12,181 results on '"Moritz, M."'
Search Results
52. Assessing climate change impacts on live fuel moisture and wildfire risk using a hydrodynamic vegetation model
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Ma, W, Zhai, L, Pivovaroff, A, Shuman, J, Buotte, P, Ding, J, Christoffersen, B, Knox, R, Moritz, M, Fisher, RA, Koven, CD, Kueppers, L, and Xu, C
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Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Earth Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences - Abstract
Live fuel moisture content (LFMC) plays a critical role in wildfire dynamics, but little is known about responses of LFMC to multivariate climate change, e.g., warming temperature, CO2 fertilization, and altered precipitation patterns, leading to a limited prediction ability of future wildfire risks. Here, we use a hydrodynamic demographic vegetation model to estimate LFMC dynamics of chaparral shrubs, a dominant vegetation type in fire-prone southern California. We parameterize the model based on observed shrub allometry and hydraulic traits and evaluate the model's accuracy through comparisons between observed and simulated LFMC of three plant functional types (PFTs) under current climate conditions. Moreover, we estimate the number of days per year of LFMC below 79% (which is a critical threshold for wildfire danger rating of southern California chaparral shrubs) from 1960 to 2099 for each PFT and compare the number of days below the threshold for medium and high greenhouse gas emission scenarios (RCP4.5 and 8.5). We find that climate change could lead to more days per year (5.2%-14.8% increase) with LFMC below 79% between the historical (1960-1999) and future (2080-2099) periods, implying an increase in wildfire danger for chaparral shrubs in southern California. Under the high greenhouse gas emission scenario during the dry season, we find that the future LFMC reductions mainly result from a warming temperature, which leads to 9.1%-18.6% reduction in LFMC. Lower precipitation in the spring leads to a 6.3%-8.1% reduction in LFMC. The combined impacts of warming and precipitation change on fire season length are equal to the additive impacts of warming and precipitation change individually. Our results show that the CO2 fertilization will mitigate fire risk by causing a 3.5%-4.8% increase in LFMC. Our results suggest that multivariate climate change could cause a significant net reduction in LFMC and thus exacerbate future wildfire danger in chaparral shrub systems.
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- 2021
53. DISCOVER-EEG: an open, fully automated EEG pipeline for biomarker discovery in clinical neuroscience
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Cristina Gil Ávila, Felix S. Bott, Laura Tiemann, Vanessa D. Hohn, Elisabeth S. May, Moritz M. Nickel, Paul Theo Zebhauser, Joachim Gross, and Markus Ploner
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Science - Abstract
Abstract Biomarker discovery in neurological and psychiatric disorders critically depends on reproducible and transparent methods applied to large-scale datasets. Electroencephalography (EEG) is a promising tool for identifying biomarkers. However, recording, preprocessing, and analysis of EEG data is time-consuming and researcher-dependent. Therefore, we developed DISCOVER-EEG, an open and fully automated pipeline that enables easy and fast preprocessing, analysis, and visualization of resting state EEG data. Data in the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) standard are automatically preprocessed, and physiologically meaningful features of brain function (including oscillatory power, connectivity, and network characteristics) are extracted and visualized using two open-source and widely used Matlab toolboxes (EEGLAB and FieldTrip). We tested the pipeline in two large, openly available datasets containing EEG recordings of healthy participants and patients with a psychiatric condition. Additionally, we performed an exploratory analysis that could inspire the development of biomarkers for healthy aging. Thus, the DISCOVER-EEG pipeline facilitates the aggregation, reuse, and analysis of large EEG datasets, promoting open and reproducible research on brain function.
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- 2023
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54. Role of the transcriptional regulator SP140 in resistance to bacterial infections via repression of type I interferons.
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Ji, Daisy X, Witt, Kristen C, Kotov, Dmitri I, Margolis, Shally R, Louie, Alexander, Chevée, Victoria, Chen, Katherine J, Gaidt, Moritz M, Dhaliwal, Harmandeep S, Lee, Angus Y, Nishimura, Stephen L, Zamboni, Dario S, Kramnik, Igor, Portnoy, Daniel A, Darwin, K Heran, and Vance, Russell E
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immunology ,inflammation ,legionella pneumophila ,mouse ,mycobacterium tuberculosis ,type i interferon ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology - Abstract
Type I interferons (IFNs) are essential for anti-viral immunity, but often impair protective immune responses during bacterial infections. An important question is how type I IFNs are strongly induced during viral infections, and yet are appropriately restrained during bacterial infections. The Super susceptibility to tuberculosis 1 (Sst1) locus in mice confers resistance to diverse bacterial infections. Here we provide evidence that Sp140 is a gene encoded within the Sst1 locus that represses type I IFN transcription during bacterial infections. We generated Sp140-/- mice and found that they are susceptible to infection by Legionella pneumophila and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Susceptibility of Sp140-/- mice to bacterial infection was rescued by crosses to mice lacking the type I IFN receptor (Ifnar-/-). Our results implicate Sp140 as an important negative regulator of type I IFNs that is essential for resistance to bacterial infections.
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- 2021
55. Minimally invasive Oxford medial unicompartmental knee replacement in patients 50 years of age or younger
- Author
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Walker, Tilman, Stupp, Julius, Reiner, Tobias, Panzram, Benjamin, Nees, Timo A., Innmann, Moritz M., Gotterbarm, Tobias, and Merle, Christian
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
56. Technical Design Report for the PANDA Endcap Disc DIRC
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Panda Collaboration, Davi, F., Erni, W., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Walford, N., Liu, H., Liu, Z., Liu, B., Shen, X., Wang, C., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Erlen, T., Feldbauer, F., Fink, M., Freudenreich, V., Fritsch, M., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kuhlmann, M., Kümmel, M., Leiber, S., Musiol, P., Mustafa, A., Pelizäus, M., Pitka, A., Reicherz, G., Richter, M., Schnier, C., Schröder, T., Sersin, S., Sohl, L., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wiedner, U., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Hartmann, J., Ketzer, B., Kube, M., Rossbach, M., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Pantea, D., Czyzycki, W., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Jaworowski, J., Krawczyk, M., Lisowski, E., Lisowski, F., Michalek, M., Plazek, J., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Swientek, K., Biernat, J., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Przygoda, W., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Strzempek, P., Wronska, A., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Marinescu, D. Nicmorus, Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Veis, N. Divani, Dzhygadlo, R., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Karabowicz, R., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Löchner, S., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Nakhoul, S., Orth, H., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, V. A., Astakhov, V., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Galoyan, A., Golovanov, G., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Lobanov, V. I., Malyshev, V., Olshevskiy, A. G., Piskun, A. A., Samartsev, A., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Verkheev, A., Vodopianov, A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zinchenko, A., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Miehling, D., Pfaffinger, M., Stelter, S., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Ali, A., Hamdi, A., Krebs, M., Nerling, F., Akishina, V., Gorbunov, S., Kisel, I., Kozlov, G., Pugach, M., Zyzak, M., Bianchi, N., Gianotti, P., Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Bracco, G., Bodenschatz, S., Brinkmann, K. T., Di Pietro, V., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Düren, M., Etzelmüller, E., Föhl, K., Galuska, M., Geßler, T., Gutz, E., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Kesselkaul, M., Kühn, W., Kuske, T., Lange, J. S., Liang, Y., Metag, V., Moritz, M., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Quagli, T., Riccardi, A., Rieke, J., Schmidt, M., Schnell, R., Stenzel, H., Strickert, M., Thöring, U., Wasem, T., Wohlfahrt, B., Zaunick, H. G., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Ireland, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A., Apostolou, A., Babai, M., Kavatsyuk, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Schakel, P., Tiemens, M., van der