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      Intuição: do que se trata? Translated title: Intuición¿De qué se trata? Translated title: Intuition: what is it about? Translated title: Intuition - De quoi s'agit-il?

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          Abstract

          Este trabalho é uma tentativa de ampliar a compreensão e o debate sobre a capacidade que, por vezes, chamamos de intuição. Utilizando visões princIPAlmente da psicanálise, mas também da biologia, da física e da filosofia, procuro traçar um percurso com distintos pontos de visão sobre o tema. A intuição é tratada como uma forma de conhecer a realidade e o outro que não envolve processos descritivos, mas provém da vivência, do contato direto com o objeto. O que apresento é o resultado de uma reflexão sobre que vias e processos estão envolvidos no conhecimento intuitivo, associada a uma busca em diferentes áreas teóricas para auxiliar esta compreensão.

          Translated abstract

          Este trabajo es un intento de ampliar la comprensión y el debate sobre la capacidad que, a veces, llamamos intuición. Utilizando visiones princIPAlmente del psicoanálisis, pero también de la biología, la física y la filosofía, busco trazar un camino con distintos puntos de vista sobre el tema. La intuición es tratada como una forma de conocer la realidad y al otro que no involucra procesos descriptivos, pero proviene de la vivencia, del contacto directo con el objeto. Lo que presento es el resultado de una reflexión sobre qué vías y procesos están involucrados en el conocimiento intuitivo, asociada a una búsqueda en diferentes áreas teóricas para ayudar en esta comprensión.

          Translated abstract

          This work is an attempt at broadening the understanding and the debate about the ability we sometimes call “intuition”. The author's purpose is to draw a path with different points of view about the subject, by using perspectives from Biology, Physics, Philosophy, and especially from Psychoanalysis. Intuition is treated as a way of knowing the reality and the other person. It does not involve descriptive processes, but comes from experience, i.e. from the direct contact with the object. This work results from a reflection on what pathways and processes are part of the intuitive knowledge. The author searched in different theoretical areas to help this understanding.

          Translated abstract

          Ce travail-ci est une tentative d'élargir la compréhension et le débat concernant la capacité que, parfois, nous appelons intuition. Tout en employant des avis, surtout de la psychanalyse, mais également de la biologie, de la physique et de la philosophie, je cherche à tracer un parcours ayant différents points de vue sur ce thème. L'intuition est traitée comme une façon de connaître la réalité et l'autre, ce qui ne comprend pas des procédés descriptifs, mais qui est issue du vécu, du contact direct avec l'objet. Ce que je vous présente, c'est le résultat d'une réflexion que discute quels voies et procédés sont impliqués dans la connaissance intuitive, associée à une recherche dans de différents domaines théoriques, pour aider à comprendre l'intuition.

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          Human cryptochrome exhibits light-dependent magnetosensitivity

