomplishing tasks that require maneuvering dexterity or physical strength. However, no existing study has investigated handedness with regard to this possibility. In this study, we examined laterality in hand usage in urban free-ranging bonnet macaques, Macaca radiata with regard to the above possibility. While solving four distinct food extraction tasks which varied in the number of steps involved in the food extraction process and the dexterity required in executing the individual steps, the macaques consistently used one hand for extracting food (i.e., task requiring maneuvering dexterity)the maneuvering hand, and the other hand for supporting the body (i.e., task requiring physical strength)the supporting hand. Analogously, the macaques used the maneuvering hand for the spontaneous routine activities that involved maneuvering in three-dimensional space, such as grooming, and hitting an opponent during an agonistic interaction, and the supporting hand for those that required physical strength, such as pulling the body up while climbing. Moreover, while solving a task that ergonomically forced the usage of a particular hand, the macaques extracted food faster with the maneuvering hand as compared to the supporting hand, demonstrating the higher maneuvering dexterity of the maneuvering hand. As opposed to the conventional ideas of handedness in non-human primates, these observations demonstrate division of labor between the two hands marked by their consistent usage across spontaneous and experimental tasks requiring maneuvering in three-dimensional space or those requiring physical strength. Am. J. Primatol. 76:576-585, 2014. (c) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Resumo:
Male takeover and infanticide are a widespread phenomenon among non-human primates, observed mostly in species with a relatively longer lactation in relation to gestation. In this study, we report for the first time an episode of male takeover and infanticide, and the rarely reported occurrence of an all-male band and female dispersal, in Nilgiri langurs, Semnopithecus johnii, in the Western Ghats, India. The new male was a member of an all-male band. After the takeover, the resident male and 3 juvenile males left the group and joined the all-male band. A female whose infant was killed was found missing after some days. There were significant changes in the patterns of social interactions among the resident group females soon after the male takeover, wherein the females spent less time on social interactions as compared to before and after the episode of takeover. The new male rarely interacted with the females soon after the takeover. We also observed that the resident group shifted its home range to a poorer quality habitat. (C) 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel
Resumo:
There are two major theories that attempt to explain hand preference in non-human primates-the `task complexity' theory and the `postural origins' theory. In the present study, we proposed a third hypothesis to explain the evolutionary origin of hand preference in non-human primates, stating that it could have evolved owing to structural and functional adaptations to feeding, which we refer to as the `niche structure' hypothesis. We attempted to explore this hypothesis by comparing hand preference across species that differ in the feeding ecology and niche structure: red howler monkeys, Alouatta seniculus and yellow-breasted capuchin monkeys, Sapajus xanthosternos. The red howler monkeys used the mouth to obtain food more frequently than the yellow-breasted capuchin monkeys. The red howler monkeys almost never reached for food presented on the opposite side of a wire mesh or inside a portable container, whereas the yellow-breasted capuchin monkeys reached for food presented in all four spatial arrangements (scattered, on the opposite side of a wire mesh, inside a suspended container, and inside a portable container). In contrast to the red howler monkeys that almost never acquired bipedal and clinging posture, the yellow-breasted capuchin monkeys acquired all five body postures (sitting, bipedal, tripedal, clinging, and hanging). Although there was no difference between the proportion of the red howler monkeys and the yellow-breasted capuchin monkeys that preferentially used one hand, the yellow-breasted capuchin monkeys exhibited an overall weaker hand preference than the red howler monkeys. Differences in hand preference diminished with the increasing complexity of the reaching-for-food tasks, i.e., the relatively more complex tasks were perceived as equally complex by both the red howler monkeys and the yellow-breasted capuchin monkeys. These findings suggest that species-specific differences in feeding ecology and niche structure can influence the perception of the complexity of the task and, consequently, hand preference.
