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Creators/Authors contains: "Harris, Christian"

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  1. In control of walking, sensory signals of decreasing forces are used to regulate leg lifting in initiation of swing and to detect loss of substrate grip (leg slipping). We used extracellular recordings in two insect species to characterize and model responses to force decrements of tibial campaniform sensilla, receptors that detect forces as cuticular strains. Discharges to decreasing forces did not occur upon direct stimulation of the sites of mechanotransduction (cuticular caps) but were readily elicited by bending forces applied to the leg. Responses to bending force decreases were phasic but had rate sensitivities similar to discharges elicited by force increases in the opposite direction. Application of stimuli of equivalent amplitude at different offset levels showed that discharges were strongly dependent upon the tonic level of loading: firing was maximal to complete unloading of the leg but substantially decreased or eliminated by sustained loads. The contribution of cuticle properties to sensory responses was also evaluated: discharges to force increases showed decreased adaptation when mechanical stress relaxation was minimized; firing to force decreases could be related to viscoelastic “creep” in the cuticle. Discharges to force decrements apparently occur due to cuticle viscoelasticity that generates transient strains similar to bending in the opposite direction. Tuning of sensory responses through cuticular and membrane properties effectively distinguishes loss of substrate grip/complete unloading from force variations due to gait in walking. We have successfully reproduced these properties in a mathematical model of the receptors. Sensors with similar tuning could fulfil these functions in legs of walking machines. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Decreases in loading of legs are important in the regulation of posture and walking in both vertebrates and invertebrates. Recordings of activities of tibial campaniform sensilla, which encode forces in insects, showed that their responses are specifically tuned to detect force decreases at the end of the stance phase of walking or when a leg slips. These results have been reproduced in a mathematical model of the receptors and also have potential applications in robotics. 
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  2. This paper discusses our experimental results obtained for several p-type polycrystalline Si wafers using transient photoconductance decay method in combination with a numerical model that accounts for the carrier density dependence of recombination lifetime. Using peak illumination intensities of up to 65 Suns, we are able to estimate the recombination rates for the various carrier recombination mechanisms separately. The model with such realistic recombination parameters produces a realistic diffusion length of minority carriers in Si at high optical injection. Our approach can be applied to the characterization of semiconductor materials for concentrator photovoltaics as well as to design of optoelectronic devices. 
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  3. null (Ed.)