177 results on '"Escudero, Alfonso"'
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152. TRES RATOS CON EL AUTOR DE UNE HEURE AVEC...
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Escudero, Alfonso, primary
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- 1932
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153. UN GRAN ESCRITOR PORTUGUES DE HOY: FIDELINO DE FIGUEIREDO
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Escudero, Alfonso, primary
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- 1931
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154. La actividad literaria chilena en 1925
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Escudero, Alfonso, primary
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- 1926
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155. UN PLAGIO
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Escudero, Alfonso, primary
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- 1932
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156. Cuentos y cantares
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Bleznick, Donald W., primary, Trueba, Antonio de, additional, and Escudero, Alfonso M., additional
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- 1961
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157. Dynamic choices are most accurate in small groups
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Julián Vicente-Page, Gonzalo G. de Polavieja, Alfonso Pérez-Escudero, Centre de Recherches sur la Cognition Animale (CRCA), Centre de Biologie Intégrative (CBI), Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut des sciences du cerveau de Toulouse. (ISCT), Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès (UT2J)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-CHU Toulouse [Toulouse]-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès (UT2J)-CHU Toulouse [Toulouse]-Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics, and Perez Escudero, Alfonso
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Ecology ,Group (mathematics) ,Ecological Modeling ,Galton's problem ,Small number ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,Condorcet method ,Affect (psychology) ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Group decision-making ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Local optimum ,Statistics ,Social information ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Mathematics - Abstract
According to the classic results of Galton and Condorcet, as well as in modern decision-making models, accuracy in groups increases with group size. However, these studies do not consider the naturally occurring situation in which individuals dynamically re-evaluate their decision with a possible change of opinion. The dynamics of re-evaluation in groups are very different to individual re-evaluation because individuals influence the group and the group influences the individual. We find that individual accuracy in a group is higher when individuals re-evaluate because all members have more access to social information, while in single decisions, those deciding first have less. This improvement is smaller in large groups as in this case errors can cascade across the members of the group before re-evaluation can correct them. The net result is a maximal accuracy at a small group size. We also analyzed the case in which individuals are influenced only by a small number of the other individuals. In this case, cascading errors affect the interacting subgroups but are very unlikely to reach the whole group. This results in a local optimum at a small group size but also an optimum at a very large size. We thus suggest that re-evaluation dynamics can make small and very large groups optimal. Also, features that may be seen as limitations, like an influence from only a small number of individuals, may turn to be beneficial when considering local animal interactions, here filtering out cascading of errors in the group when reconsideration dynamics takes place. Keywords: Collective behavior, Collective decisions, Dynamic decisions, Spain. Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (AP2006-01666)
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- 2018
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158. European sea bass show behavioural resilience to near-future ocean acidification
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Ines Fürtbauer, Alfonso Pérez-Escudero, Edward C. Pope, M. R. Brown, G. G. de Polavieja, Andrew J. King, Mathieu Duteil, Natural Environment Research Council (UK), Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (UK), Department of Energy and Climate Change (UK), Swansea University, German Research Foundation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics, and Perez Escudero, Alfonso
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0106 biological sciences ,Environmental change ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Fisheries ,Social behaviour ,Biology ,Dicentrarchus labrax, environmental change, fisheries, motion tracking, social behaviour ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Motion tracking ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,ddc:570 ,Marine ecosystem ,Dicentrarchus labrax ,14. Life underwater ,Sea bass ,lcsh:Science ,media_common ,Multidisciplinary ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Biology (Whole Organism) ,Ocean acidification ,chemistry ,Carbon dioxide ,%22">Fish ,lcsh:Q ,Psychological resilience ,Research Article - Abstract
© 2016 The Authors., Ocean acidification (OA)—caused by rising concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2)—is thought to be a major threat to marine ecosystems and has been shown to induce behavioural alterations in fish. Here we show behavioural resilience to near-future OA in a commercially important and migratory marine finfish, the Sea bass (Dicentrarchus labrax). Sea bass were raised from eggs at 19°C in ambient or near-future OA (1000 µatm pCO2) conditions and n = 270 fish were observed 59–68 days post-hatch using automated tracking from video. Fish reared under ambient conditions, OA conditions, and fish reared in ambient conditions but tested in OA water showed statistically similar movement patterns, and reacted to their environment and interacted with each other in comparable ways. Thus our findings indicate behavioural resilience to near-future OA in juvenile sea bass. Moreover, simulated agent-based models indicate that our analysis methods are sensitive to subtle changes in fish behaviour. It is now important to determine whether the absences of any differences persist under more ecologically relevant circumstances and in contexts which have a more direct bearing on individual fitness, Experimental work was funded through UKOARP grant NE/H01750X/1, co-funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), and the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) and a NERC Fellowship awarded to A.J.K. (NE/H016600/3). M.D. was supported by a Swansea University PhD scholarship, A.J.K. by a NERC Fellowship (NE/H016600/3), I.F. by a German Research Foundation Fellowship (DFG; FU-985/1–1) and M.R.B. by an EPSRC grant (EP\M00061\1).