Weele, J. C., Vejdani, S., Dutta, K., Kalita, K., Sohlbach, H., Bai, M., Bianchi, L., Büscher, M., Derichs, A., Dosdall, R., Erven, A., Fracassi, V., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Jokhovets, L., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Lai, A., Lehrach, A., Mikirtychyants, M., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Ritman, J., Rosenthal, E., Schadmand, S., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zhou, Y., Li, Z., Ma, X., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Aycock, A., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Lauth, W., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Zambrana, M., Ahmadi, H., Ahmed, S., Bleser, S., Capozza, L., Cardinali, M., Dbeyssi, A., Ehret, A., Fröhlich, B., Grasemann, P., Haasler, S., Izard, D., Jorge, J., Khaneft, D., Klasen, R., Kliemt, R., Köhler, J., Leithoff, H. H., Lin, D., Maas, F., Maldaner, S., Michel, M., Espi, M. C. Mora, Morales, C. Morales, Motzko, C., Noll, O., Pflüger, S., Pineiro, D. Rodriguez, Steinen, M., Walaa, E., Wolff, S., Zimmermann, I., Fedorov, A., Korzhik, M., Missevitch, O., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Kirin, D. Y., Matveev, V. A., Stavinskiy, A. V., Balashoff, A., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Chandratre, V., Datar, V., Jha, V., Kumawat, H., Mohanty, A. K., Parmar, A., Rai, A. K., Roy, B., Sonika, G., Fritzsch, C., Grieser, S., Hergemöller, A. K., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Khoukaz, A., Wessels, J. P., Herold, C., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Srisawad, P., Yan, Y., Blinov, A. E., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Antokhin, E., Barnyakov, M., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, V. E., Bobrovnikov, V. S., Kuyanov, I. A., Onuchin, A. P., Pivovarov, S., Pyata, E., Serednyakov, S., Tikhonov, Y., Kunne, R., Marchand, D., Ramstein, B., van de Wiele, J., Wang, Y., Boca, G., Burian, V., Finger, M., Nikolovova, A., Pesek, M., Peskova, M., Pfeffer, M., Prochazka, I., Slunecka, M., Gallus, P., Jary, V., Novy, J., Tomasek, M., Virius, M., Vrba, V., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Bukreeva, S., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Kormilitsin, V., Levin, A., Melnik, Y., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Roy, U., Yabsley, B., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Veretennikov, D., Zhdanov, A., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Makonyi, K., Preston, M., Tegner, P. E., Wölbing, D., Godre, S., Bussa, M. P., Marcello, S., Spataro, S., Iazzi, F., Introzzi, R., Lavagno, A., Calvo, D., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Mazza, G., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Martin, A., Calen, H., Andersson, W. Ikegami, Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Pettersson, J., Regina, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Diaz, J., Chackara, V. Pothodi, Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Slowinski, B., Trzcinski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Steinschaden, D., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zimmermann, S., and Zmeskal, J.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
PANDA (anti-Proton ANnihiliation at DArmstadt) is planned to be one of the four main experiments at the future international accelerator complex FAIR (Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research) in Darmstadt, Germany. It is going to address fundamental questions of hadron physics and quantum chromodynamics using cooled antiproton beams with a high intensity and and momenta between 1.5 and 15 GeV/c. PANDA is designed to reach a maximum luminosity of 2x10^32 cm^2 s. Most of the physics programs require an excellent particle identification (PID). The PID of hadronic states at the forward endcap of the target spectrometer will be done by a fast and compact Cherenkov detector that uses the detection of internally reflected Cherenkov light (DIRC) principle. It is designed to cover the polar angle range from 5{\deg} to 22{\deg} and to provide a separation power for the separation of charged pions and kaons up to 3 standard deviations (s.d.) for particle momenta up to 4 GeV/c in order to cover the important particle phase space. This document describes the technical design and the expected performance of the novel PANDA Disc DIRC detector that has not been used in any other high energy physics experiment (HEP) before. The performance has been studied with Monte-Carlo simulations and various beam tests at DESY and CERN. The final design meets all PANDA requirements and guarantees suffcient safety margins., Comment: TDR for Panda/Fair to be published
- Published
- 2019
57. Comparing simulated $^{26}$Al maps to gamma-ray measurements
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Pleintinger, Moritz M. M., Siegert, Thomas, Diehl, Roland, Fujimoto, Yusuke, Greiner, Jochen, Krause, Martin G. H., and Krumholz, Mark R.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Context. The diffuse gamma-ray emission of $^{26}{\rm Al}$ at 1.8 MeV reflects ongoing nucleosynthesis in the Milky Way, and traces massive-star feedback in the interstellar medium due to its 1 Myr radioactive lifetime. Interstellar-medium morphology and dynamics are investigated in astrophysics through 3D hydrodynamic simulations in fine detail, as only few suitable astronomical probes are available. Aims. We compare a galactic-scale hydrodynamic simulation of the Galaxy's interstellar medium, including feedback and nucleosynthesis, with gamma-ray data on $^{26}{\rm Al}$ emission in the Milky Way extracting constraints that are only weakly dependent on the particular realisation of the simulation or Galaxy structure. Methods. Due to constraints and biases in both the simulations and the gamma-ray observations, such comparisons are not straightforward. For a direct comparison, we perform maximum likelihood fits of simulated sky maps as well as observation-based maximum entropy maps to measurements with INTEGRAL/SPI. To study general morphological properties, we compare the scale heights of $^{26}{\rm Al}$ emission produced by the simulation to INTEGRAL/SPI measurements.} Results. The direct comparison shows that the simulation describes the observed inner Galaxy well, but differs significantly from the observed full-sky emission morphology. Comparing the scale height distribution, we see similarities for small scale height features and a mismatch at larger scale heights. We attribute this to the prominent foreground emission sites that are not captured by the simulation., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2019
- Full Text
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58. Symmetry-enforced band crossings in trigonal materials: Accordion states and Weyl nodal lines
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Chan, Y. -H., Kilic, Berkay, Hirschmann, Moritz M., Chiu, Ching-Kai, Schoop, Leslie M., Joshi, Darshan G., and Schnyder, Andreas P.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Nonsymmoprhic symmetries, such as screw rotations or glide reflections, can enforce band crossings within high-symmetry lines or planes of the Brillouin zone. When these band degeneracies are close to the Fermi energy, they can give rise to a number of unusual phenomena: e.g., anomalous magnetoelectric responses, transverse Hall currents, and exotic surface states. In this paper, we present a comprehensive classification of such nonsymmorphic band crossings in trigonal materials with strong spin-orbit coupling. We find that in trigonal systems there are two different types of nonsymmorphic band degeneracies: (i) Weyl points protected by screw rotations with an accordion-like dispersion, and (ii) Weyl nodal lines protected by glide reflections. We report a number of existing materials, where these band crossings are realized near the Fermi energy. This includes Cu2SrSnS4 and elemental tellurium (Te), which exhibit accordion Weyl points; and the tellurium-silicon clathrate Te16Si38, which shows Weyl nodal lines. The ab-initio band structures and surface states of these materials are studied in detail, and implications for experiments are briefly discussed., Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables
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- 2019
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59. $\mathcal{PT}$-symmetric non-Hermitian Dirac semimetals
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Rui, W. B., Hirschmann, Moritz M., and Schnyder, Andreas P.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Physics - Optics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
Parity-time ($\mathcal{PT}$) symmetry plays an important role both in non-Hermitian and topological systems. In non-Hermitian systems $\mathcal{PT}$ symmetry can lead to an entirely real energy spectrum, while in topological systems $\mathcal{PT}$ symmetry gives rise to stable and protected Dirac points. Here, we study a $\mathcal{PT}$-symmetric system which is both non-Hermitian and topological, namely a $\mathcal{PT}$-symmetric Dirac semimetal with non-Hermitian perturbations in three dimensions. We find that, in general, there are only two types of symmetry allowed non-Hermitian perturbations, namely non-Hermitian kinetic potentials, and non-Hermitian anti-commuting potentials. For both of these non-Hermitian potentials we investigate the band topology for open and periodic boundary conditions, determine the exceptional points, and compute the surface states. We find that with periodic boundary conditions, the non-Hermitian kinetic potential leads to exceptional rings, while the non-Hermitian anti-commuting potential generates exceptional spheres, which separate regions with broken $\mathcal{PT}$ symmetry from regions with unbroken $\mathcal{PT}$ symmetry. With open boundary conditions, the non-Hermitian kinetic potential induces a non-Hermitian skin effect which is localized on both sides of the sample due to symmetry, while the non-Hermitian anticommuting potential leads to Fermi ribbon surface states., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures
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- 2019
- Full Text
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60. Constraints on positron annihilation kinematics in the inner Galaxy
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Siegert, Thomas, Crocker, Roland M., Diehl, Roland, Krause, Martin G. H., Panther, Fiona H., Pleintinger, Moritz M. M., and Weinberger, Christoph