          In vertebrates, such as migratory birds and sea turtles, the ability to sense the Earth's magnetic field is clearly important for positional and directional information during their long-distance migrations1 2 3. In many animals, magnetoreception is thought to depend on light-sensitive chemical reactions involving the flavoprotein cryptochrome (CRY)3 4 5. There are two major groups of CRYs found in animals, based on both their phylogenetic position and function in the regulation of circadian clocks6. Drosophila-like type 1 CRYs (which have been found only in invertebrates) are sensitive to blue light and function mainly as circadian photoreceptors. On the other hand, vertebrate-like type 2 CRYs (which are found in both vertebrates and invertebrates) are thought to function mainly as negative regulators of the clockwork's transcriptional feedback loop and do so in a light-independent manner7. Genetic studies have shown that a light-dependent magnetic sense in Drosophila is indeed mediated by its type 1 CRY8 9. Furthermore, using the Drosophila GAL4-UAS transgenic approach for targeted gene expression, it has been shown recently that type 1 CRY proteins from either the fly itself or the monarch butterfly, and an insect version of type 2 CRY from the monarch can each restore magnetosensitivity and its light dependency in CRY-deficient Drosophila 10. Humans are widely assumed not to have a magnetic sense3. For example, the extensive behavioural studies by Robin Baker11 12 13 14 15, suggesting a link between non-visual navigation and magnetoreception in humans, are controversial. However, there is consistent evidence of an influence of geomagnetic fields on the light sensitivity of the human visual system16 17. Moreover, it has been proposed recently that light-sensitive magnetic responses are not only used for directional information, but may also aid visual spatial perception in mammals, by providing a spherical coordinate system for integrating spatial position3. We therefore evaluated the light-dependent magnetosensing potential of human CRY. Here we show using a transgenic approach, that human CRY can function as a magnetosensor in the magnetoreception system of Drosophila and that it does so in a light-dependent manner. Thus, human CRY has the molecular capability to function as a light-sensitive magnetosensor, and this finding may lead to a renewed interest in human magnetoreception. Results Human CRY2 rescues light-dependent magnetosensitivity Although there are two versions of type 2 CRYs in humans (hCRY1 and hCRY2), we focused our transgenic study on hCRY2, because previous anatomical studies have shown that it is expressed at ca. 11-fold higher levels than hCRY1 in the retina18 19. Thus hCRY2 is nicely poised to receive the light information necessary to initiate a light-sensitive magnetic response in humans. In Drosophila, magnetosensitivity can be reliably examined using a behavioural assay, in which groups of individuals experience an electric-coil-generated magnetic-field gradient ranging from ambient to eight times the Earth's strength on one arm of a two arm T-maze8 10. The directional response of flies to the field is tested by comparing the number of flies in the arm that faces the coil that generates a magnetic field with the number in the opposite arm that faces the coil that is not magnetized. Flies are tested for their direction response in either the naive state or after training when the field is paired with a sucrose reward. Using this behavioural assay, both wild-type Canton-S flies and CRY-deficient flies expressing the Drosophila cry transgene under the control of the tim-GAL4 driver, which expresses the transgene where cry is normally expressed, manifest significant naive directional avoidance of the field (negative preference index value) and a significant directional trained preference for the field (positive preference index value) (Fig. 1a, white and black bars, respectively)8 10. Remarkably, CRY-deficient flies expressing the hCRY2 transgene under the control of the tim-GAL4 driver also showed comparably robust naive and trained responses to a magnetic field under full-spectrum light (Fig. 1a, red and green bars, respectively), while CRY-deficient fly lines expressing either the GAL4 driver alone10 or the UAS-hCRY2/+ transgene alone (Fig. 1a) did not respond. Moreover, the hCRY2 rescue of magnetosensitivity was light sensitive (Fig. 1b); the hCRY2-induced magnetic responses were blocked when only long-wavelength light (>500 nm) was available, and were partially restored when light >400 nm was available. Thus, light in the blue range is necessary for the hCRY2 magnetic response. Discussion Our results show that hCRY2, the prototype type 2 CRY18 19, has the molecular capability to function in a light-dependent magnetoreception system, either as a light-sensitive magnetosensor or as part of a magnetosensing pathway. However, we do not yet know whether this capability is translated into a downstream biological response in the human retina. Nonetheless, the transgenic findings with hCRY2, together with its anatomical location in the human retina and previous work showing field effects on the visual system, suggest that a reassessment of human magnetosensivitiy may be in order. The results also define a clear light-sensitive response for a mammalian CRY, as predicted in 1998 (ref. 18). Additional research on magnetosensitivity in humans at the behavioural level, with particular emphasis on the influence of magnetic fields on visual function, rather than non-visual navigation, would be informative. Methods Fly lines Fly stocks were raised on standard cornmeal/agar medium at 25 °C and 60% relative humidity under a 12-h light:12-h dark lighting cycle. The cry b and UAS-dcry (UAS-mycdcry) were a gift from Patrick Emery. The tim-GAL4 (tim-GAL4/CyO)20 driver line was used for transgene expression in cry b