Upward Shift (upward + shift)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Repeated exposures to gustatory stimuli produce habituation or positive contrast effects in perinatal rats

DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2004
G. Andrew Mickley
Abstract Adult rats exhibit a decrease in consummatory responses following repeated presentations of a taste (habituation) and an increase in consummatory responses if they experience an upward shift in the magnitude or intensity of a gustatory stimulus (e.g., sucrose or saccharin). These responses do not represent a direct sensorimotor reaction to a gustatory cue, but rather reflect a change in responding based on the memory of a previous taste. Here, we sought to determine if fetal rats could (like adults) adjust their orofacial motor responses based on a memory of recent gustatory experience. Embryonic Day 18 (E18) or Day 19 (E19) rat fetuses received oral lavage with either 0.15 or 0.30% saccharin (SAC). Subsequently, observations of orofacial movements (mouthing and licking) following oral lavage with 0.30% SAC were made 50 min later, 24 hr later, or on postnatal Day 3 (P3). Thus, some animals were in a "shifted" condition in which they first experienced a relatively low concentration of SAC and then a higher one while control rats ("nonshifted") received 0.30% SAC during both taste exposures. Fetuses exhibited evidence of both habituation (with repeated presentation of the 0.30% SAC) and positive contrast effects (PCEs) (following an upward shift in SAC concentration) when retested 50 min after their first exposure to SAC on E19. However, these animals did not exhibit PCEs 24 hr later or 5 days later (on P3). Contrast effects were not observed when the initial SAC exposure was on E18, and habituation responses were variable depending on the time interval between the taste presentations to these animals. Rats with a 5- to 6-day latency between the two taste presentations showed neither PCEs nor habituation. Our data indicate that PCEs and habituation effects emerge at different ages, and their demonstration is dependent upon the latency between the taste presentations. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 44: 176,188, 2004. [source]


Qualitative and quantitative evaluation of equine respiratory mechanics by impulse oscillometry

EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL, Issue 1 2006
E. VAN ERCK
Summary Reasons for performing study: The long- established conventional reference technique (CRT) for measuring respiratory mechanics in horses lacks sensitivity and there is a need for further refinement in new technology, such as the impulse oscillometry system (IOS). Objectives: To evaluate the potential use of the IOS as a clinical respiratory function test and compare it to the current CRT in horses suffering from common upper and lower airway dysfunctions. Methods: Six healthy horses were tested before and after induction of a unilateral nasal obstruction (UNO) or transient left laryngeal hemiplegia (LLH). Six heaves-affected horses were tested in clinical remission and during a heaves crisis, before and after nebulisation of cumulative doses of a bronchodilator therapy (ipratropium bromide; IPB). Results: As opposed to the CRT, the IOS was able to detect partial upper airway obstruction (UAO) caused by UNO or LLH in resting horses, without differentiating both conditions. Upper airway obstruction caused an upward shift of resistance (Rrs) from 5 to 35 Hz without altering reactance (Xrs). As for the CRT, IOS respiratory parameters measured in heaves-affected horses in crisis differed significantly from values measured during remission. The difference in frequency-dependent behaviour of Rrs and Xrs allowed discrimination between upper and lower airway obstructions. Bronchodilator treatment induced significant dose-dependent changes in Xrs at 5 and 10 Hz, from the first dose. Total pulmonary resistance (RL) and Rrs at 5 Hz were affected from the second dose and displayed similar sensitivity. Although post treatment RL values were comparable to remission, Rrs and Xrs remained significantly different, characterising persistent peripheral obstruction. Conclusions: The IOS was more sensitive than the CRT in detecting partial UAO in resting horses and persistent post treatment peripheral dysfunction in heaves-affected horses. The IOS is a sensitive test that provides graded quantitative and qualitative information on disease-induced respiratory dysfunctions as well as on treatment efficiency in horses. Potential relevance: The IOS could represent a practical and sensitive alternative respiratory function test for routine clinical investigations of common airway obstructive diseases and therapy in horses. [source]


First-order reversal curve diagrams and thermal relaxation effects in magnetic particles

