Showing 1241 - 1250 of 5831 Items
Date: 2014-08-01
Creator: Xuan Qu
Access: Open access
- Central pattern generators are networks of neurons that produce rhythmic and repetitiveoutputs. These outputs control behaviors such as walking, breathing and digestion. In the Americanlobster, central pattern generators control the behavior of muscles in its foregut, which allows thedigestion of a variety of food types. The stomatogastric ganglion (STG) is a bundle of about thirtyneurons in the foregut of American lobsters. It has been studied extensively since each one of theneurons in it is both identifiable and produces simple patterned outputs. The analysis of American lobster’s stomach behaviors and the neural mechanisms controlling them could provide general insights into how rhythmic motor patterns for locomotion are produced. A large number of the neurons in the STG are modulatory neurons that use neuromodulators for at least part of their synaptic receptions. These neuromodulators are released by neurons and cause long-lasting changes in the synaptic efficacies of the targets. At present, many types of neuropeptides have been identified within the crustacean stomatogastric nervous system. The pyrokinins are members of one peptide family, PBAN. PBAN peptides all share the common Cterminalpentapeptide FXPRL-amide, in which X can be S, T, G, N, or V. Previous studies, using immunohistochemistry, have found that there are pyrokinin peptides present in both the STG and the cardiac ganglion (CG) of American lobsters. My research tests five different kinds of pyrokinin peptides, including PevPK1 (DFAFSPRLamide) and PevPK2 (ADFAFNPRLamide) from the shrimp L.vannamei (Torfs et al., 2001; Ma et al., 2010), CabPK1 (TNFAFSPRLamide) and CabPK2(SGGFAFSPRLamide from the crab C.borealis (Saideman et al., 2007;Ma et al., 2009) and Conserved Sequence (FSPRLamide) from the lobster, H.americanus (Ma, et al, 2008). ConservedSequence, the only pyrokinin identified in the American lobster so far, is highly conserved among many other pyrokinin peptides. Therefore, it is believed to be just a fragment with the complete sequence yet to be identified. Thus, we predicted that it might produce a weaker effect on the STG. Previous studies on the pyrokinin peptides have shown that in crabs, CabPK1, CabPK2 and LeucoPK (identified in an insect), all had a virtually identical effect on the CG, suggesting that the differences among these pyrokinin peptides are not important and the receptors for these peptides are the same. However, research done by Bowdoin students in 2011-2012 showed that among PevPK1,PevPK2, CabPK1, CabPK2, and Conserved Sequence, all but Conserved Sequence (not yet tested) had strong effects on the STG. However, only PevPK2 had an effect on the CG. My goal for this summer research was to determine whether or not there are differences between the responses of the STG to the different peptides in order to further determine the cause for the differences between the responses of the CG and those of the STG. The results from the extracellular recordings from the identified neurons in my research have shown that none of the five kinds of pyrokinin peptides affect the pyloric rhythm, which controls the pumping and filtering of food through the pylorus in Americanlobsters. They all, however, excite the gastric mill rhythm, which controls the movements of the teeth that grind up the food before it is transferred into the pylorus. Moreover, there is no significant difference among the effects of these five kinds of pyrokinin peptides. Conserved Sequence, which was predicted to produce a relatively weaker effect, proved to produce virtually identical effect asfour other kinds of pyrokinin peptides. Future research will focus on studying the differences between the STG and CG to determine the cause of the varied responses between them. Final Report of research funded by the Doherty Coastal Studies Research Fellowship.
Date: 2014-04-01
Creator: Andrew Rudalevige
Access: Open access
- In his 2014 State of the Union address Barack Obama pledged to act without Congress on a variety of fronts, following up his "we can't wait" campaign of unilateralism before the 2012 election. The partisan furor this engendered tended to obscure the longstanding efforts of presidents to "faithfully execute" the law in a manner that aligns with their policy preferences. This paper examines the broad logic of those efforts, and delineates five areas where the Obama administration has been particularly aggressive: in its (1) recess appointments; (2) refusal to defend federal law (notably, the Defense of Marriage Act) in court; (3) use of prosecutorial discretion in declining to pursue violations of immigration and drug laws; (4) use of waivers; and (5) its utilization of the regulatory process to interpret the meaning of statutes, as with the Clean Air Act and the Affordable Care Act. Presidents do have flexibility in many cases; but this ends where they seek to alter the plain "letter of the law.".