Resumo:
The visual system is a remarkable platform that evolved to solve difficult computational problems such as detection, recognition, and classification of objects. Of great interest is the face-processing network, a sub-system buried deep in the temporal lobe, dedicated for analyzing specific type of objects (faces). In this thesis, I focus on the problem of face detection by the face-processing network. Insights obtained from years of developing computer-vision algorithms to solve this task have suggested that it may be efficiently and effectively solved by detection and integration of local contrast features. Does the brain use a similar strategy? To answer this question, I embark on a journey that takes me through the development and optimization of dedicated tools for targeting and perturbing deep brain structures. Data collected using MR-guided electrophysiology in early face-processing regions was found to have strong selectivity for contrast features, similar to ones used by artificial systems. While individual cells were tuned for only a small subset of features, the population as a whole encoded the full spectrum of features that are predictive to the presence of a face in an image. Together with additional evidence, my results suggest a possible computational mechanism for face detection in early face processing regions. To move from correlation to causation, I focus on adopting an emergent technology for perturbing brain activity using light: optogenetics. While this technique has the potential to overcome problems associated with the de-facto way of brain stimulation (electrical microstimulation), many open questions remain about its applicability and effectiveness for perturbing the non-human primate (NHP) brain. In a set of experiments, I use viral vectors to deliver genetically encoded optogenetic constructs to the frontal eye field and faceselective regions in NHP and examine their effects side-by-side with electrical microstimulation to assess their effectiveness in perturbing neural activity as well as behavior. Results suggest that cells are robustly and strongly modulated upon light delivery and that such perturbation can modulate and even initiate motor behavior, thus, paving the way for future explorations that may apply these tools to study connectivity and information flow in the face processing network.
Resumo:
The aim of this study was to compare statistically the zooplankton assemblage ingested by brown trout (Salmo trutta) in Loch Ness with that of the zooplankton in the water column. This would allow the examination of the apparent paradox that very few copepods appear to be consumed by trout at a time of year when they are numerous and readily available as food. The investigation was limited to the crustacean zooplankters, since the Rotifera are generally so small that they are only of interest to fish in the first few days of life. 25 trout were obtained from anglers, and the stomach contents of non-"ferox" animals analysed. Samples of pelagic zooplankton were obtained approximately monthly from 30-m vertical net-hauls (mesh size 100 km). It is concluded that the variation in dietary composition with trout wet weight indicates an ontogenetic habitat shift producing spatial separation of young and older individuals.
Resumo:
In the last decade, research efforts into directly interfacing with the neurons of individuals with motor deficits have increased. The goal of such research is clear: Enable individuals affected by paralysis or amputation to regain control of their environments by manipulating external devices with thought alone. Though the motor cortices are the usual brain areas upon which neural prosthetics depend, research into the parietal lobe and its subregions, primarily in non-human primates, has uncovered alternative areas that could also benefit neural interfaces. Similar to the motor cortical areas, parietal regions can supply information about the trajectories of movements. In addition, the parietal lobe also contains cognitive signals like movement goals and intentions. But, these areas are also known to be tuned to saccadic eye movements, which could interfere with the function of a prosthetic designed to capture motor intentions only. In this thesis, we develop and examine the functionality of a neural prosthetic with a non-human primate model using the superior parietal lobe to examine the effectiveness of such an interface and the effects of unconstrained eye movements in a task that more closely simulates clinical applications. Additionally, we examine methods for improving usability of such interfaces.
The parietal cortex is also believed to contain neural signals relating to monitoring of the state of the limbs through visual and somatosensory feedback. In one of the world’s first clinical neural prosthetics based on the human parietal lobe, we examine the extent to which feedback regarding the state of a movement effector alters parietal neural signals and what the implications are for motor neural prosthetics and how this informs our understanding of this area of the human brain.
Resumo:
The insula is a mammalian cortical structure that has been implicated in a wide range of low- and high-level functions governing one’s sensory, emotional, and cognitive experiences. One particular role of this region is considered to be processing of olfactory stimuli. The ability to detect and evaluate odors has significant effects on an organism’s eating behavior and survival and, in case of humans, on complex decision making. Despite such importance of this function, the mechanism in which olfactory information is processed in the insula has not been thoroughly studied. Moreover, due to the structure’s close spatial relationship with the neighboring claustrum, it is not entirely clear whether the connectivity and olfactory functions attributed to the insula are truly those of the insula, rather than of the claustrum. My graduate work, consisting of two studies, seeks to help fill these gaps. In the first, the structural connectivity patterns of the insula and the claustrum in a non-human primate brain is assayed using an ultra-high-quality diffusion magnetic resonance image, and the results suggest dissociation of connectivity — and hence function — between the two structures. In the second study, a functional neuroimaging experiment investigates the insular activity during odor evaluation tasks in humans, and uncovers a potential spatial organization within the anterior portion of the insula for processing different aspects of odor characteristics.