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, Issue 3 2001
Christopher R. Pike
Summary We have recently developed a technique for characterizing the magnetic components within natural particle assemblages. This technique is based on the transformation of magnetization data from first-order reversal curves (FORCs) into contour plots of a 2-D distribution function (FORC diagrams). FORC diagrams are useful for obtaining information about switching fields and interactions in magnetic particle systems. Here, we examine experimental data and a theoretical model in order to provide a rigorous framework for interpreting FORC diagrams for samples that contain superparamagnetic particles. We have found four distinct manifestations of thermal relaxation on FORC diagrams. First, thermal relaxation will shift the FORC distribution to lower coercivities. Second, at intermediate temperatures, thermal relaxation can generate a secondary peak about the origin of a FORC diagram. This secondary peak indicates that part of a single-domain particle assemblage has become superparamagnetic. At high enough temperatures, the primary peak of the FORC distribution will be located about the origin of a FORC diagram. Third, thermal relaxation can produce a small, but systematic, upward shift of a FORC distribution. Fourth, thermal relaxation will produce contours that lie near and parallel to the vertical axis in the lower quadrant of a FORC diagram. These manifestations make FORC diagrams a powerful tool for studying the effects of thermal relaxation (superparamagnetism) in bulk natural samples, particularly when the samples contain mixed magnetic particle assemblages. [source]


Temperature sensitivity and substrate quality in soil organic matter decomposition: results of an incubation study with three substrates

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 6 2010
J. Å. MARTIN WETTERSTEDT
Abstract Kinetic theory suggests that the temperature sensitivity of decomposition of soil organic matter should increase with increasing recalcitrance. This ,temperature,quality hypothesis' was tested in a laboratory experiment. Microcosms with wheat straw, spruce needle litter and mor humus were initially placed at 5, 15 and 25 °C until the same cumulative amount of CO2 had been respired. Thereafter, microcosms from each single temperature were moved to a final set of incubation temperatures of 5, 15 and 25 °C. Straw decomposed faster than needle litter at 25 and 15 °C, but slower than needle litter at 5 °C, and showed a higher temperature sensitivity (expressed as Q10) than needle litter at low temperatures. When moved to the same temperature, needle litter initially incubated at 5 and 15 °C had significantly higher respiration rates in the final incubation than litters initially placed at 25 °C. Mor humus placed at equal temperatures during the initial and final incubations had higher cumulative respiration during the final incubation than humus experiencing a shift in temperature, both up- and downwards. These results indicate that other factors than substrate quality are needed to fully explain the temperature dependence. In agreement with the hypothesis, Q10 was always higher for the temperature step between 5 and 15 °C than between 15 and 25 °C. Also in agreement with the temperature,quality hypothesis, Q10 significantly increased with increasing degree of decomposition in five out of the six constant temperature treatments with needle litter and mor humus. Q10s for substrates moved between temperatures tended to be higher than for substrates remaining at the initial temperature and an upward shift in temperature increased Q10 more than a downward shift. This study largely supports the temperature,quality hypothesis. However, other factors like acclimation and synthesis of recalcitrant compounds can modify the temperature response. [source]


Consequences of climatic change for water temperature and brown trout populations in Alpine rivers and streams

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2006
RENATA E. HARI
Abstract Twenty-five years of extensive water temperature data show regionally coherent warming to have occurred in Alpine rivers and streams at all altitudes, reflecting changes in regional air temperature. Much of this warming occurred abruptly in 1987/1988. For brown trout populations, the warming resulted in an upward shift in thermal habitat that was accelerated by an increase in the incidence of temperature-dependent Proliferative Kidney Disease at the habitat's lower boundary. Because physical barriers restrict longitudinal migration in mountain regions, an upward habitat shift in effect implies habitat reduction, suggesting the likelihood of an overall population decrease. Extensive brown trout catch data documenting an altitudinally dependent decline indicate that such a climate-related population decrease has in fact occurred. Our analysis employs a quantitatively defined reference optimum temperature range for brown trout, based on the sinusoidal regression of seasonally varying field data. [source]


Trust, commitment and team working: the paradox of virtual organizations

GLOBAL NETWORKS, Issue 4 2004
Alf Crossman
The findings of a case study in an international information technology consultancy indicate that multiple relationships arising from the alliance-based structure require clear commitment to enable the development of trust as a basis for longer-term partnership. Paradoxically, the perceived low level of commitment from the organization does not engender the high level of trust and commitment required from virtual teams to maximize their performance. However, over time and with extended exchanges, the commitment level and form may evolve, thus necessitating a realignment of existing psychological understanding and trust between the actors. If there is general agreement that an upward shift from short-term to long-term commitment is beneficial to all, then the virtual arrangement will continue to be effective. [source]


Long-term changes in ozone mini-hole event frequency over the Northern Hemisphere derived from ground-based measurements

