Search results for "Mandarin Chinese"

showing 10 items of 13 documents

Insect repellent and chemical agronomic treatments to reduce seed numberin'Afourer'mandarin. Effect on yield and fruit diameter

2019

Abstract Obtaining citrus fruits without seeds is a recurrent objective for farmers as it is one of the most valued characteristics, especially in mandarins. ‘Afourer’ tangor is a highly valuable well-established mandarin, and a high percentage of seeded fruits are produced under cross-pollination conditions. Several agronomic techniques have been suggested to control presence of seeds, such as covering with nets and copper sulfate (CuSO4) and gibberellic acid (GA3) treatments. Natural bee repellents are also proposed to reduce the number of seeds per fruit. In this study, we aimed to compare the effect of several agronomic treatments to reduce the seed number in 'Afourer' mandarin. To this…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineInsecticidesAfourerBOTANICACitrus fruitsAgricultura ExperimentacióHorticulture01 natural sciencesMandarin Chinese03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundYield (wine)Copper sulfateGibberellic acidGibberellic acidTangorbiologySeed numberWeak relationshipInsect repellentfood and beveragesCopper sulfatebiology.organism_classificationlanguage.human_languageHorticultureCapsicum annuumFruita030104 developmental biologychemistrylanguageSeed reductionNet-covered treesInsect repellentFruit diameter010606 plant biology & botany
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Play it by ear? An ERP study of Chinese polysemous verb yǒu

2021

Abstract Mandarin Chinese yŏu is a polysemous verb. It can be interpreted as meaning either ‘have’ or ‘there be/exist’ in sentences of the form ‘NP1 yŏu NP2’, which can correspondingly be analyzed as either a Have-Possessive construction (‘NP1 has NP2’) or an existential/locative construction (‘(At/in) NP1 there is NP2’), or both. This study used event-related brain potentials to investigate whether and how the interpretation of yŏu in a given ‘NP1 yŏu NP2’ construction is determined by the semantics of the nouns involved and their relationship. Twenty-seven participants read sentences of this construction. The results showed that there were different patterns of brain activity that can be …

050101 languages & linguisticsLinguistics and LanguageInterpretation (logic)05 social sciencesVerbLocative caseMandarin ChinesePossessive050105 experimental psychologyLanguage and LinguisticsSentence processinglanguage.human_languageLinguisticsNounlanguage0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesComplementary distributionPsychologyLingua
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VOT in French as a foreign language : A production and perception study with mono- and multilingual learners (German/Mandarin-Chinese)

2016

This study addresses the production of Voice Onset Time (VOT) in French as a foreign language (FFL). The learners are young multilingual learners who speak Mandarin Chinese as a heritage language along with German. To determine potential effects of the learners’ multilingual background, these multilingual learners were compared to three control groups: (1) monolingual German learners of FFL, (2) monolingual Mandarin Chinese learners of FFL, and (3) native speakers of French (L1). In addition, a perception experiment was carried out to find out to what extent the VOT values measured in the production data contribute to the perception of foreign accent. Our results show that multilingual lear…

060201 languages & linguisticsComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesVoice-onset timeForeign languagePhonology06 humanities and the artsMandarin Chinese050105 experimental psychologylanguage.human_languageLinguisticsGermanlcsh:Social Scienceslcsh:HHeritage languagePerception0602 languages and literaturelanguage0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesddc:400Accent (sociolinguistics)media_common
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Reversibility in Chinese word formation influences target identification.

2011

We recorded event-related brain potentials during the processing of visually presented compound words in Mandarin Chinese. We capitalized on a particular characteristic of Chinese word formation, where two constituents can be combined in two different orders (A+B or B+A), yielding distinct meanings-so-called "reversible words". By investigating the impact of structural reversibility on the processing of compounds in Chinese during a lexical decision task, the present study revealed a pronounced difference between reversible and non-reversible words. Analyses revealed a more enhanced negativity (N400) for reversible words, reflecting demands during semantic processing, followed by a P300-lik…

AdultMaleMandarin ChineseYoung AdultCognitionAsian PeopleLexical decision taskSemantic memoryHumansChinese wordLanguageCommunicationbusiness.industryVerbal BehaviorGeneral NeuroscienceCognitionNegativity effectlanguage.human_languageN400Pattern Recognition VisualReadingCompoundlanguageEvoked Potentials VisualFemalebusinessPsychologyCognitive psychologyNeuroscience letters
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La influencia de dialectos chinos en el aprendizaje de la pronunciación de español :