Resumo:
Este trabalho descreve as contribuições da Educação a Distância para a elaboração e efetivação de projetos de educação ambiental, a partir da análise das concepções de meio ambiente e saúde de estudantes dos cursos semipresenciais de formação de professores do Consórcio CEDERJ, no Polo de Nova Friburgo, Rio de Janeiro. Foi realizada pesquisa qualitativa do tipo etnográfica utilizando-se observação participante, análise documental e entrevista semi-estruturada na coleta de dados. O conceito de rede sociotécnica, tal qual proposto por Bruno Latour, fertilizou a análise dos dados de campo e permitiu olhar a Educação Ambiental e a Educação a Distância sob um prisma que questiona a relação sujeito-objeto e o estatuto da ciência como saber hierarquicamente superior. A utilização do aporte teórico da antropologia das ciências e das técnicas evidenciou a indissociabilidade entre atividade cognitiva e fatores sociais e a reunião de elementos de todos os tempos na composição da rede de Educação a Distância brasileira, na qual atuantes humanos e não humanos estão entrelaçados nas ações de ensinar-aprender, constituindo-se num híbrido de naturezas-culturas.
Resumo:
Mediante narrativas de casos de aparição de fantasmas em um complexo de águas termais localizado no Barreiro de Araxá, em Minas Gerais, que mudou sua imagem de lugar de cura e saúde para ambiente de lazer e beleza, este trabalho buscou seguir pistas sobre: a ascensão, queda e renascimento do termalismo no Brasil; o problema da contaminação das águas minerais do Barreiro; as incongruências nas ações das Políticas Públicas. Tais aspectos produziram efeitos múltiplos nos trabalhadores das Termas e na população local, tais como: fantasmas, medos, silêncios, disputas e adoecimentos. A pesquisa toma como inspiração metodológica os trabalhos de Alessandro Portelli com a História Oral, para obter e acompanhar as narrativas; a genealogia de Michel Foucault, para apresentar as mudanças no conceito de saúde e de terapêutica no tempo; a Teoria do ator-rede de Bruno Latour, para seguir os actantes, humanos e não-humanos. Chama atenção para o cuidado de si como forma ética de estar no mundo, tendente a tornar a vida potente, criativa, abrindo uma possibilidade de alguém se tornar médico de si mesmo. Entende, nesse sentido, que podem ser viáveis, desde que em ruptura com meras práticas de renovado controle da vida das populações, as novas terapêuticas implantadas no SUS ? Terapias Alternativas e Complementares, dentre elas, em particular, o Termalismo Social.
Resumo:
Esta dissertação trata das relações de poder que marcam a produção científica ocidental moderna a partir da abordagem dos estudos sobre Gênero e Ciência da feminista historiadora da ciência estadunidense Donna Haraway. Esta autora propõe a concepção de toda a produção de conhecimento como pratica política, assumindo a perspectiva parcial como fundamento para uma ciência objetiva e apontando a perspectiva de objetividade calcada na ideia de imparcialidade como produtora de um tipo de saber que historicamente serviu como instrumento de dominação: o conhecimento que se propõe como universal. Em sua narrativa, o androcentrismo, o etnocentrismo, o racismo e as divisões de classe operam na conformação e nas transformações desta ciência a partir da construção de um sujeito privilegiado do conhecimento, o cientista, figura constituída a imagem e semelhança do homem branco ocidental independente. Meu recorte de sua obra são as reformulações dessas relações ao longo da historia da ciência ocidental moderna observadas por ela na emergência e nas produções de um conjunto especifico de disciplinas do campo das ciências naturais biológicas, fortemente marcadas pelas teorias e tecnologias da informação e da comunicação produzidas no campo da cibernética. Na construção de um discurso critico sobre os saberes / poderes hegemônicos, Haraway traz para a cena da ciência figuras monstruosas, entre elas o ciborgue, tanto como meio de revelar categorias culturais atuando na produção do conhecimento como para materializar novos significados para natureza, os corpos e as relações de diferença. Em conexão com esses monstros, refigurados em suas narrativas, a autora defende uma relação de conexão, e não de divisão, entre sujeito e objeto do saber.