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- 2016
159. Criterios bioestratinómicos en la gestión y conservación de ecosistemas : la protección de concheros en el litoral onubense
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Ager Vázquez, Francisco José, Bernáldez Sánchez, Eloísa, García-Viñas, Esteban, Bernáldez Sánchez, María, Santos-Reis, Margarida, Sobral, Paula, Freitas, Helena, Boavida, María José, Vasconcelos, Lia, Palmeirim, Jorge, Santos, Rui, Quintino, Victor, Pérez-Fernández, María A., Gallardo Correa, Antonio, Heras, Jorge de las, Carreira, José, Marañón, Teodoro, Escudero, Alfonso, and Fernández, Rocío
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ciclo biológico ,Tafonomía ,Mar ,Muerte ,Moluscos ,Ecología - Published
- 2006
160. ¿Qué relación existe entre un ser vivo y su cadáver?. Estructura y funcionamiento de la Tanatocenosis de un ecosistema terrestre
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Bernáldez Sánchez, Eloísa, Santos-Reis, Margarida, Sobral, Paula, Freitas, Helena, Boavida, María José, Vasconcelos, Lia, Palmeirim, Jorge, Santos, Rui, Quintino, Victor, Pérez-Fernández, María A., Gallardo Correa, Antonio, Heras, Jorge de las, Carreira, José, Marañón, Teodoro, Escudero, Alfonso, and Fernández, Rocío
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Parque Natural Sierra de Sevilla ,Vertebrados ,Moluscos ,Basura ,Paleobiología - Published
- 2006
161. Biostratinomía : ¿una nueva herramienta de gestión?
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García-Viñas, Esteban, Bernáldez Sánchez, Eloísa, Ager Vázquez, Francisco José, Bernáldez Sánchez, María, Santos-Reis, Margarida, Sobral, Paula, Freitas, Helena, Boavida, María José, Vasconcelos, Lia, Palmeirim, Jorge, Santos, Rui, Quintino, Victor, Pérez-Fernández, María A., Gallardo Correa, Antonio, Heras, Jorge de las, Carreira, José, Marañón, Teodoro, Escudero, Alfonso, and Fernández, Rocío
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Muerte ,Animales ,Ecosistema - Published
- 2006
162. Leaf traits and insect herbivory levels in two Mediterranean oaks and their hybrids through contrasting environmental gradients.
