positive priming
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2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (18) ◽  
pp. 10362
Author(s):  
Hanuman Singh Jatav ◽  
Vishnu D. Rajput ◽  
Tatiana Minkina ◽  
Satish Kumar Singh ◽  
Sukirtee Chejara ◽  
...  

Biochar is considered as a potential substitute for soil organic matter (SOM). Considering the importance of biochar, the present review is based on the different benefits and potential risks of the application of biochar to the soil. Biochar addition to low organic carbon soils can act as a feasible solution to keep soil biologically active for the cycling of different nutrients. The application of biochar could improve soil fertility, increase crop yield, enhance plant growth and microbial abundance, and immobilize different contaminants in the soil. It could also be helpful in carbon sequestration and the return of carbon stock back to the soil in partially combusted form. Due to the large surface area of biochar, which generally depends upon the types of feedstock and pyrolysis conditions, it helps to reduce the leaching of fertilizers from the soil and supplies additional nutrients to growing crops. However, biochar may have some adverse effects due to emissions during the pyrolysis process, but it exerts a positive priming effect (a phenomenon in which subjection to one stimulus positively influences subsequent stimulus) on SOM decomposition, depletion of nutrients (macro- and micro-) via strong adsorption, and impact on soil physicochemical properties. In view of the above importance and limitations, all possible issues related to biochar application should be considered. The review presents extensive detailed information on the sustainable approach for the environmental use of biochar and its limitations.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rolf Verleger ◽  
Kamila Śmigasiewicz ◽  
Lars Michael ◽  
Laura Heikaus ◽  
Michael Niedeggen

In order to study the changing relevance of stimulus features in time and space, we used a task with rapid serial presentation of two stimulus streams where two targets (“T1” and “T2”) had to be distinguished from background stimuli and where the difficult T2 distinction was impeded by background stimuli presented before T1 that resemble T2 (“lures”). Such lures might actually have dual characteristics: Their capturing attention might interfere with target identification, whereas their similarity to T2 might result in positive priming. To test this idea here, T2 was a blue digit among black letters, and lures resembled T2 either by alphanumeric category (black digits) or by salience (blue letters). Same-category lures were expected to prime T2 identification whereas salient lures would impede T2 identification. Results confirmed these predictions, yet the precise pattern of results did not fit our conceptual framework. To account for this pattern, we speculate that lures serve to confuse participants about the order of events, and the major factor distinguishing color lures and digit lures is their confusability with T2. Mechanisms of effects were additionally explored by measuring event-related EEG potentials. Consistent with the assumption that they attract more attention, color lures evoked larger N2pc than digit lures and affected the ensuing T1-evoked N2pc. T2-evoked N2pc was indistinguishably reduced by all kinds of preceding lures, though. Lure-evoked mesio-frontal negativity increased from first to third lures both with digit and color lures and, thereby, might have reflected expectancy for T1.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth Fortino ◽  
Jessica Hoak ◽  
Matthew N Waters

AbstractOrganic matter processing controls the flow of carbon and nutrients through ecosystems. Heterotrophic metabolism within ponds is supported by both terrestrial leaf litter and autochthonous production. We investigated the potential for the priming of leaf litter decomposition in small ponds using microcosms. We incubated senescent tulip poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera) leaf discs in the dark for 130 days either in contact with eutrophic pond sediments or isolated from sediment contact. Leaves that had been in contact with the sediments were significantly less tough and lost more carbon mass following the incubation than leaves that were not in contact with the sediments, indicating that they were decomposing faster. We calculated a positive priming effect of the sediments of 42% and 77% based on the change in toughness and C mass loss, respectively. We further found that leaf discs that were in contact with the sediments had significantly less fungal biomass, measured as ergosterol mass, and less leaf-derived N in fungal biomass than the leaf discs isolated from the sediments. These results indicate that the presence of the more labile organic matter of the sediments alters the rate of organic matter mineralization and the cycling of nitrogen and carbon.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (01) ◽  
pp. 59
Author(s):  
Hazik Mohamed

There have been many empirical investigationinto property rights and rule of law in economic development, they do not demonstrate how deep religious understanding in human behavior for mutually beneficial decision-making. This paper attempts to address this concern so as to understand religious beliefs in constructive actions. This paper investigates the degree of compliance of individual behavior to the Islamic commandment of 'commanding right and forbidding wrong', through a behavioral approach, to understand the pervasiveness of Islamic morality in our modern societies, and how Muslims actually behave as opposed to what the Qur'an prescribes for them. The methodology of this researchevaluates the actions of experiment participants (divided into religious affiliations) through a Rowing Game that was intended to test for the rule of 'commanding right and forbidding wrong'. “The game is a prototype of a social contract where it illustrates how 'mutual undertakings' create a psychological tension between individual rationality, group benefit and straightforward compliance to Allah's commandment” (Mohamed et al, 2018). The complex nature of this command and prohibition results from the varied understanding of who is responsible (and adept enough) to enforce it, during which time is appropriate to do so and by what means. In this particular experiment, Muslims and non-Muslims appear to perform the same, with negative priming effects on the Muslims and positive priming effects for the non-Muslims.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel E. Dodor ◽  
Yahaya J. Amanor ◽  
Festus T. Attor ◽  
Thomas A. Adjadeh ◽  
Dora Neina ◽  
...  

Perception ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathan H. Heller ◽  
Nicolas Davidenko

Motion processing is thought of as a hierarchical system composed of higher and lower order components. Past research has shown that these components can be dissociated using motion priming paradigms in which the lower order system produces negative priming while the higher order system produces positive priming. By manipulating various stimulus parameters, researchers have probed these two systems using bistable test stimuli that permit only two motion interpretations. Here we employ maximally ambiguous test stimuli composed of randomly refreshing pixels in a task that allows observers to report more than just two types of motion percepts. We show that even with such stimuli, motion priming can constrain the unstructured random pixel patterns into coherent percepts of positive or negative apparent motion. Moreover, we find that the higher order system is uniquely susceptible to cognitive influences, as evidenced by a significant suppression of positive priming in the presence of alternative response options.


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