Date: 2020-01-01
Creator: Sina Heydari, Amy Johnson, Olaf Ellers, Matthew J. McHenry, Eva, Kanso
Access: Open access
- The oral surface of sea stars is lined with arrays of tube feet that enable them to achieve highly controlled locomotion on various terrains. The activity of the tube feet is orchestrated by a nervous system that is distributed throughout the body without a central brain. How such a distributed nervous system produces a coordinated locomotion is yet to be understood. We develop mathematical models of the biomechanics of the tube feet and the sea star body. In the model, the feet are coupled mechanically through their structural connection to a rigid body. We formulate hierarchical control laws that capture salient features of the sea star nervous system. Namely, at the tube foot level, the power and recovery strokes follow a state-dependent feedback controller. At the system level, a directionality command is communicated through the nervous system to all tube feet. We study the locomotion gaits afforded by this hierarchical control model. We find that these minimally coupled tube feet coordinate to generate robust forward locomotion, reminiscent of the crawling motion of sea stars, on various terrains and for heterogeneous tube feet parameters and initial conditions. Our model also predicts a transition from crawling to bouncing consistently with recent experiments. We conclude by commenting on the implications of these findings for understanding the neuromechanics of sea stars and their potential application to autonomous robotic systems.
Date: 2001-01-01
Creator: Olivia C. Vitale
Access: Open access
- Catalog of an exhibition held at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Apr. 12-June 17, 2001.
Date: 2011-11-15
Creator: Christopher Chong, Guido Schneider
Access: Open access
- It is the purpose of this short note to discuss some aspects of the validity question concerning the Korteweg-de Vries (KdV) approximation for periodic media. For a homogeneous model possessing the same resonance structure as it arises in periodic media we prove the validity of the KdV approximation with the help of energy estimates. © 2011 Elsevier Inc.
Date: 2020-01-01
Creator: Joseph Campbell Hilleary
Access: Open access
- This thesis explores changes in and challenges to Moroccan political authority in the region of the Sous during the late nineteenth century. It attempts to show how the phenomenon of British informal empire created a crisis over Moroccan sovereignty that caused the sultan to both materially and discursively change the way he wielded power in southern Morocco. It further connects these changes and the narrative contestation that accompanied them to the construction of the Bilad al-Siba/Bilad al-Makhzan dichotomy found in Western academic literature on Morocco starting in the colonial period. It begins with an examination of letters between Sultan Hassan I and local leaders in the Sous that show a shift toward a more bureaucratic form of governance in response to repeated openings of black-market ports by British trading companies. It then investigates the textual debate over the framing of Hassan I’s military expeditions to southern Morocco in the 1880s and 90s by drawing on a collection of European travel accounts, American consular reports, and a royal Moroccan history. Finally, it ties the illegal trade in the Sous to the broader theory of informal empire through a close examination of the Tourmaline Incident of 1897, using documents from the British Foreign Office as well as published accounts by crew members aboard the Tourmaline, itself.
Date: 2017-06-01
Creator: Collin Roesler, Julia Uitz, Hervé Claustre, Emmanuel Boss, Xiaogang, Xing, Emanuele Organelli, Nathan Briggs, Annick Bricaud, Catherine Schmechtig, Antoine Poteau, Fabrizio D'Ortenzio, Josephine Ras, Susan Drapeau, Nils Haëntjens, Marie Barbieux
Access: Open access
- Chlorophyll fluorometers provide the largest in situ global data set for estimating phytoplankton biomass because of their ease of use, size, power consumption, and relatively low price. While in situ chlorophyll a (Chl) fluorescence is proxy for Chl a concentration, and hence phytoplankton biomass, there exist large natural variations in the relationship between in situ fluorescence and extracted Chl a concentration. Despite this large natural variability, we present here a global validation data set for the WET Labs Environmental Characterization Optics (ECO) series chlorophyll fluorometers that suggests a factor of 2 overestimation in the factory calibrated Chl a estimates for this specific manufacturer and series of sensors. We base these results on paired High Pressure Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) and in situ fluorescence match ups for which non-photochemically quenched fluorescence observations were removed. Additionally, we examined matchups between the factory-calibrated in situ fluorescence and estimates of chlorophyll concentration determined from in situ radiometry, absorption line height, NASA's standard ocean color algorithm as well as laboratory calibrations with phytoplankton monocultures spanning diverse species that support the factor of 2 bias. We therefore recommend the factor of 2 global bias correction be applied for the WET Labs ECO sensors, at the user level, to improve the global accuracy of chlorophyll concentration estimates and products derived from them. We recommend that other fluorometer makes and models should likewise undergo global analyses to identify potential bias in factory calibration.
Date: 2007-03-13
Creator: Thomas W. Baumgarte, Stephen G. Naculich
Access: Open access
- The "moving-puncture" technique has led to dramatic advancements in the numerical simulations of binary black holes. Hannam et al. have recently demonstrated that, for suitable gauge conditions commonly employed in moving-puncture simulations, the evolution of a single black hole leads to a well-known, time-independent, maximal slicing of Schwarzschild spacetime. They construct the corresponding solution in isotropic coordinates numerically and demonstrate its usefulness, for example, for testing and calibrating numerical codes that employ moving-puncture techniques. In this brief report we point out that this solution can also be constructed analytically, making it even more useful as a test case for numerical codes. © 2007 The American Physical Society.