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The annihilation of cosmic positrons ($e^+$) with electrons in the interstellar medium (ISM) results in the strongest persistent gamma-ray line signal in the sky. For 50 years, this 511 keV emission has puzzled observers and theoreticians. A key issue for understanding $e^+$-astrophysics is found in cosmic-ray propagation, especially at low kinetic energies (< 10 MeV). We want to shed light on how $e^+$s propagate and the resulting morphology of the emission. We approach this "positron puzzle" by inferring kinematic information of the 511 keV line in the inner radian of the Galaxy. This constrains propagation scenarios and source populations. By dissecting the 511 keV emission as measured with INTEGRAL/SPI, we derive spectra for individual regions in the sky. The centroid energies are converted into Doppler-shifts, representing the line-of-sight velocity along different longitudes. This results in a longitude-velocity diagram of $e^+$-annihilation. We also determine Doppler-broadenings to study annihilation conditions as they vary across the Galaxy. We find line-of-sight velocities in the 511 keV line that are consistent with zero, as well as with galactic rotation from CO measurements, and measurements of radioactive Al-26. The velocity gradient in the inner 60 deg is determined to be $4\pm6$ km/s/deg. The 511 keV line width is constant as a function of longitude at $2.43\pm0.14$ keV. The positronium fraction is found to be 1.0 along the galactic plane. The weak signals in the disk leave open the question whether $e^+$-annihilation is associated with the high velocities seen in Al-26 or rather with ordinarily rotating components of the Galaxy's ISM. We confirm previous results that $e^+$s are slowed down to the 10 eV energy scale before annihilation, and constrain bulk Doppler-broadening contributions to <1.25 keV. Consequently, the true annihilation conditions remain unclear., Comment: 8 pages, 5 main figures, 7 pages appendix with 6 auxiliary figures, accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2019
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61. How is hip anatomy reconstruction and inlay wear associated up to 10 years after primary THA using ceramic on highly crosslinked polyethylene bearings?
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Weishorn, Johannes, Heid, Samira, Bruckner, Thomas, Merle, Christian, Renkawitz, Tobias, and Innmann, Moritz M.
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- 2023
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62. Chasing the “How” and “Why” of goal pursuit: A multimethod approach to the study of goal focus
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Moersdorf, Lea, Daum, Moritz M., Eid, Michael, and Freund, Alexandra M.
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- 2023
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63. Sacral Slope Change From Standing to Relaxed-Seated Grossly Overpredicts the Presence of a Stiff Spine
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Sharma, Abhinav K., Grammatopoulos, George, Pierrepont, Jim W., Madurawe, Chameka S., Innmann, Moritz M., Vigdorchik, Jonathan M., and Shimmin, Andrew J.
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- 2023
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64. Temporal–spectral signaling of sensory information and expectations in the cerebral processing of pain
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Nickel, Moritz M., Tiemann, Laura, Hohn, Vanessa D., May, Elisabeth S., Ávila, Cristina Gil, Eippert, Falk, and Ploner, Markus
- Published
- 2022
65. Correlation induced magnetic topological phases in the mixed-valence compound SmB_{6}
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Huimei Liu, Moritz M. Hirschmann, George A. Sawatzky, Giniyat Khaliullin, and Andreas P. Schnyder
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
SmB_{6} is a mixed-valence compound with flat f-electron bands that have a propensity to magnetism. Here, using a realistic Γ_{8} quartet model, we investigate the dynamical spin susceptibility and describe the in-gap collective mode observed in neutron scattering experiments. We show that as the Sm valence increases with pressure, the magnetic correlations enhance and SmB_{6} undergoes a first-order phase transition into a metallic antiferromagnetic state, whose symmetry depends on the model parameters. The magnetic orderings give rise to distinct band topologies: while the A-type order leads to an overlap between valence and conduction bands in the form of Dirac nodal lines, the G-type order has a negative indirect gap with weak Z_{2} indices. We also consider the spin polarized phase under a strong magnetic field, and find that it exhibits Weyl points as well as nodal lines close to the Fermi level. The magnetic phases show markedly different surface states and tunable bulk transport properties, with important implications for experiments. Our theory predicts that a magnetic order can be stabilized also by lifting the Γ_{8} cubic symmetry, thus explaining the surface magnetism reported in SmB_{6}.
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- 2023
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66. Background modelling for $\gamma$-ray spectroscopy with INTEGRAL/SPI
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Siegert, Thomas, Diehl, Roland, Weinberger, Christoph, Pleintinger, Moritz M. M., Greiner, Jochen, and Zhang, Xiaoling
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The coded-mask spectrometer-telescope SPI on board the INTEGRAL observatory records photons in the energy range between 20 and 8000 keV. A robust and versatile method to model the dominating instrumental background (BG) radiation is difficult to establish for such a telescope in the rapidly changing space environment. From long-term monitoring of SPI's Germanium detectors, we built up a spectral parameter data base, which characterises the instrument response as well as the BG behaviour. We aim to build a self-consistent and broadly applicable BG model for typical science cases of INTEGRAL/SPI, based on this data base. The general analysis method for SPI relies on distinguishing between illumination patterns on the 19-element Germanium detector array from BG and sky in a maximum likelihood framework. We illustrate how the complete set of measurements, even including the exposures of the sources of interest, can be used to define a BG model. We apply our method to different science cases, including point-like, diffuse, continuum, and line emission, and evaluate the adequacy in each case. From likelihood values and the number of fitted parameters, we determine how strong the impact of the unknown BG variability is. We find that the number of fitted parameters, i.e. how often the BG has to be re-normalised, depends on the emission type (diffuse with many observations over a large sky region, or point-like with concentrated exposure around one source), and the spectral energy range and bandwidth. A unique time scale, valid for all analysis issues, is not applicable for INTEGRAL/SPI, but must and can be inferred from the chosen data set. We conclude that our BG modelling method is usable in a large variety of INTEGRAL/SPI science cases, and provides nearly systematics-free and robust results., Comment: 11 pages, 2 appendix pages, 9 figures, 4 appendix figures, 4 tables; based on the work of Diehl et al. (2018), Siegert (2017), and Siegert (2013)
- Published
- 2019
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67. A combinatorial approach to uncover an additional Integrator subunit
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Offley, Sarah R., Pfleiderer, Moritz M., Zucco, Avery, Fraudeau, Angelique, Welsh, Sarah A., Razew, Michal, Galej, Wojciech P., and Gardini, Alessandro
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- 2023
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68. The kleineWeltentdecker App - A smartphone-based developmental diary
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Daum, Moritz M., Bleiker, Marco, Wermelinger, Stephanie, Kurthen, Ira, Maffongelli, Laura, Antognini, Katharina, Beisert, Miriam, and Gampe, Anja
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- 2022
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69. Minimum 20-year follow-up of a press-fit acetabular cup in cementless total hip replacement in young patients
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Andre Lunz, Moritz von Falkenhayn, Sebastian Jaeger, Tobias Reiner, Christian Merle, Marcus R Streit, Tobias Renkawitz, and Moritz M Innmann
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Allofit ,arthroplasty ,cementless fixation ,implant survival rates ,long-term outcome ,press-fit cup ,Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
Purpose: We aimed to determine the minimum 20-year survival rates of a cementless press-fit cup in young patients. Patients and methods: This is a retrospective, single-center, multi-surgeon cohort study investigating the minimum 20-year clinical and radiological outcome of the first 121 consecutive total hip replacements (THRs) using a cementless, press-fit cup (Allofit, Zimmer, Warsaw, IN, USA) performed between 1999 and 2001. 28-mm metal-on-metal (MoM) and ceramic-on-conventionally not highly crosslinked polyethylene (CoP) bearings were used in 71% and 28%, respectively. Median patient age at surgery was 52 (range 21–60) years. Kaplan–Meier survival analysis was conducted for different endpoints. Results: The 22-year survival rate for the endpoint aseptic cup or inlay revision was 94% (95% confidence interval [CI] 87–96) and 99% (CI 94–100) for aseptic cup loosening. 20 patients (21 THRs; 17%) had died and 5 (5 THRs; 4%) were lost to follow-up. No THR showed evidence of radiographic cup loosening. Osteolysis was observed in 40% of THRs with MoM and 77% with CoP bearings. 88% of THRs with CoP bearings showed significant polyethylene wear. Conclusion: The investigated cementless press-fit cup, which is still in clinical use today, showed excellent long-term survival rates in patients under the age of 60 years at surgery. However, osteolysis due to polyethylene and metal wear was frequently observed and is a matter of concern in the third decade after surgery.
