Search results for "Discrimination"
showing 10 items of 477 documents
Auditory and Cognitive Deficits Associated with Acquired Amusia after Stroke: A Magnetoencephalography and Neuropsychological Follow-Up Study
2010
Acquired amusia is a common disorder after damage to the middle cerebral artery (MCA) territory. However, its neurocognitive mechanisms, especially the relative contribution of perceptual and cognitive factors, are still unclear. We studied cognitive and auditory processing in the amusic brain by performing neuropsychological testing as well as magnetoencephalography (MEG) measurements of frequency and duration discrimination using magnetic mismatch negativity (MMNm) recordings. Fifty-three patients with a left (n = 24) or right (n = 29) hemisphere MCA stroke (MRI verified) were investigated 1 week, 3 months, and 6 months after the stroke. Amusia was evaluated using the Montreal Battery of …
Derecho de los hijos nacidos por reproducción asistida a conocer la identidad de sus padres biológicos: Breves reflexiones y propuestas
2018
The present communication intends to analyze and reflect on the existing problem and the conflict of rights produced regarding the need of information of a son to know the identity of his biological parents, possible discrimination by birth. Comparative law. Analysis of the right to personal and family privacy, and right to Identity. Consideration of public information as an essential element of the practice of techniques
Influence of the suspension of continued treatment with flurazepam and amobarbital on two discrimination learning schedules.
1977
The authors have studied the effect of the suspension of chronic treatment with flurazepam and amobarbital on the operant behavior of rats that for the first time were in the presence of two fixed-interval discrimination schedules. With the sound discrimination schedule, the responses emitted by the treated animals had characteristics similar to those of control animals. With the temporal discrimination schedule, though it is not possible to distinguish between learning rates, modifications in the intensity of the effect (increases in lever pressing) indicate that, considering the doses, the action of flurazepam is slight and that of amobarbital clear and statistically significant.
Electrophysiological Correlates of Intensity Resolution Under Forward Masking
2010
Nonsimultaneous masking can severely impair auditory intensity resolution, but the effect strongly depends on the stimulus configuration. For example, an intense forward masker causes a pronounced impairment in intensity resolution for standards presented at intermediate levels, but not for standards presented at low and high levels, resulting in a midlevel hump pattern (Zeng et al., Hear Res 55:223-230, 1991). Several aspects of the phenomenon cannot be explained by mechanisms in the auditory periphery. For instance, backward maskers cause midlevel humps at least as large as the humps caused by forward maskers. The present experiment was aimed at studying the relation between the effects o…
Test of digital neutron-gamma discrimination with four different photomultiplier tubes for the NEutron Detector Array (NEDA)
2014
WOS: 000344994600012
Indistinguishability-enabled coherence for quantum metrology
2019
Quantum coherence plays a fundamental and operational role in different areas of physics. A resource theory has been developed to characterize the coherence of distinguishable particles systems. Here we show that indistinguishability of identical particles is a source of coherence, even when they are independently prepared. In particular, under spatially local operations, states that are incoherent for distinguishable particles, can be coherent for indistinguishable particles under the same procedure. We present a phase discrimination protocol, in which we demonstrate the operational advantage of using two indistinguishable particles rather than distinguishable ones. The coherence due to th…
General principles in motion vision: Color blindness of object motion depends on pattern velocity in honeybee and goldfish
2011
AbstractVisual systems can undergo striking adaptations to specific visual environments during evolution, but they can also be very “conservative.” This seems to be the case in motion vision, which is surprisingly similar in species as distant as honeybee and goldfish. In both visual systems, motion vision measured with the optomotor response is color blind and mediated by one photoreceptor type only. Here, we ask whether this is also the case if the moving stimulus is restricted to a small part of the visual field, and test what influence velocity may have on chromatic motion perception. Honeybees were trained to discriminate between clockwise- and counterclockwise-rotating sector disks. S…
Decomposing encoding and decisional components in visual-word recognition: a diffusion model analysis.
2014
In a diffusion model, performance as measured by latency and accuracy in two-choice tasks is decomposed into different parameters that can be linked to underlying cognitive processes. Although the diffusion model has been utilized to account for lexical decision data, the effects of stimulus manipulations in previous experiments originated from just one parameter: the quality of the evidence. Here we examined whether the diffusion model can be used to effectively decompose the underlying processes during visual-word recognition. We explore this issue in an experiment that features a lexical manipulation (word frequency) that we expected to affect mostly the quality of the evidence (the dri…
Honeybee (Apis mellifera) vision can discriminate between and recognise images of human faces.
2005
SUMMARY Recognising individuals using facial cues is an important ability. There is evidence that the mammalian brain may have specialised neural circuitry for face recognition tasks, although some recent work questions these findings. Thus, to understand if recognising human faces does require species-specific neural processing, it is important to know if non-human animals might be able to solve this difficult spatial task. Honeybees (Apis mellifera) were tested to evaluate whether an animal with no evolutionary history for discriminating between humanoid faces may be able to learn this task. Using differential conditioning, individual bees were trained to visit target face stimuli and to …
La discriminación racial o étnica: marco jurídico, formas y protección = Racial and ethnic discrimination: regulatory framework, forms and protection
2019
Resumen: El desarrollo de los instrumentos jurídicos internacionales y europeos relativos a la prohibición de la discriminación racial o étnica ha sido significativo en las últimas décadas. Sin embargo, dicho marco regulatorio necesita un mayor perfeccionamiento e implementación que permita también combatir las nuevas formas de discriminación. En esa línea, este trabajo realiza una revisión crítica de la normativa internacional y europea sobre la materia y establece el estado actual de la cuestión. Desde ese análisis, para consolidar los instrumentos de protección del derecho antidiscriminatorio, se propone fortalecer los estándares jurisprudenciales y desarrollar la función de los organism…