Search results for "GRAMMATICA"

showing 10 items of 182 documents

All Talk and No Action: A Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Study of Motor Cortex Activation during Action Word Production

2004

AbstractA number of researchers have proposed that the premotor and motor areas are critical for the representation of words that refer to actions, but not objects. Recent evidence against this hypothesis indicates that the left premotor cortex is more sensitive to grammatical differences than to conceptual differences between words. However, it may still be the case that other anterior motor regions are engaged in processing a word's sensorimotor features. In the present study, we used singleand paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation to test the hypothesis that left primary motor cortex is activated during the retrieval of words (nouns and verbs) associated with specific actions. W…

AdultMaleCognitive Neurosciencemedicine.medical_treatmentGrammatical categoryNouncorticospinal excitability language verb retrievalmedicineHumansDominance CerebralAnalysis of VarianceBrain MappingMotor CortexLinguisticsNeural InhibitionCognitionEvoked Potentials MotorTranscranial Magnetic StimulationElectric StimulationTranscranial magnetic stimulationmedicine.anatomical_structureAcoustic StimulationAction (philosophy)FemaleComplement (linguistics)PsychologyWord (group theory)Cognitive psychologyMotor cortexJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience
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Grammatical distinctions in the left frontal cortex

2001

Abstract Selective deficits in producing verbs relative to nouns in speech are well documented in neuropsychology and have been associated with left hemisphere frontal cortical lesions resulting from stroke and other neurological disorders. The basis for these impairments is unresolved: Do they arise because of differences in the way grammatical categories of words are organized in the brain, or because of differences in the neural representation of actions and objects? We used repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to suppress the excitability of a portion of left prefrontal cortex and to assess its role in producing nouns and verbs. In one experiment subjects generated real w…

AdultMaleLanguage Disordersprefrontal cortexFrontal cortexAdolescentCognitive Neurosciencemedicine.medical_treatmentNeuropsychologyLinguisticsGrammatical categoryElectric StimulationLateralization of brain functionFrontal LobeTranscranial magnetic stimulationMagneticsNounLeft prefrontal cortexmedicineHumansFemalePsychologyCognitive psychology
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Regular rhythmic primes boost P600 in grammatical error processing in dyslexic adults and matched controls

2020

International audience; Regular musical rhythms orient attention over time and facilitate processing. Previous research has shown that regular rhythmic stimulation benefits subsequent syntax processing in children with dyslexia and specific language impairment. The present EEG study examined the influence of a rhythmic musical prime on the P600 late evoked-potential, associated with grammatical error detection for dyslexic adults and matched controls. Participants listened to regular or irregular rhythmic prime sequences followed by grammatically correct and incorrect sentences. They were required to perform grammaticality judgments for each auditorily presented sentence while EEG was recor…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtySyntax processingCognitive NeuroscienceExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySpecific language impairmentAudiology050105 experimental psychologyDyslexiaYoung Adult03 medical and health sciencesBehavioral Neuroscience[SCCO]Cognitive science0302 clinical medicineRhythmTemporal attentionmedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEvoked PotentialsRhythmic primingCerebral CortexP600PsycholinguisticsP600 evoked potentialDyslexia P600 evoked potential Rhythmic priming Syntax processing Temporal attention05 social sciencesDyslexiaElectroencephalographymedicine.diseaseSyntax[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/PsychologyAuditory PerceptionSpeech PerceptionFemaleGrammaticalityPsychologyPriming (psychology)Music030217 neurology & neurosurgerySentence
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Informatīvā paneļa "InfoDesk" izstrāde

2015

Darbā ir aprakstīts slīdrādes rīka „InfoDesk” funkcionalitātes paplašināšana, atkļūdojot un papildinot to. „InfoDesk” nodrošina slaidu veidošanu, konfigurējamību un slīdrādi uz Android ierīcēm ar API līmeni 14 vai augstāk. Pirms kvalifikācijas darbā aprakstītajām izmaiņām „InfoDesk” spēja izveidot slaidus, tos atskaņot, kā arī konfigurēt tos, bet katrā no šīm darbībām programma varēja pātraukt darboties. „InfoDesk” klāt pievienotā funkcionalitātē ietilpst plašāka slaidā pievienoto elementu kontrole, saglabāšana uz ārējas atmiņas ierīces, labāka atmiņas lietošana, vispārēja programmatūras stabilitāte. Sistēma realizēta Java programmēšanas valodā, izstrādes vidēs Eclipse un Android Studio.

