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Dive into the research topics where Abigail E Huang is active.

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Featured researches published by Abigail E Huang.


Nutrition & Metabolism | 2008

Bone mineral density and content during weight cycling in female rats: effects of dietary amylase-resistant starch

John D. Bogden; Francis W. Kemp; Abigail E Huang; Sue A. Shapses; Hasina Ambia-Sobhan; Sugeet Jagpal; Ian Brown; Anne M. Birkett

BackgroundAlthough there is considerable evidence for a loss of bone mass with weight loss, the few human studies on the relationship between weight cycling and bone mass or density have differing results. Further, very few studies assessed the role of dietary composition on bone mass during weight cycling. The primary objective of this study was to determine if a diet high in amylase-resistant starch (RS2), which has been shown to increase absorption and balance of dietary minerals, can prevent or reduce loss of bone mass during weight cycling.MethodsFemale Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats (n = 84, age = 20 weeks) were randomly assigned to one of 6 treatment groups with 14 rats per group using a 2 × 3 experimental design with 2 diets and 3 weight cycling protocols. Rats were fed calcium-deficient diets without RS2 (controls) or diets high in RS2 (18% by weight) throughout the 21-week study. The weight cycling protocols were weight maintenance/gain with no weight cycling, 1 round of weight cycling, or 2 rounds of weight cycling. After the rats were euthanized bone mineral density (BMD) and bone mineral content (BMC) of femur were measured by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry, and concentrations of calcium, copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, and zinc in femur and lumbar vertebrae were determined by atomic absorption spectrophotometry.ResultsRats undergoing weight cycling had lower femur BMC (p < 0.05) and marginally lower BMD (p = 0.09) than rats not undergoing weight cycling. In comparison to controls, rats fed RS2 had higher femur BMD (p < 0.01) and BMC (p < 0.05), as well as higher values for BMD and BMC measured at the distal end (p < 0.001 and p < 0.01) and femoral neck (p < 0.01 and p < 0.05). Consistent with these findings, RS2-fed rats also had higher femur calcium (p < 0.05) and magnesium (p < 0.0001) concentrations. They also had higher lumbar vertebrae calcium (p < 0.05) and magnesium (p < 0.05) concentrations.ConclusionWeight cycling reduces bone mass. A diet high in RS2 can minimize loss of bone mass during weight cycling and may increase bone mass in the absence of weight cycling.


Perception | 2012

Contrast polarity preservation’s role in perception: Explained and unexplained stimuli

Meghan C McCormick; Alice Hon; Abigail E Huang; Eric L. Altschuler

Roncato and Casco (2003, Perception & Psychophysics 65 1252–1272) had shown that in situations where the Gestalt principle of good continuity is put into conflict with preservation of contrast polarity (CP) the perception that preserves CP prevails. Parlangeli and Roncato (2010, Perception 39 255–259) have studied this question of preservation of CP more closely and have added an addendum to the rule. They have used stimuli consisting of a checkerboard of perpendicularly arranged rectangular bricks (white, gray, or black) and draughtsmen–white, gray, or black disks placed at the corners of the bricks. This study has caused them to add an addendum to the rule of CP-preserved path-conjunction binding: if there are two contour completions that preserve the CP, the one with the higher contrast will prevail. Parlangeli and Roncato find that, for certain shades of the disks and bricks, the perpendicular lines of the checkerboard appear strikingly to be slanted or undulating. Here we consider all possible arrangements of relative magnitudes of checkerboards consisting of bricks of two different shades and disks of two shades as well, as such arrangements with widely varying differences in the magnitude of brightness. We have found a number of cases where the perception is not explained by the rule and addendum of Roncato and Casco, and Parlangeli and Roncato, and a case where preservation of “distant” as well as local CP plays a role in perception. The previously known cases, and the new exceptional unexplained stimuli we have found, warrant further study.


Perception | 2008

Thickness and the Koffka Ring Effect

Abigail E Huang; Alice Hon; Eric L. Altschuler

Over seven decades ago Gestalt psychologist Kurt Koffka described a remarkable effect: when a contiguous gray ring is placed on a background half of one shade of gray, half of another, the ring appears homogeneous. However, if the ring is slightly divided, the two halves of the ring appear different shades of gray, the half of the ring on the darker background appearing lighter than the half of the ring on the lighter background. The Gestalt principle of continuity is used to explain this effect. We show that when the ring is made thinner it appears heterogeneous even when contiguous. We also illustrate this in the additional material with a colored background with more than two regions.


