4,529 research outputs found
Contrasting activity profile of two distributed cortical networks as a function of attentional demands
The original publication is available at http://www.jneurosci.orgThis work was supported by R01 grant MH-073610 from the National Institutes of Health to Denis Paré
Impact de l'industrialisation sur les régions rurales de Zambie : R.H Bates, Rural Responses to Industrialization. A Study of Village Zambia
Denis Jacques. Impact de l'industrialisation sur les régions rurales de Zambie : R.H Bates, Rural Responses to Industrialization. A Study of Village Zambia. In: Annales de Géographie, t. 89, n°491, 1980. pp. 115-116
Impact de l'industrialisation sur les régions rurales de Zambie : R.H Bates, Rural Responses to Industrialization. A Study of Village Zambia
Denis Jacques. Impact de l'industrialisation sur les régions rurales de Zambie : R.H Bates, Rural Responses to Industrialization. A Study of Village Zambia. In: Annales de Géographie, t. 89, n°491, 1980. pp. 115-116
Melolontha aeneicollis Bates 1891
aeneicollis group The aeneicollis species group includes four species: M. aeneicollis Bates, 1891 (India), M. costipennis Fairmaire, 1889 (China), M. cuprescens Blanchard, 1871 (China, India), and M. sculpticollis Fairmaire, 1891 (China).Published as part of Gupta, Devanshu, Keith, Denis, Bhunia, Debika, Das, Priyanka, Ghosh, Joyjit & Chandra, Kailash, 2023, Review of Melolontha Fabricius, 1775 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Melolonthinae) from India with the description of two new species, pp. 191-216 in Zootaxa 5263 (2) on page 207, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5263.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/780097
Evolutionary significance of the retiolitine Gothograptus (Graptolithina) with four new species from the Silurian of the East European Platform (Baltica), Poland and Lithuania
Kozłowska, Anna, Bates, Denis, Zalasiewicz, Jan, Radzevičius, Sigitas (2019): Evolutionary significance of the retiolitine Gothograptus (Graptolithina) with four new species from the Silurian of the East European Platform (Baltica), Poland and Lithuania. Zootaxa 4568 (3): 435-469, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4568.3.
Melolontha aeneicollis Bates 1891
Melolontha aeneicollis Bates, 1891 (Figs. 5, 17, 45, 57) Melolontha aeneicollis Bates 1891: 16 (type locality: India, Kulu); Dalla Torre 1912: 267 (catalogue); Arrow 1921: 13; Chandra 2005: 152 (checklist); Bezděk 2006: 194 (catalogue); Li et al. 2010: 343 (key), 344 (checklist), fig. 12; Krajčík 2012: 158 (checklist); Keith & Saltin 2012: 35 (distribution); Bezděk 2016: 230 (catalogue). Material examined. India, Himachal Pradesh: Kulu, Great Himalayan National Park, 1,953m, 4.iv.2018, 1♁, leg. S.K. Sajan [NZSI]. India, Uttarakhand: Chamoli, Valley of Flower National Park, 3,103m, 15.vi.2017, 1♁, leg. S.K. Sajan [NZSI]. Diagnosis. Refer to species key. Distribution. India: Himachal Pradesh (Bates 1891) and Uttarakhand (new record); Pakistan (Keith & Saltin 2012).Published as part of Gupta, Devanshu, Keith, Denis, Bhunia, Debika, Das, Priyanka, Ghosh, Joyjit & Chandra, Kailash, 2023, Review of Melolontha Fabricius, 1775 (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Melolonthinae) from India with the description of two new species, pp. 191-216 in Zootaxa 5263 (2) on page 208, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5263.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/780097
Nicht-Ort Bates Motel: Vorüberlegungen zu einer Ikonografie der Einsamkeit in der amerikanischen Moderne
Denis Newiak lotet anhand des umfangreichen filmischen Bildreservoirs von „Psycho“ – von Hitchcocks Klassiker über die Fortsetzungsfilme bis hin zur aktuellen Fernsehserie BATES MOTEL (USA 2013-2017) – die Möglichkeiten einer kinematographischen Ikonografie der Einsamkeit aus. Die Welt von „Psycho“ gilt dabei vorwiegend durch ihre hochgradige Modernität als unerschöpflicher Bildspeicher, der sich vorwiegend aus den „Nicht-Orten“ (Augé) und deren verdächtigen Räumen hinter den Medienoberflächen speist. Unter Zuhilfenahme der Erkenntnisse der Kunstwissenschaft zu Einsamkeitsbildern in Malerei und Fotografie unterbreitet der Autor damit Vorschläge, wie sich eine Ikonografie der Einsamkeit als Abdruck der Moderne als Zeitalter zunehmender Vereinsamung denken ließe. Dies, so der Autor, könnte die Voraussetzung für einen neuartigen methodischen Zugang zu Kunstformen der Moderne im Allgemeinen bilden
Gothograptus diminutus Kozłowska & Bates & Zalasiewicz & Radzevičius 2019, n. sp.