Resumo:
O cinema é uma expressão artística mediada pela tecnologia desde o seu surgimento no século XIX. A partir dessa constatação, investigam-se neste trabalho as relações entre tecnologia e documentário e de que forma elas impactam as linguagens midiáticas, tomando como aplicação a obra de Eduardo Coutinho - mais especificamente o uso do vídeo pelo cineasta. Para desenvolver este estudo, foi usado como referenciais teóricos a Teoria Ator-Rede e a Teoria das Materialidades da Comunicação, que têm em comum a análise de atores humanos (homem) e não humanos (técnica), além de permitir a justaposição de descrições histórica, biográfica, analítica e empírica a cerca do objeto do estudo. Essas análises mostram que há uma influência mútua e simultânea entre tecnologia e documentário, onde tecnologia influencia a linguagem documental, ao mesmo tempo em que o documentário, ao buscar novas maneiras de se expressar, acossa e afeta os aparatos técnicos, demandando aprimoramentos e transformações nos mesmos. No cinema documental, a tecnologia permitiu diversas contribuições estéticas que vinham sendo requeridas pela prática, como a necessidade de um cinema mais ágil e sonoro que foi viabilizado pelo advento de câmeras menores e do som direto. Esse encontro entre técnica e estética foi visto de perto na obra de Eduardo Coutinho.
Resumo:
A radioterapia é amplamente utilizada no tratamento de tumores pélvicos, incluindo os de bexiga, intestino e reto. Ela apresenta efeitos danosos, notadamente em tecidos que apresentam intensa renovação celular, sendo a mucosa intestinal altamente susceptível. Nesse contexto, a suplementação dietética com aminoácidos tem se mostrado uma terapia promissora para minimizar este dano. O objetivo desse estudo foi determinar o efeito da suplementação dietética com os aminoácidos L-arginina e glicina na estrutura da parede do cólon de ratos submetidos a irradiação abdominal. Quarenta ratos Wistar machos adultos foram distribuídos aleatoriamente em quatro grupos, cada um com dez animais: I controle não irradiado e sem suplementação de aminoácidos; II controle irradiado e sem suplementação de aminoácidos; III irradiado e suplementado com L-arginina; IV irradiado e suplementado com glicina. O período de suplementação dietética foi de 14 dias, com a irradiação ocorrendo no 8. dia do experimento. A análise estereológica mostrou que a irradiação provocou diminuição do volume total da parede colônica dos animais dos grupos II e III em relação aos animais saudáveis, mas não dos ratos que receberam suplementação de glicina. A camada mucosa dos animais irradiados de todos os grupos diminuiu quando comparada com os ratos saudáveis não irradiados. Os animais irradiados que não receberam suplementação de aminoácido apresentaram diminuição da camada muscular da mucosa, quando comparados com os grupos I e IV, e o grupo de ratos suplementados com glicina apresentou aumento significativo da camada submucosa em relação aos grupos I e II. Os animais do grupo III mostraram diminuição da camada muscular própria em comparação aos grupos I e IV. A suplementação com L-arginina foi eficaz na manutenção do volume parcial do epitélio da camada mucosa. Nossos resultados sugerem que a suplementação de glicina apresentou efeitos superiores ao da suplementação com L-arginina na estrutura da parede colônica, haja vista que foi capaz de manter a espessura da parede e a superfície epitelial da mucosa, enquanto a Larginina foi capaz de manter o volume parcial do epitélio e a superfície epitelial, mas não o volume total da parede intestinal.