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González-Carrera S, Fernández-Fuentes A, Escudero A, García-Estévez I, Martínez-Ortega M, and Mediavilla S
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- Animals, Hybridization, Genetic, Mediterranean Region, Environment, Quercus physiology, Herbivory, Plant Leaves physiology, Insecta physiology
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Insect herbivory has attracted enormous attention from researchers due to its effects on plant fitness. However, there remain questions such as what are the most important leaf traits that determine consumption levels, whether there are latitudinal gradients in herbivore pressure, or whether there are differences in susceptibility between hybrids and their parental species. In this work, we address all these issues in two species of Mediterranean Quercus (Quercus faginea subsp. faginea Lam. and Quercus pyrenaica Wild.) and their hybrids. Over 2 years, we analyzed leaf emergence and 11 leaf traits (biomechanical, chemical and morphological), as well as the levels of herbivory by insects in leaves of the three genetic groups in different locations distributed along a climatic gradient. The hybrids showed intermediate values between both species in leaf emergence, chemical traits and structural reinforcement. By contrast, they were more similar to Q. faginea in leaf size and shape. Despite their intermediate leaf traits, hybrids always showed lower losses by consumption than both parental species, which suggests that they possess inherent higher resistance to herbivores, which cannot be explained by their dissimilarities in leaf traits. Within each genetic group, differences in leaf size were the most important determinant of differences in herbivory losses, which increased with leaf size. In turn, leaf size increased significantly with the increase in mean annual temperatures across the climatic gradient, in parallel with herbivory losses. In conclusion, contrary to our expectations, hybrids maintained lower levels of herbivory than their parent species. Given the potential negative effect of leaf herbivory on carbon fixation, this advantage of the hybrids would imply a threat to the persistence of both pure species. More research is needed to elucidate possible alternative mechanisms that allow for maintaining species integrity in the absence of reproductive barriers., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permission@oup.com.)
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- 2025
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163. Histone H4 acetylation regulates behavioral inter-individual variability in zebrafish.
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Román AC, Vicente-Page J, Pérez-Escudero A, Carvajal-González JM, Fernández-Salguero PM, and de Polavieja GG
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- Acetylation, Animals, Gene Expression, Histone Deacetylase 1 metabolism, Histones metabolism, Larva genetics, Larva metabolism, Larva physiology, Swimming, YY1 Transcription Factor metabolism, Zebrafish genetics, Zebrafish growth & development, Zebrafish metabolism, Zebrafish physiology, Zebrafish Proteins metabolism, Biological Variation, Population genetics, Histone Code
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Background: Animals can show very different behaviors even in isogenic populations, but the underlying mechanisms to generate this variability remain elusive. We use the zebrafish (Danio rerio) as a model to test the influence of histone modifications on behavior., Results: We find that laboratory and isogenic zebrafish larvae show consistent individual behaviors when swimming freely in identical wells or in reaction to stimuli. This behavioral inter-individual variability is reduced when we impair the histone deacetylation pathway. Individuals with high levels of histone H4 acetylation, and specifically H4K12, behave similarly to the average of the population, but those with low levels deviate from it. More precisely, we find a set of genomic regions whose histone H4 acetylation is reduced with the distance between the individual and the average population behavior. We find evidence that this modulation depends on a complex of Yin-yang 1 (YY1) and histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1) that binds to and deacetylates these regions. These changes are not only maintained at the transcriptional level but also amplified, as most target regions are located near genes encoding transcription factors., Conclusions: We suggest that stochasticity in the histone deacetylation pathway participates in the generation of genetic-independent behavioral inter-individual variability.
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- 2018
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164. Preferential interactions promote blind cooperation and informed defection.
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Pérez-Escudero A, Friedman J, and Gore J
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- Game Theory, Humans, Information Seeking Behavior ethics, Interpersonal Relations, Learning, Punishment, Cooperative Behavior, Decision Making ethics, Motivation ethics
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It is common sense that costs and benefits should be carefully weighed before deciding on a course of action. However, we often disapprove of people who do so, even when their actual decision benefits us. For example, we prefer people who directly agree to do us a favor over those who agree only after securing enough information to ensure that the favor will not be too costly. Why should we care about how people make their decisions, rather than just focus on the decisions themselves? Current models show that punishment of information gathering can be beneficial because it forces blind decisions, which under some circumstances enhances cooperation. Here we show that aversion to information gathering can be beneficial even in the absence of punishment, due to a different mechanism: preferential interactions with reliable partners. In a diverse population where different people have different-and unknown-preferences, those who seek additional information before agreeing to cooperate reveal that their preferences are close to the point where they would choose not to cooperate. Blind cooperators are therefore more likely to keep cooperating even if conditions change, and aversion to information gathering helps to interact preferentially with them. Conversely, blind defectors are more likely to keep defecting in the future, leading to a preference for informed defectors over blind ones. Both mechanisms-punishment to force blind decisions and preferential interactions-give qualitatively different predictions, which may enable experimental tests to disentangle them in real-world situations., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2016
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165. Costs of leaf reinforcement in response to winter cold in evergreen species.