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- 2023
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70. IKKβ primes inflammasome formation by recruiting NLRP3 to the trans-Golgi network
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Schmacke, Niklas A., O’Duill, Fionan, Gaidt, Moritz M., Szymanska, Inga, Kamper, Julia M., Schmid-Burgk, Jonathan L., Mädler, Sophia C., Mackens-Kiani, Timur, Kozaki, Tatsuya, Chauhan, Dhruv, Nagl, Dennis, Stafford, Che A., Harz, Hartmann, Fröhlich, Adrian L., Pinci, Francesca, Ginhoux, Florent, Beckmann, Roland, Mann, Matthias, Leonhardt, Heinrich, and Hornung, Veit
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- 2022
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71. Cup orientation following posterior approach THA – the effect of different visual aids and pelvic supports
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Moritz M. Innmann, Jeroen Verhaegen, Christian Merle, Paul E. Beaulé, Geert Meermans, and George Grammatopoulos
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Hip ,Arthroplasty ,Pelvis ,Position ,Posterior approach ,Cup ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction This study aims to compare cup inclination achieved (1) Using two orientation guides, whilst using the same 3-point pelvic positioner and (2) Using two types of pelvic positioners, whilst measuring intra-operative cup inclination with an inclinometer. Materials and methods This is a prospective, diagnostic cohort study of a consecutive series of 150 THAs performed through a posterior approach. Two types of 3-point pelvic positioners were used (Stulberg and modified Capello Hip Positioners) and the cup was positioned freehand using one of two orientation guides (mechanical guide or digital inclinometer). Intra-operative inclination was recorded, radiographic cup inclination and anteversion were measured from radiographs. The differences in inclination due to pelvic position (ΔPelvicPosition) and orientation definitions (ΔDefinition) were calculated. Target radiographic inclination and anteversion was 40/20° ± 10°. Results There was no difference in radiographic cup inclination/ (p = 0.63) using a mechanical guide or digital inclinometer. However, differences were seen in ΔPelvicPosition between the positioners ((Stulberg: 0° ± 5 vs. Capello: 3° ± 6); p = 0.011). Intra-operative inclination at implantation was different between positioners and this led to equivalent cases within inclination/anteversion targets (Stulberg:84%, Capello:80%; p = 0.48). Conclusions With the pelvis securely positioned with 3-point supports, optimum cup orientation can be achieved with both alignment guides and inclinometer. Non-optimal cup inclinations were seen when intra-operative inclinations were above 40° and below 32°, or the ΔPelvicPosition was excessive (> 15°; n = 2). We would thus recommend that the intra-operative cup inclination should be centered strictly between 30° and 35° relative to the floor. Small differences exist between different type of pelvic positioners that surgeons need to be aware off and account for.
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- 2022
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72. Gamma-Ray Observations of Nova Sgr 2015 No. 2 with INTEGRAL
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Siegert, Thomas, Coc, Alain, Delgado, Laura, Diehl, Roland, Greiner, Jochen, Hernanz, Margarita, Jean, Pierre, Jose, Jordi, Molaro, Paolo, Pleintinger, Moritz M. M., Savchenko, Volodymyr, Starrfield, Sumner, Tatischeff, Vincent, and Weinberger, Christoph
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
INTEGRAL observed the nova V5668 Sgr around the time of its optical maximum on March 21, 2015. Studies at UV wavelengths showed spectral lines of freshly produced Be-7. This could be measurable also in gamma-rays at 478 keV from the decay to Li-7. Novae are also expected to synthesise Na-22 which decays to Ne-22, emitting a 1275 keV photon. About one week before the optical maximum, a strong gamma-ray flash on time-scales of hours is expected from short-lived radioactive nuclei, such as N-13 and F-18. These beta-plus-unstable nuclei should yield emission up to 511 keV, but which has never been observed. The spectrometer SPI aboard INTEGRAL pointed towards V5668 by chance. We use these observations to search for possible gamma-ray emission of decaying Be-7, and to directly measure the synthesised mass during explosive burning. We also aim to constrain possible burst-like emission days to weeks before the optical maximum using the SPI anticoincidence shield (ACS). We extract spectral and temporal information to determine the fluxes of gamma-ray lines at 478 keV, 511 keV, and 1275 keV. A measured flux value directly converts into abundances produced by the nova. The SPI-ACS rates are analysed for burst-like emission using a nova model light-curve. For the obtained nova flash candidate events, we discuss possible origins. No significant excess for the expected gamma-ray lines is found. Our upper limits on the synthesised Be-7 and Na-22 mass depend on the uncertainties of the distance to the nova: The Be-7 mass is constrained to less than $4.8\times10^{-9}\,(d/kpc)^2$, and Na-22 to less than $2.4\times10^{-8}\,(d/kpc)^2$ solar masses. For the Be-7 mass estimate from UV studies, the distance to V5668 Sgr must be larger than 1.2 kpc. During three weeks before the optical maximum, we find 23 burst-like events in the ACS rate, of which six could possibly be associated with V5668 Sgr., Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, accepted by A&A
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- 2018
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73. Developmental Psychology
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Daum, Moritz M., primary and Manfredi, Mirella, additional
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- 2022
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74. Neurofeedback and attention modulate somatosensory alpha oscillations but not pain perception.