AndroidProgrammatical stability.DatorzinātneAPIInfoDesk
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Defocusing and agentive prepositions in Early Sicilian

2010

In early Italo-Romance two means code the agent in passive constructions: per ‘through’ and da ‘from’. Whilst similarities and differences have never been questioned, I claim that the analysis of prepositions’ semantics is essential to understand agent defocussing strategies. I propose a corpus-based investigation on Early Sicilian (14th century), conducted on Archivio testuale del siciliano antico (, University of Catania). My framework is Cognitive Grammar (Langacker 1991; Luraghi 2003), which interprets prepositions as meaningful elements, expressing the spatial organisation among entities. The agentive value derives from the projection of these spatial relations onto an abstract domain:…

Antico italo-romanzo preposizioni passivo grammaticalizzazione linguistica cognitivaSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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On the Non-uniform Redundancy in Grammatical Evolution

2016

This paper investigates the redundancy of representation in grammatical evolution (GE) for binary trees. We analyze the entire GE solution space by creating all binary genotypes of predefined length and map them to phenotype trees, which are then characterized by their size, depth and shape. We find that the GE representation is strongly non-uniformly redundant. There are huge differences in the number of genotypes that encode one particular phenotype. Thus, it is difficult for GE to solve problems where the optimal tree solutions are underrepresented. In general, the GE mapping process is biased towards short tree structures, which implies high GE performance if the optimal solution requir…

Binary treeComputer scienceBinary number0102 computer and information sciences02 engineering and technologyENCODE01 natural sciencesTree (graph theory)Tree structure010201 computation theory & mathematicsGrammatical evolution0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringRedundancy (engineering)020201 artificial intelligence & image processingRepresentation (mathematics)Algorithm
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Structural difficulty in grammatical evolution versus genetic programming

2013

Genetic programming (GP) has problems with structural difficulty as it is unable to search effectively for solutions requiring very full or very narrow trees. As a result of structural difficulty, GP has a bias towards narrow trees which means it searches effectively for solutions requiring narrow trees. This paper focuses on the structural difficulty of grammatical evolution (GE). In contrast to GP, GE works on variable-length binary strings and uses a grammar in Backus-Naur Form (BNF) to map linear genotypes to phenotype trees. The paper studies whether and how GE is affected by structural difficulty. For the analysis, we perform random walks through the search space and compare the struc…

Binary treeGrammarGrammatical evolutionmedia_common.quotation_subjectStructure (category theory)Contrast (statistics)Genetic programmingRepresentation (mathematics)Random walkAlgorithmmedia_commonMathematicsProceedings of the 15th annual conference on Genetic and evolutionary computation
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On the Locality of Standard Search Operators in Grammatical Evolution

2014

Offspring should be similar to their parents and inherit their relevant properties. This general design principle of search operators in evolutionary algorithms is either known as locality or geometry of search operators, respectively. It takes a geometric perspective on search operators and suggests that the distance between an offspring and its parents should be less than or equal to the distance between both parents. This paper examines the locality of standard search operators used in grammatical evolution (GE) and genetic programming (GP) for binary tree problems. Both standard GE and GP search operators suffer from low locality since a substantial number of search steps result in an o…

Binary treeTheoretical computer sciencebusiness.industryPerspective (graphical)LocalityEvolutionary algorithmGenetic programmingcomputer.software_genreRandom walkGrammatical evolutionArtificial intelligencebusinesscomputerNatural language processingMathematics
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THE SEMANTIC NETWORK OF THE LATIN PREPOSITION PER: A DIACHRONIC INVESTIGATION

2020

Proponiamo qui i risultati di uno studio corpus-based sugli slittamenti diacronici osservabili nel network semantico della preposizione per in latino. Sulla base della Cognitive Grammar, descriviamo la semantica di per situandola lungo un continuum che procede dal concreto all’astratto, a partire da un contenuto schematico originario; discutiamo, quindi, i percorsi attraverso i quali i nuovi significati astratti emergono attraverso sli ttamenti metonimici, focalizzando la nostra attenzione sui ruoli causali e sulla caratteristica di animatezza.

CausaCausationSpazioGrammatica cognitivaCognitive GrammarSpaceAnimazionePrepositions; Latin; Grammaticalisation; Cognitive grammarPreposizioni latineLatin prepositionAnimacySettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Prefix Stripping Re-Re-Revisited: MEG Investigations of Morphological Decomposition and Recomposition

2019

We revisit a long-standing question in the psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic literature on comprehending morphologically complex words: are prefixes and suffixes processed using the same cognitive mechanisms? Recent work using Magnetoencephalography (MEG) to uncover the dynamic temporal and spatial responses evoked by visually presented complex suffixed single words provide us with a comprehensive picture of morphological processing in the brain, from early, form-based decomposition, through lexical access, grammatically constrained recomposition, and semantic interpretation. In the present study, we find that MEG responses to prefixed words reveal interesting early differences in the la…

Cognitive sciencemagnetoencephalographymedicine.diagnostic_testlexical accessSemantic interpretationlcsh:BF1-990derivational morphologymorphological recompositionOf the formCognitionMagnetoencephalographyprefixationPsycholinguisticsLateralization of brain functionmorphological decompositionPrefixlcsh:Psychologygrammatical licensingStripping (linguistics)medicinePsychologyPsychologyGeneral PsychologyOriginal Researchmorphological processingFrontiers in Psychology
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