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González-Zurdo P, Escudero A, Babiano J, García-Ciudad A, and Mediavilla S
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- Chlorophyll metabolism, Geography, Linear Models, Nitrogen analysis, Phosphorus analysis, Plant Leaves anatomy & histology, Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase metabolism, Spain, Species Specificity, Temperature, Cold Temperature, Plant Leaves physiology, Seasons, Trees physiology
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The competitive equilibrium between deciduous and evergreen plant species to a large extent depends on the intensity of the reduction in carbon gain undergone by evergreen leaves, associated with the leaf traits that confer resistance to stressful conditions during the unfavourable part of the year. This study explores the effects of winter harshness on the resistance traits of evergreen leaves. Leaf mass per unit area (LMA), leaf thickness and the concentrations of fibre, nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), soluble protein, chlorophyll and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) were determined in three evergreen and two deciduous species along a winter temperature gradient. In the evergreen species, LMA, thickness, and P and structural carbohydrate concentrations increased with the decrease in winter temperatures. Nitrogen and lignin concentrations did not show definite patterns in this regard. Chlorophyll, soluble proteins and Rubisco decreased with the increase in winter harshness. Our results suggest that an increase in LMA and in the concentration of structural carbohydrates would be a requirement for the leaves to cope with low winter temperatures. The evergreen habit would be associated with higher costs at cooler sites, because the cold resistance traits imply additional maintenance costs and reduced N allocation to the photosynthetic machinery, associated with structural reinforcement at colder sites., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2016
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166. Selection favors incompatible signaling in bacteria.
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Pérez-Escudero A and Gore J
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- Bacillus subtilis genetics, Bacillus subtilis physiology, Models, Biological, Quorum Sensing genetics
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- 2016
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167. A New Method to Increase Ultrafiltration in Peritoneal Dialysis: Steady Concentration Peritoneal Dialysis.
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Pérez-Díaz V, Pérez-Escudero A, Sanz-Ballesteros S, Rodríguez-Portela G, Valenciano-Martínez S, Palomo-Aparicio S, Hernández-García E, Sánchez-García L, Gordillo-Martín R, and Marcos-Sánchez H
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biological Transport physiology, Combined Modality Therapy, Dialysis Solutions metabolism, Dialysis Solutions pharmacology, Female, Humans, Kidney Failure, Chronic diagnosis, Male, Middle Aged, Osmosis, Patient Safety, Peritoneal Dialysis adverse effects, Peritoneum metabolism, Pilot Projects, Quality Improvement, Risk Assessment, Sampling Studies, Treatment Outcome, Glucose metabolism, Hemofiltration methods, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Peritoneal Dialysis methods
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Unlabelled: ♦, Background: Peritoneal dialysis (PD) has limited power for liquid extraction (ultrafiltration), so fluid overload remains a major cause of treatment failure. ♦, Methods: We present steady concentration peritonal dialysis (SCPD), which increases ultrafiltration of PD exchanges by maintaining a constant peritoneal glucose concentration. This is achieved by infusing 50% glucose solution at a constant rate (typically 40 mL/h) during the 4-hour dwell of a 2-L 1.36% glucose exchange. We treated 21 fluid overload episodes on 6 PD patients with high or average-high peritoneal transport characteristics who refused hemodialysis as an alternative. Each treatment consisted of a single session with 1 to 4 SCPD exchanges (as needed). ♦, Results: Ultrafiltration averaged 653 ± 363 mL/4 h - twice the ultrafiltration of the peritoneal equilibration test (PET) (300 ± 251 mL/4 h, p < 0.001) and 6-fold the daily ultrafiltration (100 ± 123 mL/4 h, p < 0.001). Serum and peritoneal glucose stability and dialysis efficacy were excellent (glycemia 126 ± 25 mg/dL, peritoneal glucose 1,830 ± 365 mg/dL, D/P creatinine 0.77 ± 0.08). The treatment reversed all episodes of fluid overload, avoiding transfer to hemodialysis. Ultrafiltration was proportional to fluid overload (p < 0.01) and inversely proportional to final peritoneal glucose concentration (p < 0.05). ♦, Conclusion: This preliminary clinical experience confirms the potential of SCPD to safely and effectively increase ultrafiltration of PD exchanges. It also shows peritoneal transport in a new dynamic context, enhancing the influence of factors unrelated to the osmotic gradient., (Copyright © 2016 International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis.)