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Hohn, Vanessa D., Tiemann, Laura, Bott, Felix S., May, Elisabeth S., Fritzen, Clara, Nickel, Moritz M., Gil Ávila, Cristina, and Ploner, Markus
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PAIN perception ,MEDIATION (Statistics) ,FORM perception ,BIOFEEDBACK training ,SENSORIMOTOR integration - Abstract
Pain is closely linked to alpha oscillations (8 < 13 Hz) which are thought to represent a supra-modal, top-down mediated gating mechanism that shapes sensory processing. Consequently, alpha oscillations might also shape the cerebral processing of nociceptive input and eventually the perception of pain. To test this mechanistic hypothesis, we designed a sham-controlled and double-blind electroencephalography (EEG)-based neurofeedback study. In a short-term neurofeedback training protocol, healthy participants learned to up- and down-regulate somatosensory alpha oscillations using attention. Subsequently, we investigated how this manipulation impacts experimental pain applied during neurofeedback. Using Bayesian statistics and mediation analysis, we aimed to test whether alpha oscillations mediate attention effects on pain perception. The results showed that attention and neurofeedback successfully up- and down-regulated the asymmetry of somatosensory alpha oscillations. However, attention and neurofeedback did not modulate pain ratings or related brain responses. Accordingly, somatosensory alpha oscillations did not mediate attention effects on pain perception. Thus, our results challenge the hypothesis that somatosensory alpha oscillations shape pain perception. A causal relationship between alpha oscillations and pain perception might not exist or be more complex than hypothesized. Trial registration: Following Stage 1 acceptance, the study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05570695. Alpha oscillations shape sensory processing, but do they also modulate the perception of pain? This pre-registered study found no evidence for a causal relationship between alpha oscillations and pain perception. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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75. Comparison of the new RIDA qLine Allergy multiparameter immunoblot and the ImmunoCAP Specific IgE test for the identification of clinically relevant food and aeroallergen allergies.
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Hahn, Katharina K., Schuppe, Marie C., Hollstein, Moritz M., Forkel, Susann, and Buhl, Timo
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- 2025
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76. Multi-variable process-based calibration of a behavioural hydrological model.
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Heuer, Moritz M., Mohajerani, Hadysa, and Casper, Markus C.
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Behavioural hydrological modelling aims not only at predicting the discharge of an area within a model, but also at understanding and correctly depicting the underlying hydrological processes. Here, we present a new approach for the calibration and evaluation of water balance models, exemplarily applied to the Riveris catchment in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. For our approach, we used the behavioural model WaSiM. The first calibration step is the adjustment of the evapotranspiration (ETa) parameters based on MODIS evaporation data. This aims at providing correct evaporation behaviour of the model and at closing the water balance at the gauging station. In a second step, geometry and transmissivity of the aquifer are determined using the Characteristic Delay Curve (CDC). The portion of groundwater recharge was calibrated using the Delayed Flow Index (DFI). In a third step, inappropriate pedotransfer functions (PTFs) could be filtered out by comparing dominant runoff process patterns under a synthetic precipitation event with a soil hydrological reference map, Then, the discharge peaks were adjusted based on so-called signature indices. This ensured a correct depiction of high-flow volume in the model. Finally, the overall model performance was determined using signature indices and efficiency measures. The results show a very good model fit with values for the NSE of 0.88 and 0.9 for the KGE in the calibration period and an NSE of 0.81 and a KGE of 0.89 for the validation period. Simultaneously, our calibration approach ensured a correct depiction of the underlying processes (groundwater behaviour, runoff patterns). This means that our calibration approach allows selecting a behaviourally faithful one from many possible parameterisation variants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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77. Obesity is linked to disease severity in moderate to severe atopic dermatitis—Data from the prospective observational TREATgermany registry.
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Traidl, Stephan, Hollstein, Moritz M., Kroeger, Nadine, Fischer, Sascha, Heratizadeh, Annice, Heinrich, Luise, Kind, Barbara, Siegels, Doreen, Abraham, Susanne, Schäfer, Thomas, Augustin, Matthias, Harder, Inken, Pinter, Andreas, Schäkel, Knut, Wollenberg, Andreas, Ertner, Konstantin, Ramaker‐Brunke, Jutta, Bong, Anne, Quist, Sven, and Gorriahn‐Maiterth, Hannah
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BODY mass index , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *GERMANS , *ATOPIC dermatitis , *EDUCATIONAL background - Abstract
Background: There are conflicting data on a potential association between obesity and atopic dermatitis (AD). The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between obesity and AD disease severity. Methods: Patients from the TREATgermany registry cohort were divided into three groups according to their body mass index (BMI). Due to low numbers, underweight patients (BMI <18.5 kg/m2) were excluded from the analysis. Physician‐ and patient‐reported disease severity scores as well as additional phenotypic characteristics were evaluated for association with BMI. Generalized linear mixed models and multinomial logit models, respectively, were applied to investigate the association of BMI, age, sex and current systemic AD treatment with disease severity. Results: This study encompassed 1416 patients, of which 234 (16.5%) were obese (BMI ≥30 kg/m2). Obesity was associated with lower educational background and smoking. Otherwise, obese and non‐obese AD patients had similar baseline characteristics. Increased BMI was associated with higher oSCORAD (adjusted β: 1.24, 95% CI: 1.05–1.46, p = 0.013) and Patient‐oriented eczema measure (POEM) (adjusted β: 1.09, 95% CI: 1.01–1.17, p = 0.038). However, the absolute difference in the overall oSCORAD was small between obese and non‐obese AD patients (Δ oSCORAD = 2.5). Allergic comorbidity was comparable between all three groups, with the exception of asthma which was more pronounced in obese patients (p < 0.001). Discussion: In this large and well‐characterized AD patient cohort, obesity is significantly associated with physician‐ and patient‐assessed measures of AD disease severity. However, the corresponding effect sizes were low and of questionable clinical relevance. The overall prevalence of obesity among the German AD patients was lower than in studies on other AD cohorts from different countries, which confirms previous research on the German population and suggests regional differences in the interdependence of AD and obesity prevalence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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78. Infants' Social Evaluation of Helpers and Hinderers: A Large‐Scale, Multi‐Lab, Coordinated Replication Study.
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Lucca, Kelsey, Yuen, Francis, Wang, Yiyi, Alessandroni, Nicolás, Allison, Olivia, Alvarez, Mario, Axelsson, Emma L., Baumer, Janina, Baumgartner, Heidi A., Bertels, Julie, Bhavsar, Mitali, Byers‐Heinlein, Krista, Capelier‐Mourguy, Arthur, Chijiiwa, Hitomi, Chin, Chantelle S.‐S., Christner, Natalie, Cirelli, Laura K., Corbit, John, Daum, Moritz M., and Doan, Tiffany
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SOCIAL skills ,SOCIAL perception ,SOCIAL history ,MORAL development ,SOCIAL development - Abstract
Evaluating whether someone's behavior is praiseworthy or blameworthy is a fundamental human trait. A seminal study by Hamlin and colleagues in 2007 suggested that the ability to form social evaluations based on third‐party interactions emerges within the first year of life: infants preferred a character who helped, over hindered, another who tried but failed to climb a hill. This sparked a new line of inquiry into the origins of social evaluations; however, replication attempts have yielded mixed results. We present a preregistered, multi‐laboratory, standardized study aimed at replicating infants' preference for Helpers over Hinderers. We intended to (1) provide a precise estimate of the effect size of infants' preference for Helpers over Hinderers, and (2) determine the degree to which preferences are based on social information. Using the ManyBabies framework for big team‐based science, we tested 1018 infants (567 included, 5.5–10.5 months) from 37 labs across five continents. Overall, 49.34% of infants preferred Helpers over Hinderers in the social condition, and 55.85% preferred characters who pushed up, versus down, an inanimate object in the nonsocial condition; neither proportion differed from chance or from each other. This study provides evidence against infants' prosocial preferences in the hill paradigm, suggesting the effect size is weaker, absent, and/or develops later than previously estimated. As the first of its kind, this study serves as a proof‐of‐concept for using active behavioral measures (e.g., manual choice) in large‐scale, multi‐lab projects studying infants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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79. Compatibility Effects in Young Children's Tool Use: Learning and Transfer
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Beisert, Miriam and Daum, Moritz M.
