Motor measures are sensitive to central lesions, but they are also affected by peripheral injury and motivation. The motor skills profiles of proven brain injury clients were compared with the profiles of healthy postconcussion patients. The chief result was a double dissociation: The traumatic brain injury (TBI) group produced a motor dysfunction gradient consistent with upper motor neuron disease, while the compensation-seeking postconcussion group produced a nonphysiologic pattern. Objective measures of behavioral pain and emotional distress did not correlate with the findings. Motor skill deficiencies in postconcussion syndrome (PCS) are probably functional in nature. (JINS, 1996, 2, 477-485.)
The date palm (Phoenix dactylifera) has been a cornerstone of Middle Eastern and North African agriculture for millennia. It is presumed that date palms were first domesticated in the Persian Gulf and subsequently introduced into North Africa, where their evolution in the latter region appears to have been influenced by gene flow from the wild relative P. theophrasti, which is restricted to Crete and Turkey. However, the timing of gene flow from P. theophrasti to P. dactylifera remains unknown due to the limited archaeobotanical evidence of P. theophrasti and their exclusion from population genomic studies.We addressed this issue by investigating the relatedness and ancestry of a ~2,100-year-old P. dactylifera leaf from Saqqara (Egypt), combining genome sequencing of this ancient specimen with a broad sample of date palm cultivars and closely related species.The ancient Saqqara date palm shares close genetic ancestry with North African date palm populations. We find clear genomic admixture between the Saqqara date palm, P. theophrasti and the closest known relative P. sylvestris.Our study highlights that gene flow from P. theophrasti and P. sylvestris to North African date palms had already occurred at least ~2,100 years ago, providing a minimum timestamp for hybridisation between species.
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