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- 2016
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168. Phenotypic variability in unicellular organisms: from calcium signalling to social behaviour.
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Vogel D, Nicolis SC, Perez-Escudero A, Nanjundiah V, Sumpter DJ, and Dussutour A
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- Models, Biological, Physarum polycephalum genetics, Social Behavior, Calcium Signaling, Genetic Variation, Phenotype, Physarum polycephalum physiology
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Historically, research has focused on the mean and often neglected the variance. However, variability in nature is observable at all scales: among cells within an individual, among individuals within a population and among populations within a species. A fundamental quest in biology now is to find the mechanisms that underlie variability. Here, we investigated behavioural variability in a unique unicellular organism, Physarum polycephalum. We combined experiments and models to show that variability in cell signalling contributes to major differences in behaviour underpinning some aspects of social interactions. First, following thousands of cells under various contexts, we identified distinct behavioural phenotypes: 'slow-regular-social', 'fast-regular-social' and 'fast-irregular-asocial'. Second, coupling chemical analysis and behavioural assays we found that calcium signalling is responsible for these behavioural phenotypes. Finally, we show that differences in signalling and behaviour led to alternative social strategies. Our results have considerable implications for our understanding of the emergence of variability in living organisms., (© 2015 The Author(s).)
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- 2015
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169. Automated image-based tracking and its application in ecology.
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Dell AI, Bender JA, Branson K, Couzin ID, de Polavieja GG, Noldus LP, Pérez-Escudero A, Perona P, Straw AD, Wikelski M, and Brose U
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- Animals, Animal Distribution, Behavior, Animal, Ecology trends, Telemetry
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The behavior of individuals determines the strength and outcome of ecological interactions, which drive population, community, and ecosystem organization. Bio-logging, such as telemetry and animal-borne imaging, provides essential individual viewpoints, tracks, and life histories, but requires capture of individuals and is often impractical to scale. Recent developments in automated image-based tracking offers opportunities to remotely quantify and understand individual behavior at scales and resolutions not previously possible, providing an essential supplement to other tracking methodologies in ecology. Automated image-based tracking should continue to advance the field of ecology by enabling better understanding of the linkages between individual and higher-level ecological processes, via high-throughput quantitative analysis of complex ecological patterns and processes across scales, including analysis of environmental drivers., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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170. Patterns of leaf morphology and leaf N content in relation to winter temperatures in three evergreen tree species.
