The effect of frequent ejaculation in the ram on some semen characteristics

1964 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 950 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Salamon

(1) Series of 13 ejaculates per day for 10 successive days were collected from each of five Merino rams. Every third ejaculate was examined for volume, density, and fructose and citric acid concentrations — 250 samples in all. (2) The mean fructose and citric acid concentrations were 596 and 91 mg% respectively. While the mean fructose concentrations differed significantly (P < 0.001) during the successive 10 days of collection, the citric acid concentrations did not. Both seminal constituents declined with ejaculates within days (P < 0.01 ; P< 0.001). There were significant declines in mean volume and density and an increase in mean reaction time with successive days and with collections within days (P < 0.001). Rams differed significantly in all characteristics examined (P < 0.001). (3) Multiple factor analysis revealed that three factors were mainly responsible for variances in the characteristics studied during the 10 days and within days of collection. The variances in characteristics contributed to by sequence of ejaculates in individual rams over the 10 days were: 68–96% for volume, 90–100% for density, 28–98% for reaction time, and practically nil for fructose and citric acid concentrations. There were marked ram differences in contribution of the sequence of ejaculates to the within-day variance in volume (0–90%), density (0–98%), citric acid concentration (0–98%, and reaction time (0–97%). The ejaculates collected had practically no contribution to the within-day variance in fructose concentration. (4) The rams with relatively low sexual response (long mean reaction time) tended to ejaculate semen of relatively high volume and with high concentrations of fructose and citric acid.

Perception ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 25 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. 157-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Thiele ◽  
K-P Hoffmann

Direction-selective neurons from the middle temporal area (MT) and the middle superior temporal area (MST) were recorded while a monkey performed a direction discrimination task. Stimuli consisted of evenly spaced bars moving in one of the four cardinal directions. Monkey's reaction time, single-cell latency, and direction selectivity were calculated when stimuli of 53%, 24%, and 4% contrast were presented, and the monkey indicated a correct decision. Mean reaction time was 359±77 ms at 53% contrast, 391±107 ms at 24% contrast, and 582±374 ms at 4% contrast. Most neurons exhibiting direction selective responses at 53% contrast was also active at 24% contrast (MT, 99%; MST, 88%). The number of neurons still exhibiting stimulus-related activity at 4% contrast dramatically decreased (MT to 28%; MST to 41%). Shortest latencies were found at high contrast level (53% contrast; MT, 29 ms; population mean, 76±40 ms; MST, 35 ms; population mean, 77±27 ms). Single cell and population latency increased at lower contrast (4% contrast: MT minimum, 86 ms; population mean, 180±76 ms; MST minimum, 97 ms; population mean, 205±56 ms). This indicates that the mean increase in latency at the single-cell level only partially reflects the increase in reaction time (mean reaction time increased by 223 ms, while mean single-cell latency increased by ∼100 ms in MT and MST). We therefore calculated the normalised population response at different contrast levels. The maximal population activity was always found at the highest contrast level and this was set to 1. In MT it took 75 – 80 ms from stimulus onset until half maximal activity (0.5) was reached at 53% contrast. To reach 0.5 took 85 – 90 ms at 24% contrast and 205 – 210 ms at 4% contrast. For MST the respective values were 85 ms (53% contrast), 90 ms (24% contrast) and 255 ms (4%) contrast. Thus the time to reach half the maximal population activity much better reflects the reaction time than the mean of the latencies calculated from single cells.


1994 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 971-978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Geheb ◽  
Keith E. Whitfield ◽  
Linda Brannon

The present study of gender differences in hemispheric processing involved identification of tachistoscopically presented images of varying complexity. A computerized tachistoscopic program was administered to 24 men and 34 women. Time to identify contour and detailed pictures presented to the left or right cerebral hemisphere was recorded. Mean reaction time for contour pictures was significantly faster than for detailed pictures, and mean reaction time to the right hemisphere was significantly faster than that to the left hemisphere. The mean reaction time for men to identify pictures exposed to the left hemisphere was significantly slower than that for exposure to the right hemisphere for women. The mean reaction time for both men and women to identify contour pictures exposed to the right hemisphere was significantly faster than the mean time to identify detailed pictures presented to the left hemisphere. The interaction of gender, hemisphere, and complexity was also significant in that mean reaction times for men to identify detailed pictures presented to the left hemisphere were slower than the times for women to identify contour pictures presented to the right hemisphere. The results are discussed in relation to theories about hemispheres, gender, and differences in picture features.