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An inherent component of tool-use actions is the transformation of the user's operating movement into the desired effect. In this study, the relevance of this transformation for young children's learning of tool-use actions was investigated. Sixty-four children at the age of 27-30 months learned to use levers which either simply extended (compatible transformation) or reversed (incompatible transformation) their operating movements. Data revealed a compatibility effect as well as transfer effects originating from the two different types of transformations. Furthermore, results suggest that young children's tool-use learning is not a uniform process, but has to be regarded individually depending on the type of transformation.
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- 2021
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80. Spelling out some unaddressed conceptual and methodological challenges in empirical lifespan research
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Moersdorf, Lea, Freund, Alexandra M., and Daum, Moritz M.
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- 2022
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81. Do You Understand What I Want to Tell You? Early Sensitivity in Bilinguals' Iconic Gesture Perception and Production
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Wermelinger, Stephanie, Gampe, Anja, Helbling, Natascha, and Daum, Moritz M.
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Previous research has shown differences in monolingual and bilingual communication. We explored whether monolingual and bilingual pre-schoolers (N = 80) differ in their ability to understand others' iconic gestures (gesture perception) and produce intelligible iconic gestures themselves (gesture production) and how these two abilities are related to differences in parental iconic gesture frequency. In a gesture perception task, the experimenter replaced the last word of every sentence with an iconic gesture. The child was then asked to choose one of four pictures that matched the gesture as well as the sentence. In a gesture production task, children were asked to indicate 'with their hands' to a deaf puppet which objects to select. Finally, parental gesture frequency was measured while parents answered three different questions. In the iconic gesture perception task, monolingual and bilingual children did not differ. In contrast, bilinguals produced more intelligible gestures than their monolingual peers. Finally, bilingual children's parents gestured more while they spoke than monolingual children's parents. We suggest that bilinguals' heightened sensitivity to their interaction partner supports their ability to produce intelligible gestures and results in a bilingual advantage in iconic gesture production.
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- 2020
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82. The Agent Preference in Visual Event Apprehension
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Arrate Isasi-Isasmendi, Caroline Andrews, Monique Flecken, Itziar Laka, Moritz M. Daum, Martin Meyer, Balthasar Bickel, and Sebastian Sauppe
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Consciousness. Cognition ,BF309-499 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Published
- 2023
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83. Children’s group loyalty is related to parental in-group collectivism
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Gampe, Anja, Blaumeiser, Jasmin, and Daum, Moritz M.
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- 2022
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84. Topological quantum wires with balanced gain and loss
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Menke, Henri and Hirschmann, Moritz M.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
We study a one-dimensional topological superconductor, the Kitaev chain, under the influence of a non-Hermitian but $\mathcal{PT}$-symmetric potential. This potential introduces gain and loss in the system in equal parts. We show that the stability of the topological phase is influenced by the gain/loss strength and explicitly derive the bulk topological invariant in a bipartite lattice as well as compute the corresponding phase diagram using analytical and numerical methods. Furthermore we find that the edge state is exponentially localized near the ends of the wire despite the presence of gain and loss of probability amplitude in that region., Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures
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- 2017
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85. Feasibility study for the measurement of $\pi N$ TDAs at PANDA in $\bar{p}p\to J/\psi\pi^0$
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PANDA Collaboration, Singh, B., Erni, W., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Walford, N., Liu, H., Liu, Z., Liu, B., Shen, X., Wang, C., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Erlen, T., Fink, M., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Jasper, S., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kuhlmann, M., Kümmel, M., Leiber, S., Mikirtychyants, M., Musiol, P., Mustafa, A., Pelizäus, M., Pychy, J., Richter, M., Schnier, C., Schröder, T., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wiedner, U., Ball, M., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Ketzer, B., Kube, M., Mahlberg, P., Rossbach, M., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Walther, D., Wendel, C., Wilson, A., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Caprini, M., Pantea, D., Patel, B., Czyzycki, W., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Jaworowski, J., Krawczyk, M., Lisowski, E., Lisowski, F., Michałek, M., Poznański, P., Płażek, J., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Przyborowski, D., Swientek, K., Biernat, J., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Pyszniak, A., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Strzempek, P., Wronska, A., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Marinescu, D. Nicmorus, Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Veis, N. Divani, Dzhygadlo, R., Ehret, A., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Gromliuk, A., Gruber, L., Karabowicz, R., Kliemt, R., Krebs, M., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Löchner, S., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Orth, H., Patsyuk, M., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Ugur, C., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Zühlsdorf, M., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, V. A., Astakhov, V., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Davydov, Y., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Fedunov, A. G., Galoyan, A., Grigoryan, S., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Lobanov, V. I., Makarov, A. F., Malinina, L. V., Malyshev, V., Olshevskiy, A. G., Perevalova, E., Piskun, A. A., Pocheptsov, T., Pontecorvo, G., Rodionov, V., Rogov, Y., Salmin, R., Samartsev, A., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Shabratova, G., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Suleimanov, M., Teshev, R., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Vodopianov, A., Zaporozhets, S. A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zinchenko, A., Zorin, A. G., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Britting, A., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Pfaffinger, M., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Carassiti, V., Ramusino, A. Cotta, Dalpiaz, P., Drago, A., Fioravanti, E., Garzia, I., Savrie, M., Akishina, V., Kisel, I., Kozlov, G., Pugach, M., Zyzak, M., Gianotti, P., Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Bersani, A., Bracco, G., Macri, M., Parodi, R. F., Biguenko, K., Brinkmann, K. T., Di Pietro, V., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Drexler, P., Düren, M., Etzelmüller, E., Galuska, M., Gutz, E., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Kesselkaul, M., Kühn, W., Kuske, T., Lange, J. S., Liang, Y., Metag, V., Moritz, M., Nanova, M., Nazarenko, S., Novotny, R., Quagli, T., Reiter, S., Riccardi, A., Rieke, J., Rosenbaum, C., Schmidt, M., Schnell, R., Stenzel, H., Thöring, U., Ullrich, T., Wagner, M. N., Wasem, T., Wohlfahrt, B., Zaunick, H. G., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Ireland, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A., Apostolou, A., Babai, M., Kavatsyuk, M., Lemmens, P. J., Lindemulder, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Schakel, P., Smit, H., Tiemens, M., van der Weele, J. C., Veenstra, R., Vejdani, S., Dutta, K., Kalita, K., Kumar, A., Roy, A., Sohlbach, H., Bai, M., Bianchi, L., Büscher, M., Cao, L., Cebulla, A., Dosdall, R., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Herten, A., Hu, Q., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Lai, A., Lehrach, A., Nellen, R., Ohm, H., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Ritman, J., Schadmand, S., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zambanini, A., Li, S., Li, Z., Sun, Z., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Karavdina, A., Lauth, W., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Ahmadi, H., Ahmed, S., Bleser, S., Capozza, L., Cardinali, M., Dbeyssi, A., Deiseroth, M., Feldbauer, F., Fritsch, M., Fröhlich, B., Kang, D., Khaneft, D., Klasen, R., Leithoff, H. H., Lin, D., Maas, F., Maldaner, S., Martínez, M., Michel, M., Espí, M. C. Mora, Morales, C. Morales, Motzko, C., Nerling, F., Noll, O., Pflüger, S., Pitka, A., Piñeiro, D. Rodríguez, Sanchez-Lorente, A., Steinen, M., Valente, R., Weber, T., Zambrana, M., Zimmermann, I., Fedorov, A., Korjik, M., Missevitch, O., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Balanutsa, V., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Chandratre, V., Datar, V., Dutta, D., Jha, V., Kumawat, H., Mohanty, A. K., Parmar, A., Roy, B., Sonika, G., Fritzsch, C., Grieser, S., Hergemöller, A. K., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Khoukaz, A., Wessels, J. P., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Srisawad, P., Yan, Y., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Barnyakov, M., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, V. E., Bobrovnikov, V. S., Kuyanov, I. A., Martin, K., Onuchin, A. P., Serednyakov, S., Sokolov, A., Tikhonov, Y., Blinov, A. E., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Atomssa, E., Kunne, R., Ma, B., Marchand, D., Ramstein, B., van de Wiele, J., Wang, Y., Boca, G., Costanza, S., Genova, P., Montagna, P., Rotondi, A., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Bukreeva, S., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Kormilitsin, V., Levin, A., Melnik, Y., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Roy, U., Yabsley, B., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Veretennikov, D., Zhdanov, A., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Makonyi, K., Preston, M., Tegner, P. E., Wölbing, D., Rai, A. K., Godre, S., Calvo, D., Coli, S., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Giraudo, G., Lusso, S., Mazza, G., Mignone, M., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Amoroso, A., Bussa, M. P., Busso, L., De Mori, F., Destefanis, M., Fava, L., Ferrero, L., Greco, M., Hu, J., Lavezzi, L., Maggiora, M., Maniscalco, G., Marcello, S., Sosio, S., Spataro, S., Balestra, F., Iazzi, F., Introzzi, R., Lavagno, A., Olave, J., Birsa, R., Bradamante, F., Bressan, A., Martin, A., Calen, H., Andersson, W. Ikegami, Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Pettersson, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Galnander, B., Diaz, J., Chackara, V. Pothodi, Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Slowinski, B., Trzcinski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Steinschaden, D., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zmeskal, J., and Semenov-Tian-Shansky, K. M.