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Mediavilla S, Gallardo-López V, González-Zurdo P, and Escudero A
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- Nitrogen analysis, Pinus chemistry, Plant Leaves chemistry, Quercus chemistry, Seasons, Spain, Temperature, Pinus anatomy & histology, Plant Leaves anatomy & histology, Quercus anatomy & histology
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The competitive equilibrium between deciduous and perennial species in a new scenario of climate change may depend closely on the productivity of leaves along the different seasons of the year and on the morphological and chemical adaptations required for leaf survival during the different seasons. The aim of the present work was to analyze such adaptations in the leaves of three evergreen species (Quercus ilex, Q. suber and Pinus pinaster) and their responses to between-site differences in the intensity of winter harshness. We explore the hypothesis that the harshness of winter would contribute to enhancing the leaf traits that allow them to persist under conditions of stress. The results revealed that as winter harshness increases a decrease in leaf size occurs in all three species, together with an increase in the content of nitrogen per unit leaf area and a greater leaf mass per unit area, which seems to be achieved only through increased thickness, with no associated changes in density. P. pinaster was the species with the most intense response to the harshening of winter conditions, undergoing a more marked thickening of its needles than the two Quercus species. Our findings thus suggest that lower winter temperatures involve an increase in the cost of leaf production of evergreen species, which must be taken into account in the estimation of the final cost and benefit balance of evergreens. Such cost increases would be more pronounced for those species that, like P. pinaster, show a stronger response to the winter cold.
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- 2012
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171. Structure of deviations from optimality in biological systems.
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Pérez-Escudero A, Rivera-Alba M, and de Polavieja GG
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- Animals, Bayes Theorem, Caenorhabditis elegans anatomy & histology, Computer Simulation, Energy Metabolism physiology, Escherichia coli physiology, Neural Pathways anatomy & histology, Adaptation, Biological physiology, Biological Evolution, Models, Biological, Systems Biology methods
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Optimization theory has been used to analyze evolutionary adaptation. This theory has explained many features of biological systems, from the genetic code to animal behavior. However, these systems show important deviations from optimality. Typically, these deviations are large in some particular components of the system, whereas others seem to be almost optimal. Deviations from optimality may be due to many factors in evolution, including stochastic effects and finite time, that may not allow the system to reach the ideal optimum. However, we still expect the system to have a higher probability of reaching a state with a higher value of the proposed indirect measure of fitness. In systems of many components, this implies that the largest deviations are expected in those components with less impact on the indirect measure of fitness. Here, we show that this simple probabilistic rule explains deviations from optimality in two very different biological systems. In Caenorhabditis elegans, this rule successfully explains the experimental deviations of the position of neurons from the configuration of minimal wiring cost. In Escherichia coli, the probabilistic rule correctly obtains the structure of the experimental deviations of metabolic fluxes from the configuration that maximizes biomass production. This approach is proposed to explain or predict more data than optimization theory while using no extra parameters. Thus, it can also be used to find and refine hypotheses about which constraints have shaped biological structures in evolution.
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- 2009
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172. Minor influence of myopic laser in situ keratomileusis on the posterior corneal surface.
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Pérez-Escudero A, Dorronsoro C, Sawides L, Remón L, Merayo-Lloves J, and Marcos S
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- Adult, Animals, Corneal Topography, Humans, Middle Aged, Models, Anatomic, Postoperative Period, Preoperative Care, Reproducibility of Results, Surgical Flaps, Swine, Young Adult, Diagnostic Techniques, Ophthalmological instrumentation, Endothelium, Corneal pathology, Keratomileusis, Laser In Situ, Lasers, Excimer therapeutic use, Myopia surgery, Photography methods
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Purpose: To check whether myopic LASIK induces changes on the posterior corneal surface., Methods: A Scheimpflug system (Pentacam; Oculus, GmbH, Wetzlar, Germany) was used to measure preoperative and postoperative posterior corneal topography in 27 eyes (of 14 subjects) that had undergone standard myopic LASIK surgery (attempted corrections between -1.25 and -8.50 D) and on 18 nonoperated eyes (9 subjects). A hybrid porcine-plastic eye model was developed to validate the measurement technique. Longitudinal displacement of the posterior corneal apex and changes of the apical radius of curvature and asphericity were computed., Results: Measurements on a hybrid model eye of known posterior corneal geometry showed that the measured posterior corneal radius of curvature was minimally affected by the geometry of the anterior surface. The measurements on patients showed that, on average, the only relevant (though clinically unimportant) change in radius of curvature and asphericity occurred the first day after surgery (DeltaR = -28 +/- 34 microm and DeltaQ = -0.06 +/- 0.06). No statistically significant change was observed afterward. The change in radius was more pronounced in the vertical direction than in the horizontal direction. On average, there was no significant displacement of the posterior corneal apex. Individual changes over time did not show a systematic trend across patients, and control subjects experienced changes of the same order of magnitude., Conclusions: The Pentacam Scheimpflug system can be used reliably to assess changes in the posterior corneal radius of curvature after LASIK. There is no evidence of surgically induced changes in the corneal posterior surface beyond 1 week after surgery.