Gothograptus diminutus n. sp. Fig. 23 1999 Gothograptus nassa (Holm, 1890), Kozłowska-Dawidziuk, p. 156, fig. 3B. 2016 Gothograptus nassa (Holm, 1890), Kozłowska, p. 535, fig. 1b. Type material. Holotype ZPAL G.29/21, mature specimen with six pairs of thecae (Fig. 23B, C, E); paratype ZPAL G.55/34, mature tubarium with six pairs of thecae and appendix (Fig. 23D). Bartoszyce IG-1well, depth 1659.9 m, Poland, parvus / nassa Biozone. Etymology. Latin diminutus— relating to the small size of the finite tubarium. Diagnosis. Small finite tubarium reaching six or seven pairs of thecae and appendix. Genicular structures of the nassa type of hood are usually developed on medial and distal thecae. It differs from other Gothograptus species in the small hoods and small number of thecae. Material. Bartoszyce IG-1 core, Poland, parvus / nassa Biozone, depths 1659.9 m; five mature specimens, and about 60 young tubaria or fragments; 1658.8 m, a few specimens. Description. Tubaria of G. diminutus n. sp. are small; length of mature tubarium with six pairs of thecae and appendix is about 5.0– 5.5 mm. Nema short. Length of appendix is about 0.6 mm. Width of proximal end above the ancora umbrella rim is 0.7 mm. Maximum width of tubarium reaches about 0.9 mm at the level of second and third pairs of thecae. The tubarium slowly tapers distally; below the appendix it is 0.4–0.5 mm wide. Mid-ventral lists are slightly longer in medial thecae, about 0.7 mm. Length of mid-ventral list of th1 1 is 0.35 mm. Mature tubaria have nassa - type hoods developed on medial and distal thecae. The biggest hoods are in distal thecae. Mature tubaria usually have thin lists and poorly developed reticulum (Fig. 23A, D). Some membrane of the metasicula is observed (Fig. 23B, F). The outer ancora is not observed. Remarks. Gothograptus diminutus n. sp. is the smallest form among the Gothograptus species. It is distinctive in that its mature tubaria do not have thick lists and dense reticulum, characteristic of mature colonies of all other Gothograptus species. This form is comparable in size to the dwarf monograptid, Pristiograptus parvus. It is noteworthy that both species occur at the same stratigraphical level, in the parvus / nassa Biozone. This material comes only from the Bartoszyce IG-1core of Poland.Published as part of Kozłowska, Anna, Bates, Denis, Zalasiewicz, Jan & Radzevičius, Sigitas, 2019, Evolutionary significance of the retiolitine Gothograptus (Graptolithina) with four new species from the Silurian of the East European Platform (Baltica), Poland and Lithuania, pp. 435-469 in Zootaxa 4568 (3) on page 466, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4568.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/260160
Is Tolerance Political? An Interview with Denis Lacorne
contribution à un site webDenis Lacorne is the author of "The Limits of Tolerance. Enlightenment Values and Religious Fanaticism" (Columbia University Press, 2019), the English translation of "Les limites de la tolérance" (Gallimard, awarded the Prix Montyon by the Académie Française). In his book, which is intellectually very inspiring because of the many questions it addresses and raises, Denis Lacorne traces the emergence of the notion of tolerance from its early thinkers to the Age of Enlightenment and finally questions the notion and its various understandings through more recent events in France and the United States. What is tolerance? Is tolerance political? Interview by Miriam Périer, CER
Timing of impulses from the central amygdala and bed nucleus of the stria terminalis to the brainstem
The amygdala and bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST) are thought to subserve distinct functions with the former mediating rapid fear responses to discrete sensory cues and the latter longer “anxiety-like” states in response to diffuse environmental contingencies. Yet, these structures are reciprocally connected and their projection sites overlap extensively. To shed light on the significance of BNST-amygdala connections, we compared the antidromic response latencies of BNST and central amygdala (CE) neurons to brainstem stimulation. Whereas the frequency distribution of latencies was unimodal in BNST neurons (~10 ms mode), that of CE neurons was bimodal (~10 and ~30 ms modes). However, after stria terminalis (ST) lesions, only short-latency antidromic responses were observed, suggesting that CE axons with long conduction times course through the ST. Compared to the direct route, the ST greatly lengthens the path of CE axons to the brainstem, an apparently disadvantageous arrangement. Since BNST and CE share major excitatory basolateral amygdala (BL) inputs, lengthening the path of CE axons might allow synchronization of BNST and CE impulses to brainstem when activated by BL. To test this, we applied electrical BL stimuli and compared orthodromic response latencies in CE and BNST neurons. The latency difference between CE and BNST neurons to BL stimuli approximated that seen between the antidromic responses of BNST cells and CE neurons with long-conduction times. These results point to a hitherto unsuspected level of temporal coordination between the inputs and outputs of CE and BNST neurons, supporting the idea of shared functions.The original publication is available at: http://jn.physiology.org/cgi/content/full/100/6/342
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