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Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The exclusive charmonium production process in $\bar{p}p$ annihilation with an associated $\pi^0$ meson $\bar{p}p\to J/\psi\pi^0$ is studied in the framework of QCD collinear factorization. The feasibility of measuring this reaction through the $J/\psi\to e^+e^-$ decay channel with the PANDA (AntiProton ANnihilation at DArmstadt) experiment is investigated. Simulations on signal reconstruction efficiency as well as the background rejection from various sources including the $\bar{p}p\to\pi^+\pi^-\pi^0$ and $\bar{p}p\to J/\psi\pi^0\pi^0$ reactions are performed with PandaRoot, the simulation and analysis software framework of the PANDA experiment. It is shown that the measurement can be done at PANDA with significant constraining power under the assumption of an integrated luminosity attainable in four to five months of data taking at the maximum design luminosity., Comment: 25 pages, 22 figures
- Published
- 2016
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86. Multipurpose Ce-doped Ba-Gd silica glass scintillator for radiation measurements
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Dormenev, V., Amelina, A., Auffray, E., Brinkmann, K.-T., Dosovitskiy, G., Cova, F., Fedorov, A., Gundacker, S., Kazlou, D., Korjik, M., Kratochwil, N., Ladygin, V., Mechinsky, V., Moritz, M., Nargelas, S., Novotny, R.W., Orsich, P., Salomoni, M., Talochka, Y., Tamulaitis, G., Vaitkevicius, A., Vedda, A., and Zaunick, H.-G.
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- 2021
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87. Radiation tolerant YAG: Ce scintillation crystals grown under reducing [formula omitted] atmosphere
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Dormenev, V., Brinkmann, K.-T., Borisevich, A., Kazlou, D., Korzhik, M., Moritz, M., Novotny, R.W., Orsich, P., Gerasymov, Ia., Tkachenko, S., Arhipov, P., Sidletskiy, O., and Zaunick, H.-G.
- Published
- 2021
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88. Modulating Brain Rhythms of Pain Using Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation (tACS) - A Sham-Controlled Study in Healthy Human Participants
- Author
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May, Elisabeth S., Hohn, Vanessa D., Nickel, Moritz M., Tiemann, Laura, Gil Ávila, Cristina, Heitmann, Henrik, Sauseng, Paul, and Ploner, Markus
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- 2021
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89. Development of the bodily self: Effects of visuomotor synchrony and visual appearance on virtual embodiment in children and adults
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Weijs, Marieke L., Macartney, Elle, Daum, Moritz M., and Lenggenhager, Bigna
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- 2021
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90. Influence of causal language on causal understanding: A comparison between Swiss German and Turkish
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Ger, Ebru, Stuber, Larissa, Küntay, Aylin C., Göksun, Tilbe, Stoll, Sabine, and Daum, Moritz M.
- Published
- 2021
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91. Universality and Diversity in Event Cognition and Language.
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Yue Ji, Caroline Andrews, Sebastian Sauppe, Monique Flecken, Roberto Zariquiey, Itziar Laka, Moritz M. Daum, Ercenur ünal, Anna Papafragou, Lilia Rissman, Saskia van Putten, Asifa Majid, Francie Manhardt, Asli özyürek, Arrate Isasi-Isasmendi, Martin Meyer, and Balthasar Bickel
- Published
- 2022
92. Virtual Therapeutics – Requirements to deliver value with virtual reality and biofeedback applications for alcohol addiction therapy
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Hanshans Christian, Maisch Bettina, Zauner Johannes, Faust Moritz M. R., Bröll Lukas M., and Karch Susanne
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telemedicine ,virtual reality ,vr ,psychotherapy ,virtual therapeutics ,addiction ,alcohol ,addiction disorder ,cue exposure therapy ,coping strategies ,craving ,biofeedback ,heart rate variability ,hrv ,autonomic nervous system ,Medicine - Abstract
The application of virtual reality (VR) as a supportive tool in psychotherapy has gained great popularity in recent years. Especially for addiction therapy, a combination of virtual exposure and learning or training coping skills by using biofeedback has a high potential to improve conventional therapy. To add value, the new therapy system has to meet the needs of patients and practitioners likewise. Added values consistently named by experts included, but were not limited to, new possibilities of creating individual exposition or coping scenarios, enhanced psychoeducation, a shorter duration of treatment, telemedical aspects, the possibility of measuring and predicting craving and finally an improvement in abstinence. Besides literature research, we evaluated existing technical solutions in the field of virtual addiction treatment, surveyed experts and evolved a concept that led to a first prototype. The prototype consists of a wireless VR headset and a wireless multi-sensor system for measuring the physiological reaction to stimuli or the effectiveness of coping strategies by means of biofeedback. For further studies we developed both, a virtual exposure and a coping scenario and tested the hardware and software in a pilot study in order to elaborate factors that could negatively affect the therapy adherence, the effectiveness of exposition (immersion) and possible hurdles in practical use. Cybersickness and the lack of haptic feedback turned out to be the main limiting factors. Concepts for the next iteration of the therapy system will reflect these points for upcoming clinical studies. In our proof of concept, we demonstrated that virtual therapy can be implemented with a reasonable effort of time and costs. The combination of software and hardware, that supplements the traditional therapeutic approach, lays the foundation for upcoming clinical use and trials to prove the better outcome of VR enhanced addiction therapy.
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- 2021
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93. Movement filtered heart rate variability (HRV) data from a chest-worn sensor
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Hanshans Christian, Broell Lukas M., Plischke Herbert, Offenbaecher Martin, Zauner Johannes, Faust Moritz M. R., Maisch Bettina, Kohls Niko, Toussaint Loren, Hirsch Jameson, and Siros Fuschia M.