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- 2009
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173. Optimally wired subnetwork determines neuroanatomy of Caenorhabditis elegans.
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Pérez-Escudero A and de Polavieja GG
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- Animals, Cluster Analysis, Motor Neurons physiology, Neurons, Afferent physiology, Caenorhabditis elegans anatomy & histology, Caenorhabditis elegans cytology, Nerve Net physiology, Neuroanatomy
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Wiring cost minimization has successfully explained many structures of nervous systems. However, in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, for which anatomical data are most detailed, wiring economy is thought to play only a partial role and alone has failed to account for the grouping of neurons into ganglia [Chen BL, Hall DH, Chklovskii DB (2006) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 103:4723-4728; Kaiser M, Hilgetag CC (2006) PLoS Comput Biol 2:e95; Ahn Y-Y, Jeong H, Kim BJ (2006) Physica A 367:531-537]. Here, we test the hypothesis that optimally wired subnetworks can exist within nonoptimal networks, thus allowing wiring economy to give an improved prediction of spatial structure. We show in C. elegans that the small subnetwork of wires connecting sensory and motor neurons with sensors and muscles, comprising only 15% of connections, is close to optimal and alone predicts the main features of the spatial segregation of neurons into ganglia and encephalization. Moreover, a method to dissect networks into optimal and nonoptimal components is shown to find a large near-optimal subnetwork of 84% of neurons with a very low position error of 5.4%, and that explains clustering of neurons into ganglia and encephalization to fine detail. In general, we expect realistic networks not to be globally optimal in wire cost. We thus propose the strategy of using near-optimal subnetworks to understand neuroanatomical structure.
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- 2007
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174. [Individual differences in the linguistic competence of referential and expressive subjects].
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Galián MD, Carranza JA, Escudero AJ, Ato M, and Ato E
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- Communication, Follow-Up Studies, Gestures, Humans, Imitative Behavior, Mother-Child Relations, Mothers psychology, Names, Nonverbal Communication, Play and Playthings, Speech, Vocabulary, Individuality, Language Development, Linguistics, Psychology, Child, Verbal Behavior
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The aim of this work was to examine individual differences in referential and expressive style through a longitudinal study. The composition of the first 50 words, communicative gestures, the conversational style of dyads and the percentage of vocabulary produced from 12 to 24 month-olds were analyzed. The vocabulary was collected through interviews to parents and sessions of mother-infant interaction in the laboratory. Significant differences in the proportion of common nouns and frozen phrases between referential and expressive children in the frequency of communicative gestures and style conversation were found. Thus, referential children and their mothers used more pointing gestures than the expressive children and their mothers. Additionally, mothers of referential children used completing more frequently.
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- 2006
175. Stomatal responses to drought at a Mediterranean site: a comparative study of co-occurring woody species differing in leaf longevity.