Perception | 2013

Not physically present contours can yield illusory motion.

Eric L. Altschuler; Hee J. Kim; Abigail E Huang; Alice Hon; Meghan C McCormick; Sergio Roncato

We demonstrate a perceptual effect whereby contours not physically present in a visual scene can yield striking illusory motion. The not physically present contours are paths of invariant contrast polarity (CP). For example, when a square checkerboard composed of dark and light square checks with small black and white discs covering the vertices is put in lateral motion, there is the striking perception of vertical expansion/contraction. Such a checkerboard has (not physically present) diagonal paths of CP presentation with vertical components. However, when a square checkerboard made up of square black and very light checks with gray discs of luminance intermediate to the checks is put in lateral motion, no expansion/contraction is seen. For this checkerboard the vertical components of paths of CP preservation cancel each other out, predicting the lack of perception of vertical expansion/contraction. We also discuss how not physically present contours can explain previously described effects and suggest new effects to be explored.


Perception | 2011

Koffka's Effect is Mediated by Figure Thickness at the Joining Region

Abigail E Huang; Alice Hon; Xintong Li; Meghan C McCormick; Dina A. Patel; Charles Chubb; Eric L. Altschuler

Three-quarters of a century ago Gestalt psychologist Kurt Koffka described a remarkable effect: when a contiguous gray ring is placed on a background half one shade of gray, half another, the ring appears homogeneous. However, if the ring is divided, the two halves of the ring appear different shades of gray, the half of the ring on the darker background appearing lighter than the half of the ring on the lighter background. The Gestalt principle of continuity is used to explain this effect. But what microscopic principles might be mediating this effect? Recently we found sufficiently thin rings (annuli) appear heterogeneous even when geometrically continuous. Here, using crescent-shaped figures instead of the circular annuli used for the traditional Koffka effect, we show that this effect of thickness of the ring is mediated by the thickness at the boundary of the region where the halves of the figure are joined.


Perception | 2009

The Wertheimer–Benary Effect Does Not Invert, and a Nulled Wertheimer–Benary Effect

Abigail E Huang; Shanchita Ghosh; Alice Hon; Jessica Goris-Rosales; Eric L. Altschuler

More than three-quarters of a century ago Wertheimer and Benary demonstrated an ingenious and clear, though, interestingly, small effect: a grey triangle just inside an arm of a black cross on a white background appears slightly lighter than an identical triangle immediately adjacent to the cross, despite both triangles having the same perimeter exposure to black and white. Over a generation ago White discovered an apparently related, but far stronger effect: when short grey (test) bars are placed onto either black or white alternating long bars, the short test bars placed on the long black bars appear much lighter than those placed on the long white bars. A decade ago Spehar, Gilchrist, and Arend found that, enigmatically, if the short test bars in Whites effect are the lightest stimulus in a figure, then the relative lightness of the test bars inverts compared with the standard version of Whites effect. Here we show that the Wertheimer–Benary effect does not invert, but instead produces a very weak version of the standard effect. We also demonstrate a novel, nulled Wertheimer-Benary effect.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2007

Case 19-2007: a college student with fever and joint pain.

Eric L. Altschuler; Alice Hon; Abigail E Huang


Journal of Vision | 2012

Contrast Polarity Preservation’s Role in Perception: Explained and Unexplained Stimuli

Meghan C McCormick; Alice Hon; Abigail E Huang; Eric L. Altschuler


Journal of Vision | 2011

Illusory “Neon” Spreading of Perceived Depth Implies an Anisotropic Propagation Constraint in Depth Reconstruction

Xintong Li; Abigail E Huang; Eric L. Altschuler; Christopher W. Tyler


Journal of Vision | 2011

Neon Color Spreading to Two Dimensional Manifolds and Three Dimensional Solids

Elizabeth Seckel; Abigail E Huang; Xintong Li; Alice Hon; Eric L. Altschuler

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Xintong Li

The College of New Jersey

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Charles Chubb

University of California

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Chris Tyler

Smith-Kettlewell Institute

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