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hrv ,movement ,filter ,accelerometer ,algorithm ,psychophysiology ,chest-worn ,single-lead ecg ,chronic pain ,psychology ,psychiatry ,sleep ,Medicine - Abstract
Recording of heart rate variability (HRV) is a noninvasive and continuous measurement method that allows investigating the autonomic nervous system (ANS) and its reaction to environmental influences. For a precise measurement of HRV data, a carefully chosen study design and environment is required to minimize secondary influences. One major influence to be avoided is movement. However, in the daily routine and for some scientific questions, movement can often not be avoided. If so, a manual or automated method to differentiate between artifacts caused by body movement and the actual psychophysiological effect is needed to ensure the data quality. In this approach, a chest-worn sensor was developed, that measures the heart rate using a single lead ECG and filters the measured change of the HRV caused by movement. Data from an integrated accelerometer is used to detect upper body movements that affect the resting heart rate. The movementcorresponding time stamps are then used to filter the Interbeat Intervals (IBI) accordingly. Functionality and effectiveness of the sensor system have been tested against state-of-the art sports- or clinical devices in varying scenarios. As our test series showed, motion filtering has a decisive effect when motion occurs, two-thirds of all cases showed a significant effect of motion filtering, with small to medium effect sizes for the parameters SD2, SD2/SD1, and SDNN. Thereby, automatic filtering of motion artifacts can help to significantly reduce the need for costly post-processing of distorted data sets. The results show a better data quality of HRV measurement, a method that is commonly used for the investigation of physiological processes in the field of chronic pain, psychology, psychiatry, or sports medicine.
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- 2021
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94. Differences in Spinopelvic Characteristics Between Hip Osteoarthritis Patients and Controls
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Innmann, Moritz M., Merle, Christian, Phan, Philippe, Beaulé, Paul E., and Grammatopoulos, George
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- 2021
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95. Tumor necrosis factor is a necroptosis-associated alarmin
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Francesca Pinci, Moritz M. Gaidt, Christophe Jung, Dennis Nagl, Gunnar Kuut, and Veit Hornung
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TNF ,alarmin ,necroptosis ,cell death ,ADAM17 ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Necroptosis is a form of regulated cell death that can occur downstream of several immune pathways. While previous studies have shown that dysregulated necroptosis can lead to strong inflammatory responses, little is known about the identity of the endogenous molecules that trigger these responses. Using a reductionist in vitro model, we found that soluble TNF is strongly released in the context of necroptosis. On the one hand, necroptosis promotes TNF translation by inhibiting negative regulatory mechanisms acting at the post-transcriptional level. On the other hand, necroptosis markedly enhances TNF release by activating ADAM proteases. In studying TNF release at single-cell resolution, we found that TNF release triggered by necroptosis is activated in a switch-like manner that exceeds steady-state TNF processing in magnitude and speed. Although this shedding response precedes massive membrane damage, it is closely associated with lytic cell death. Further, we found that lytic cell death induction using a pore-forming toxin also triggers TNF shedding, indicating that the activation of ADAM proteases is not strictly related to the necroptotic pathway but likely associated with biophysical changes of the cell membrane upon lytic cell death. These results demonstrate that lytic cell death, particularly necroptosis, is a critical trigger for TNF release and thus qualify TNF as a necroptosis-associated alarmin.
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- 2022
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96. Dynamic Interaction Patterns of Monolingual and Bilingual Infants with Their Parents
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Gampe, Anja, Hartmann, Leonie, and Daum, Moritz M.
- Abstract
Bilingual children show a number of advantages in the domain of communication. The aim of the current study was to investigate whether differences in interactions are present before productive language skills emerge. For a duration of 5 minutes, 64 parents and their 14-month-old infants explored a decorated room together. The coordination of their behaviors in the modalities of action, language, and gesture was coded. The results showed no differences in interactions across different language statuses. In two additional analyses, we first compared monolinguals and bilinguals with caregivers who shared the same language and culture. Results showed the same pattern of non-difference. Second, we compared bilinguals with caregivers from different cultures. The rate and duration of coordination differed across infants with different cultural backgrounds. The findings suggest that exposure to two languages is not sufficient to explain the previously identified beneficial effects in the communicative interactions of bilingual children.
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- 2020
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97. Structure of the catalytic core of the Integrator complex
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Pfleiderer, Moritz M. and Galej, Wojciech P.
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- 2021
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98. Child-directed speech is optimized for syntax-free semantic inference
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Guanghao You, Balthasar Bickel, Moritz M. Daum, and Sabine Stoll
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The way infants learn language is a highly complex adaptive behavior. This behavior chiefly relies on the ability to extract information from the speech they hear and combine it with information from the external environment. Most theories assume that this ability critically hinges on the recognition of at least some syntactic structure. Here, we show that child-directed speech allows for semantic inference without relying on explicit structural information. We simulate the process of semantic inference with machine learning applied to large text collections of two different types of speech, child-directed speech versus adult-directed speech. Taking the core meaning of causality as a test case, we find that in child-directed speech causal meaning can be successfully inferred from simple co-occurrences of neighboring words. By contrast, semantic inference in adult-directed speech fundamentally requires additional access to syntactic structure. These results suggest that child-directed speech is ideally shaped for a learner who has not yet mastered syntactic structure.
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- 2021
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99. Humans and great apes visually track event roles in similar ways.
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Wilson, Vanessa A. D., Sauppe, Sebastian, Brocard, Sarah, Ringen, Erik, Daum, Moritz M., Wermelinger, Stephanie, Gu, Nianlong, Andrews, Caroline, Isasi-Isasmendi, Arrate, Bickel, Balthasar, and Zuberbühler, Klaus
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HOMINIDS ,INFANTS ,COGNITION ,SYNTAX (Grammar) ,GAZE ,ADULTS - Abstract
Human language relies on a rich cognitive machinery, partially shared with other animals. One key mechanism, however, decomposing events into causally linked agent–patient roles, has remained elusive with no known animal equivalent. In humans, agent–patient relations in event cognition drive how languages are processed neurally and expressions structured syntactically. We compared visual event tracking between humans and great apes, using stimuli that would elicit causal processing in humans. After accounting for attention to background information, we found similar gaze patterns to agent–patient relations in all species, mostly alternating attention to agents and patients, presumably in order to learn the nature of the event, and occasionally privileging agents under specific conditions. Six-month-old infants, in contrast, did not follow agent–patient relations and attended mostly to background information. These findings raise the possibility that event role tracking, a cognitive foundation of syntax, has evolved long before language but requires time and experience to become ontogenetically available. Are only humans capable of tracking agent/patient roles during events, a cognitive foundation of syntax? This study shows that great apes, like human adults but unlike infants, differentiate agents from patients in event roles, suggesting that event role apprehension predates language, emerging under ontogenetic processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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100. Color polymorphic carnivores have faster speciation rates.
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Heuer, Moritz M., Fischer, Klaus, and Tensen, Laura
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BIOLOGICAL extinction ,POLYMORPHISM (Zoology) ,GENETIC speciation ,PHYLOGENY ,COMPARATIVE method - Abstract
Variation in coat color is a prominent feature in carnivores, thought to be shaped by environmental factors. As new traits could allow populations to occupy novel niches and habitats, color polymorphism may be maintained by balancing selection. Consequently, color polymorphic species may speciate more rapidly and can give rise to monomorphic daughter species. We thus predicted that, within the Carnivora, (i) speciation rate is higher in polymorphic lineages, (ii) divergence between color polymorphic lineages is more recent, and (iii) within closely related groups, polymorphic lineages are ancestral and monomorphic lineages derived. We also tested whether accelerated speciation rates relate to niche breadth, measured by the number of occupied habitats and range size. We collected data of 48 polymorphic and 192 monomorphic carnivore species, and assessed speciation rates using phylogenetic comparative methods. We found that polymorphic carnivores had higher speciation rates (λ
1 = 0.29, SD = 0.13) than monomorphic species (λ0 = 0.053, SD = 0.044). Hidden and quantitative state speciation and extinction models inferred that color polymorphism was the main contributing factor, and that niche breadth was not of influence. Therefore, other selective forces than spatial niche segregation, such as predator-prey coevolution, may contribute to color polymorphism in wild carnivores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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