1994 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 342-346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zvi Y. Offer ◽  
Yosef Steinberger

Airbone particulate samples were collected during 1989 in the northern Negev desert, Israel, using two Sierra ultra-high-volume dust samplers with cascade impactors on glass-fibre filters. A total of 12 elements were detected, of which only eight were present in relatively high concentrations, as was indicated by using an x-ray spectra XL-LINK system. During the study period, the mean annual airborne concentration was 102 μg·m−3, with a minimum and maximum concentration of 0.17 and 1.376 μg·m−3 per 12 hours, respectively. Eight elements (A1, Si, Ca, S, K, Cl, Fe, and Ti) were found in relatively high concentrations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (3) ◽  
pp. 46-57
Author(s):  
Ekaterina M. Alekseeva

The article describes a cross-cultural study of associative oral representation of mental states. 32 Russian and 33German students – 53 female and 12 male aged from 20 up to 24 years participated in the research. The experimental procedure was developed on the basis of the DMDX program allowed to measure the time of speech response to the shown stimuli – names of 25 mental states. In the conditions of time deficiency probands had to call free and estimated associations (adjectives). The mean reaction time was calculated, quantitative content of associative fields was analyzed. In the Russian group associations (both free and estimated in the form of an adjective) to names of mental states were more quickly named. The average time of free oral associative reaction in the Russian group was 2114.6 ms, in the German - 2163.6 ms. The estimated associative response proved slower than the free associative response in both groups: the average time of the estimated oral associative reaction in the Russian group was 2246.9 ms, in the German – 2384.6 ms. During the experiment more evaluation associations in the form of adjectives were named than free ones. The vast majority of free associations to names of mental states were nouns. Most of the associations to names of mental states are unique.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Guérin ◽  
Maxim Dolgushev ◽  
Olivier Bénichou ◽  
Raphaël Voituriez

AbstractChemical reactions generically require that particles come into contact. In practice, reaction is often imperfect and can necessitate multiple random encounters between reactants. In confined geometries, despite notable recent advances, there is to date no general analytical treatment of such imperfect transport-limited reaction kinetics. Here, we determine the kinetics of imperfect reactions in confining domains for any diffusive or anomalously diffusive Markovian transport process, and for different models of imperfect reactivity. We show that the full distribution of reaction times is obtained in the large confining volume limit from the knowledge of the mean reaction time only, which we determine explicitly. This distribution for imperfect reactions is found to be identical to that of perfect reactions upon an appropriate rescaling of parameters, which highlights the robustness of our results. Strikingly, this holds true even in the regime of low reactivity where the mean reaction time is independent of the transport process, and can lead to large fluctuations of the reaction time - even in simple reaction schemes. We illustrate our results for normal diffusion in domains of generic shape, and for anomalous diffusion in complex environments, where our predictions are confirmed by numerical simulations.


1951 ◽  
Vol 25 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 49-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. W. Fenwick

Immersion of cysts of Heterodera rostochiensis in potato-root diffusate results in larval emergence which may occupy up to two or three months. In a previous paper (Fenwick, 1950), the author dealt with the form of the hatching curve, and showed that any given curve was controlled by three parameters; the number of larvae finally emerging, the mean reaction time of the hatchable larvae and the standard deviation of that mean reaction time expressed in log-time units. Since it was also shown that each of these parameters was subject to considerable variation, it is obvious that maximum information and accuracy can only be obtained by continuing a hatching test until all larval emergence has ceased and plotting cumulative hatches at selected intervals of tune against log-time; in this way detailed information may be obtained regarding the parameters of the hatching curve.


2018 ◽  
Vol 67 ◽  
pp. 03008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuliusman ◽  
Silvia ◽  
Annisaa Nurqomariah ◽  
Radifan Fajaryanto

Lithium ion batteries are commonly used as power sources for mobile phone, but by using it continually will degrade their capabilities. Battery replacements will cause a lot of waste in environment. Spent lithium ion batteries cathode contain heavy metals, such as cobalt and nickel. However it is also included as valuable metals thus recovery process is necessary. In this research, hydrometallurgical leaching process has been done for recovery of cobalt and nickel from spent lithium ion batteries using citric acid as a leaching agent by varying citric acid concentration (0.5-1 M), reaction temperature (50-80) and reaction time (5-20 minutes). The spent lithium ion batteries were analyzed by atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS). The result showed that the leaching of lithium ion batteries using citric acid was depend on citric acid concentration, reaction temperature and reaction time. Based on kinetics study, the leaching reaction of cobalt and nickel from cathode powder using citric acid was chemically controlled process and the activation energy of cobalt and nickel were 67.12 kJ/mole and 58.22 kJ/mole. The reaction order of leaching cobalt and nickel using citric acid was first-order reaction.


1997 ◽  
Vol 85 (2) ◽  
pp. 563-568
Author(s):  
Miya Muroi ◽  
Eiichi Naito ◽  
Michikazu Matsumura

Human subjects exhibit difficulty in initiating two independent, discrete responses in close succession, a difficulty known as the ‘psychological refractory effect.’ It is not yet known whether motor-inhibition processes are under the influence of this effect, as are motor-execution processes. This study examined the temporal changes of subjects' reaction times, interpreted in terms of motor programming for inhibition, in a dual-response Go/No-Go task that required two independent responses in close succession Light subjects performed the task with both a shorter (400 msec.) and a longer interstunulus interval (800 msec). The mean reaction time for the second stimulus (RT2) in the Go response of the 400-msec. condition was significantly longer than that of the 800-msec. condition. For committed error responses during the No-Go trials, the mean RT2 in the 400-msec. condition was longer than that in the 800-msec. condition. The total number of these errors in the 400-msec. condition was significantly greater than that in the 800-msec. condition. These results suggested that both the motor-execution processes and motor-inhibition processes were influenced by the psychological refractory effect.


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