flies. For generating UAS–mychCRY2 transgenic lines, the hCRY2 open reading frame was amplified by PCR from pfmh2 and subcloned into the BglII and NotI sites of the pUASTattBmyc vector. The myc-pUASTattB vector was generated by cloning a BamHI-myc-BglII fragment, created using two oligos followed by primer extension, into the BglII site of pUASTattB. The construct contained a full Kozak sequence. The construct was sequenced before injection into y w, nos-phiC31/+; attP40 or y w, nos-phiC31/Y; attP40/+ embryos by Genetic Services. During balancing, the y w, nos-phiC31-containing X chromosome was replaced with the y w-containing X chromosome. Behavioural apparatus The apparatus consisted of a choice chamber and an illuminated black box containing the two-coil system connected to an adjustable DC power supply8. The choice chamber was comprised of a one-tube training section and a two-tube choice section (T-maze) for testing the relative response of flies to a magnetic field. An elevator section was used to transfer flies between training and T-maze sections (see below). The housing box was constructed such that the choice chamber could be placed between the two coils in either an upright position (used during training) or when rotated to the horizontal (used during testing). In this way, flies were exposed to the same lighting conditions and magnetic field intensity during training and test trials. The two-coil system allowed for the production of a magnetic field on one side, while producing no field on the opposite side and alternation of the field between sides; heat was generated equally in either coil, with or without generating a magnetic field. Coils were positioned directly under the tube ends at 45° to the horizontal. We adjusted the power supply so that the magnetic field intensity ranged from 0.1 G at the tube entrance to 5 G at the end of the tube. The box containing the coil system was open on the top so that the chamber, regardless of position, could be illuminated by one ZooMed Reptisun 10.0 UVB fluorescent tube (F17T8). Irradiance measurements were taken from inside one arm of the T-maze portion of the choice chamber apparatus to ensure that the lighting conditions measured represented those experienced by the flies while they were being either trained or tested. Wavelength dependence of magnetosensitivity was examined by either covering the top of the box with a long-wavelength filter that transmitted wavelengths of light >500 nm (Edmund Optic) or >400 nm (E400 from Gentex). Behavioural procedure Flies were starved for 18 h before testing their magnetic response. All experiments were performed between 0800 and 1500 hours EST. Flies in the trained group were moved into the training section facing one of two adjustable coils with no field for 2 min, and then were reloaded into the training tube containing sucrose reinforcement and a magnetic field for an additional 2 min. After being held for 1 min in the elevator section, flies were tested for their magnetic preference by transferring them to the T-maze section and allowing them to choose between the sides with or without a magnetic field for 2 min. Flies in the naivegroup were loaded into the elevator section and immediately transferred to the T-maze and allowed to choose between the sides with or without a magnetic field for 2 min. Trained and naive groups were tested consecutively with the magnetic field on the same side. As an additional control for side preferences independent of magnetic stimuli, we tested flies in the absence of a magnetic field. For each population of flies tested (100–150 individuals), we calculated a preference index (PI) value based on the following equation: (PM-0.5)/0.5, where PM is the proportion of flies on the magnetic field side of the T-maze. To test whether flies responded to the experimental magnetic field, we either used a one-sample t-test to compare naive PI values to zero (that is, PI value expected with no response to the magnetic field) or a Student's t-test to compare PI values between trained and naive groups. Author contributions All authors contributed to experimental design, execution, data analysis and writing the paper. Additional information How to cite this article: Foley, L. E. et al. Human cryptochrome exhibits light-dependent magnetosensitivity. Nat. Commun. 2:356 doi: 10.1038/ncomms1364 (2011).
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            Dicionário de psicanálise

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              Edição Standard Brasileira das Obras Psicológicas Completas de SigmundFreud

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                rbp
                Revista Brasileira de Psicanálise
                Rev. bras. psicanál
                Federação Brasileira de Psicanálise (São Paulo, SP, Brazil )
                0486-641X
                December 2018
                : 52
                : 4
                : 169-184
                Affiliations
                [2] orgnameUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
                [1] orgnameHospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre
                [3] orgnameSociedade Psicanalítica de Porto Alegre
                Article
                S0486-641X2018000400013 S0486-641X(18)05200400013
                daf39a23-b05f-4198-a105-72115ef24877

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 20 December 2018
                : 06 March 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 43, Pages: 16
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                SciELO Periódicos Eletrônicos em Psicologia

                Categories
                Outras Palavras

                psychanalyse,connaissance,Kant,Bion,intuition,knowledge,psicoanálisis,intuición,conocimiento,psicanálise,intuição,conhecimento,Psychoanalysis

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