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 12 2002
Janusz W. Krzy
Abstract Decadal changes of ozone mini-hole event appearance over the Northern Hemisphere midlatitudes are examined based on daily total ozone data from seven stations having long records (four decades or more) of ozone observations. The various threshold methods for accepting and rejecting the ozone minima as mini-holes are examined. Mini-hole event activity is seen to be rather stable when averaged over a decadal time scale if the mini-holes are selected as large negative departures (exceeding 20%) relative to the moving long-term total ozone reference. The results are compared with a previous ozone mini-hole climatology derived from satellite data (TOMS measurements on board the Nimbus-7 satellite for the period 1978,93). A nonlinear statistical model (MARS), which takes into account various total ozone dynamical proxies (from NCEP,NCAR reanalysis), is used to study dynamical factors responsible for the ozone extremes over Arosa in the period 1950,99. The model explains as much as 95% of the total variance of the ozone extremes. The model,observation differences averaged over the decadal intervals are rather smooth throughout the whole period analysed. It is suggested that the short-term dynamical processes controlling the appearance of ozone extremes influenced the ozone field in a similar way before and after the onset of abrupt ozone depletion in the early 1980s. The analysis of the ozone profile and the tropopause pressure (from the ozonesondings over Hohenpeissenberg, 1966,99) during mini-hole events shows ,60% ozone reduction in the lower stratosphere and an approximately 50 hPa upward shift of the thermal tropopause there. Copyright © 2002 Royal Meteorological Society. [source]


Modelling trends in central England temperatures

JOURNAL OF FORECASTING, Issue 1 2003
David I. Harvey
Abstract Trends are extracted from the central England temperature (CET) data available from 1723, using both annual and seasonal averages. Attention is focused on fitting non-parametric trends and it is found that, while there is no compelling evidence of a trend increase in the CET, there have been three periods of cooling, stability, and warming, roughly associated with the beginning and the end of the Industrial Revolution. There does appear to have been an upward shift in trend spring temperatures, but forecasting of current trends is hazardous because of the statistical uncertainty surrounding them. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Global Warming: Can Existing Reserves Really Preserve Current Levels of Biological Diversity?

JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2006
Mai-He Li
Abstract Paleoecological evidence and paleoclimatic records indicate that there was a plant poleward migration in latitude and an upward shift in elevation with increased temperatures after the last glaciation. Recent studies have shown that global warming over the past 100 years has been having a noticeable effect on living systems. Current global warming is causing a poleward and upward shift in the range of many plants and animals. Climate change, in connection with other global changes, is threatening the survival of a wide range of plant and animal species. This raises the question: can existing reserves really preserve current levels of biological diversity in the long term given the present rapid pace of climate change? The present paper deals with this question in the context of the responses of plants and animals to global climate change, based on a literature review. Consequently, we recommend expanding reserves towards the poles and/or towards higher altitudes, to permit species to shift their ranges to keep pace with global warming. (Managing editor: Ya-Qin Han) [source]


Operant Behavior and Alcohol Levels in Blood and Brain of Alcohol-Dependent Rats

ALCOHOLISM, Issue 12 2009
Nicholas W. Gilpin
Background:, The purpose of the present investigation was to more clearly define blood-alcohol parameters associated with alcohol dependence produced by alcohol vapor inhalation and alcohol-containing liquid diet. Methods:, Alcohol levels in blood and brain were compared during and after 4 hours of acute alcohol vapor exposure; also, brain-alcohol levels were assessed in alcohol-exposed (14-day alcohol vapor) and alcohol-naïve rats during and after 4 hours of acute alcohol vapor exposure. A separate group of rats were implanted with i.v. catheters, made dependent on alcohol via vapor inhalation, and tested for operant alcohol responding; blood-alcohol levels (BALs) were measured throughout operant alcohol drinking sessions during alcohol withdrawal. A final group of rats consumed an alcohol-liquid diet until they were dependent, and those rats were then tested for operant behavior at various withdrawal time points; BALs were measured at different withdrawal time points and after operant sessions. Results:, Blood- and brain-alcohol levels responded similarly to vapor, but brain-alcohol levels peaked at a higher point and more slowly returned to zero in alcohol-naïve rats relative to alcohol-exposed rats. Alcohol vapor exposure also produced an upward shift in subsequent operant alcohol responding and resultant BALs. Rats consumed large quantities of alcohol-liquid diet, most of it during the dark cycle, sufficient to produce high blood-alcohol levels and elevated operant alcohol responding when tested during withdrawal from liquid diet. Conclusions:, These results emphasize that the key determinants of excessive alcohol drinking behavior are the BAL range and pattern of chronic high-dose alcohol exposure. [source]