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Mediavilla S and Escudero A
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- Crataegus physiology, Dehydration, Mediterranean Region, Plant Transpiration physiology, Pyrus physiology, Quercus physiology, Plant Leaves physiology, Trees physiology
- Abstract
We studied stomatal responses to decreasing predawn water potential (Psipd) and increasing leaf-to-air water vapor pressure difference (VPD) of co-occurring woody Mediterranean species with contrasting leaf habits and growth form. The species included two evergreen oaks (Quercus ilex subsp. ballota (Desf.) Samp. and Q. suber L.), two deciduous oaks (Q. faginea Lam. and Q. pyrenaica Willd.) and two deciduous shrubs (Pyrus bourgaeana Decne. and Crataegus monogyna Jacq.). Our main objective was to determine if stomatal sensitivity is related to differences in leaf life span and leaf habit. The deciduous shrubs had the least conservative water-use characteristics, with relatively high stomatal conductance and low stomatal sensitivity to soil and atmospheric drought. As a result, Psipd decreased greatly in both species during the growing season, resulting in early leaf abscission in the summer. The deciduous oaks showed intermediate water-use characteristics, having maximum stomatal conductances and CO2 assimilation rates similar to or even higher than those of the deciduous shrubs. However, they had greater stomatal sensitivity to soil drying and showed less negative Psipd values than the deciduous shrubs. The evergreen oaks, and especially the species with the greatest leaf longevity, Q. ilex, exhibited the most conservative water-use behavior, having lower maximum stomatal conductances and greater sensitivity to VPD than the deciduous species. As a result, Psipd decreased less during the growing season in the evergreens than in the deciduous species, which may contribute to greater leaf longevity by avoiding irreversible damage during the summer drought. However, the combination of low maximum CO2 assimilation rates and high stomatal sensitivity to drought must have a negative impact on the final carbon budget of leaves with a long life span.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
176. Photosynthetic capacity, integrated over the lifetime of a leaf, is predicted to be independent of leaf longevity in some tree species.
- Author
-
Mediavilla S and Escudero A
- Abstract
• The relationships between leaf longevity and the average photosynthetic capacity of the different leaf age-classes present in the crown were studied in several tree species to understand the effects of the differences in leaf longevity on the final C budget of the leaves. • Photosynthetic capacity per unit leaf mass (A/mass) was measured in leaves of all age classes present in the crown. Demographic analyses were conducted to establish the age structure of the leaf populations. With these data we estimated the average A/mass of the whole leaf population, weighted by the mass of leaves present in each age class. • A/mass decreased in all the evergreen species as the leaves aged. As a result, the assimilation rates averaged over all leaf age classes in species with greater leaf longevity were much lower than assimilation rates of young foliage, and the average rate of assimilation decreased with the increase in leaf life span of the different species. • The reduction in the average assimilation rates with the increase in leaf life span was proportional to the increase in leaf longevity. With these results it may be predicted that CO
2 assimilation integrated over the lifetime of the leaf should be independent of leaf longevity.- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
177. Uptake, demand and internal cycling of nitrogen in saplings of Mediterranean Quercus species.
- Author
-
Silla F and Escudero A
- Subjects
- Mediterranean Region, Plant Leaves metabolism, Trees metabolism, Nitrogen pharmacokinetics, Quercus metabolism
- Abstract
Nitrogen uptake, nitrogen demand and internal nitrogen cycling were studied to address the question of the importance of nutrient storage in Quercus species with contrasting leaf longevities. We carried out this study at the whole-plant level with young trees (2-4 years old) of three Mediterranean Quercus species: the evergreen Q. ilex, the marcescent/evergreen Q. faginea, and the deciduous Q. pyrenaica. Seasonal dynamics of nitrogen in all compartments of the plant were followed for 3 years. Nitrogen losses were measured through litter production, herbivory and fine root shedding. Nitrogen uptake was estimated using increments of nitrogen plant content plus accumulative nitrogen losses. Nitrogen uptake was limited to a few months during late winter and spring. Before budbreak, acquired nitrogen was stored in old-leaf cohorts of evergreen and woody compartments. After budbreak, Quercus species relied first on soil uptake and second on nitrogen retranslocation to supply new growth requirements. However, in most cases we found a high asynchrony between nitrogen demand by growing tissues and soil supply, which determined a strong nitrogen retranslocation up to 88.4% of the nitrogen demand throughout leaf expansion. Except for the first year after planting, the above- and underground woody fractions provided more nitrogen to the new tissues than the old leaf cohorts. Differences in the benefit of nitrogen withdrawn from senescent and old leaves were not found between species. We conclude that sink/source interaction strength was determined by differences between nitrogen demand and uptake, regulating internal nutrient cycling at the whole plant level.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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