Activation of the retrotrapezoid nucleus by posterior hypothalamic stimulation

THE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 21 2009
Michal G. Fortuna
The retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN) contains chemically defined neurons (ccRTN neurons) that provide a pH-regulated excitatory drive to the central respiratory pattern generator. Here we test whether ccRTN neurons respond to stimulation of the perifornical hypothalamus (PeF), a region that regulates breathing during sleep, stress and exercise. PeF stimulation with gabazine increased blood pressure, phrenic nerve discharge (PND) and the firing rate of ccRTN neurons in isoflurane-anaesthetized rats. Gabazine produced an approximately parallel upward shift of the steady-state relationship between ccRTN neuron firing rate and end-tidal CO2, and a similar shift of the relationship between PND and end-tidal CO2. The central respiratory modulation of ccRTN neurons persisted after gabazine without a change in pattern. Morphine administration typically abolished PND and reduced the discharge rate of most ccRTN neurons (by 25% on average). After morphine administration, PeF stimulation activated the ccRTN neurons normally but PND activation and the central respiratory modulation of the ccRTN neurons were severely attenuated. In the same rat preparation, most (58%) ccRTN neurons expressed c-Fos after exposure to hypercapnic hyperoxia (6,7% end-tidal CO2; 3.5 h; no hypothalamic stimulation) and 62% expressed c-Fos under hypocapnia (,3% end-tidal CO2) after PeF stimulation. Under baseline conditions (,3% end-tidal CO2, hyperoxia, no PeF stimulation) few (11%) ccRTN neurons expressed c-Fos. In summary, most ccRTN neurons are excited by posterior hypothalamic stimulation while retaining their normal response to CNS acidification. ccRTN neurons probably contribute both to the chemical drive of breathing and to the feed-forward control of breathing associated with emotions and or locomotion. [source]


Kinetic and DFT Studies on the Photoinduced Desorption of Sulfur from Gold Nanoparticles Loaded on Titanium Dioxide

CHEMPHYSCHEM, Issue 12 2005
Tomokazu Kiyonaga
Cleaning poisoned gold catalysts: Kinetic analysis of the photoinduced desorption of sulfur from gold nanoparticles loaded on TiO2 particles in water revealed that the rate constant increases with increasing pH. Photoelectrochemical measurements and DFT calculations led to the conclusion that this reaction results from an upward shift in the Fermi energy of gold nanoparticles by irradiation. The picture shows a high-resolution TEM image of an Au nanoparticle on TiO2. [source]


Overweight and obesity in Norwegian children: Secular trends in weight-for-height and skinfolds

ACTA PAEDIATRICA, Issue 9 2007
PB Júlíusson
Abstract Aim: The prevalence of overweight and obesity in paediatric populations has been rapidly increasing in many countries over the past decades. The aims of the present study were to provide new data on weight-for-height and skinfolds, and to compare these to growth references for children between 3 and 17 years, collected in the same city between 1971 and 1974. Material: The present study is based on cross-sectional data of 4115 children (2086 boys and 2029 girls) aged 4,15 years measured in 2003,6. Results: Overall, 18.0% of the boys and 20.1% of the girls were above the 90th weight-for-height percentile of the 1971,1974 references, 8.0% and 7.2% were above the 97.5th percentile, indicating an upward shift in weight-for-height. An even more prominent increase was observed for skinfold thicknesses; for triceps skinfolds about 30% of the boys and 28% of the girls were above the 90th percentile of the 1971,1974 references, and corresponding values for subscapular skinfolds were 26.5% and 25.9%. Using international cut-off values for body mass index, the overall prevalence of overweight and obesity was 12.5% and 2.1% in boys, and 14.8% and 2.9% in girls. Conclusions: Our study has demonstrated a significant increase in weight-for-height in Norwegian children over the last 30 years, and that these changes are caused by an increase in fat tissue, as shown by skinfold measurements. The current prevalence of overweight and obesity is comparable to recent estimates from most Western and Northern European countries. [source]


Role Of Protein Kinase C In Myogenic Calcium, Contraction Coupling Of Rat Cannulated Mesenteric Small Arteries

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 10 2001
Jos Pm Wesselman
SUMMARY 1. The present study was designed to determine the role of protein kinase C (PKC) in the myogenic response of small arteries. In particular, we tested whether inhibition of PKC reverses the previously found pressure-induced elevation of contractile element calcium sensitivity. 2. Rat mesenteric small arteries were cannulated and pressurized. The internal diameter was continuously monitored with a video camera and intracellular calcium levels were measured by means of fura-2. Myogenic responses were observed when the pressure was raised stepwise from 20 to 60 and then to 100 mmHg in physiological saline solution and during application of phenylephrine (0.1 or 1 ,mol/L) or potassium (36 mmol/L). 3. The PKC inhibitors H-7 (20 ,mol/L), staurosporine (100 nmol/L) and calphostin C (10 nmol/L) all completely abolished the myogenic response. Whereas staurosporine caused an ongoing reduction in intracellular calcium, pressure-induced calcium transients were not affected by either H-7 or calphostin C. In particular, the slope of the wall tension,calcium relationship remained similar in the presence of both H-7 and calphostin C, despite an upward shift of this relationship to higher calcium levels in the case of calphostin C. 4. These results show that activity of PKC isoform(s) is essential for myogenic calcium,contraction coupling. [source]


Changes in seasonal mean maximum air temperature in Romania and their connection with large-scale circulation

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 10 2002
Rodica Tomozeiu
Abstract This paper investigates the temporal and spatial variability of the seasonal mean of maximum air temperature in Romania and its links with the large,scale atmospheric circulation. The Romanian data sets are represented by time series at 14 stations. The large-scale parameters are represented by the observed sea-level pressure (SLP) and geopotential height at 500 hPa (Z500). The period analysed was 1922,98 for winter and 1960,98 for all seasons. Before analysis, the original temperature data were tested to detect for inhomogeneity using the standard normal homogeneity test. Empirical orthogonal functions (EOFs) were used to analyse the spatial and temporal variability of the local and large-scale parameters and to eliminate noise from the original data set. The time series associated with the first EOF pattern of the SLP and mean maximum temperature in Romania were analysed from trend and shifts point of view using the Pettitt and Mann,Kendall tests respectively. The covariance map computed using the Z500 and the seasonal mean of maximum temperature in Romania were used as additional methods to identify the large-scale circulation patterns influencing the local variability. Significant increasing trends were found for winter and summer mean maximum temperature in Romania, with upward shifts around 1947 and 1985 respectively. During autumn, a decreasing trend with a downward shift around 1969 was detected. These changes seem to be real, since they are connected to similar changes in the large-scale circulation. So, the intensification of the southwesterly circulation over Europe since 1933 overlapped with the enhancement of westerly circulation after the 1940s could be the reason for the change in winter mean maximum temperature. The slight weakening of the southwesterly circulation during autumn could be one of the reasons for the decrease in the regime of the mean maximum temperature for autumn seasons. Additionally, the covariance map technique reveals the influence of the North Atlantic oscillation in winter, East Atlantic Jet in summer and Scandinavian (or Euroasia-1) circulation pattern in autumn upon mean maximum air temperature. Copyright © 2002 Royal Meteorological Society. [source]


A tale of two analyses: estimating the consequences of shifts in hexapod diversification

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, Issue 1 2003
PETER J. MAYHEW
I present a novel descriptive (non-statistical) method to help identify the location and importance of shifts in diversification across a phylogeny. The method first estimates radiation rates across terminal higher taxa and then subjects these rates to a parsimony analysis across the phylogeny. The reconstructions define the magnitude, direction and influence of past shifts in realized diversification rates across nodes. I apply the method to data on the extant hexapod orders. The results indicate that the Coleoptera (beetles) and Diptera (flies) have contributed large upward shifts in diversification tendency, without which, under the model employed, global species richness would be reduced by 20% and 6%, respectively. The origin of Neoptera (insects with wing flexion), identified elsewhere as a significant radiation, may represent a large positive, a large negative or zero influence on current species richness, depending on the assumed phylogeny and parsimony method. The most influential radiations are attributable to the origin of the Eumetabola (insects with complete metamorphosis plus bugs and their relatives) and Pterygota (winged insects), but there is presently only weak evidence that they represent significant shifts in underlying diversification tendency. These analyses support some but not all results of previous phylogenetic analyses and the identity of the most important shift therefore remains elusive. New methodology involving comparisons across multiple taxa is likely to be necessary. © 2003 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2003, 80, 23,36. [source]