2019

Resumen: Este trabajo pretende mostrar la influencia fonológica de los dialectos chinos en el aprendizaje de español tomando el shanghainés como ejemplo. Se hace una comparación entre el inventario consonántico y vocálico, así como la entonación del dialecto shanghainés y del chino mandarín para encontrar las características fonológicas propias del primero que ayudan en el aprendizaje del español. La investigación revela que se facilita la pronunciación de las consonantes oclusivas sonoras y la entonación menos marcada para los hablantes del shanghainés gracias a su dialecto pero no les resultan fáciles los grupos consonánticos ni la vibrante. El gran número de consonantes nasales en el chi…

ConsonantHistory"UNESCO:PEDAGOGÍA"OcclusiveIntonation (linguistics)languageTrill (music)PronunciationHumanitiesMandarin Chineselanguage.human_language
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The texture of tongues: Languages and power in China

1998

Mandarin stands at the pinnacle of a metalinguistic hierarchy which mirrors the vertical basis of power in China today. State language policies have established official minority languages and Chinese ‘dialects’ under the arching umbrella of the Chinese state; yet their domain is strictly constrained through prescriptive standardization. The tension between this codifying imperative and the dynamic force of speaker identity is examined through the expressions of power through language use, inviting a re‐examination of assumptions about the static texture of language in a multilingual society.

HierarchyStandardizationmedia_common.quotation_subjectGeography Planning and DevelopmentTexture (music)Mandarin ChineseLinguisticslanguage.human_languagePower (social and political)State (polity)Political sciencePolitical Science and International RelationslanguageIdentity (object-oriented programming)Chinamedia_commonNationalism and Ethnic Politics
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The role of animacy in online argument interpretation in Mandarin Chinese

2011

The present event-related brain potential (ERPs) study demonstrates that online argument interpretation in verb-final structures in Mandarin Chinese is modulated by two factors: a preference for Undergoer-before-Actor orders and a preference for animate Actor arguments. Participants listened to sentences with NP(animate)-NP(inanimate)-verb or NP(inanimate)-NP(animate)-verb orders embedded in minimal contexts. Sentences were disambiguated towards either an Actor-initial or an Undergoer-initial order by the clause-final verb. Between 450 and 700 ms post verb onset, we observed an anterior negativity for sentences violating both preferences (inanimate-Actor-initial structures) vs. sentences fu…

Interpretation (logic)Contrast (statistics)VerbMandarin Chineselanguage.human_languagePreferenceLinguisticsanimacy informationlanguageArgument (linguistics)PsychologyAnimacyonline argument interpretationWord order
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Exploring the nature of the ‘subject’-preference: Evidence from the online comprehension of simple sentences in Mandarin Chinese

2009

In two visual ERP studies, we investigated whether Mandarin Chinese shows a subject-preference in spite of the controversial status of grammatical relations in this language. We compared ERP responses at the position of the verb and the second NP in object-verb-subject (OVS) and subject-verb-object (SVO) structures. While SVO is the basic word order in Chinese and OV with subject-drop is possible, OVS is strongly dispreferred. At the position of the verb, which disambiguated towards an object or a subject reading of NP1, Experiment 1 revealed an N400 for both subject-initial control conditions in comparison with the critical object-initial condition. Experiment 2 showed that this result was…

Linguistics and LanguagePhrase3205 Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyObject (grammar)410 LinguisticsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyVerb10104 Department of Comparative LinguisticsMandarin ChineseLanguage and Linguisticslanguage.human_languageLinguisticsEducation3310 Linguistics and Language490 Other languagesSubject (grammar)language890 Other literaturesPsychologyControl (linguistics)1203 Language and LinguisticsSentence3304 EducationWord orderLanguage and Cognitive Processes
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Tone perception in Mandarin-speaking school age children with otitis media with effusion.

2017

Objectives The present study explored tone perception ability in school age Mandarin-speaking children with otitis media with effusion (OME) in noisy listening environments. The study investigated the interaction effects of noise, tone type, age, and hearing status on monaural tone perception, and assessed the application of a hierarchical clustering algorithm for profiling hearing impairment in children with OME. Methods Forty-one children with normal hearing and normal middle ear status and 84 children with OME with or without hearing loss participated in this study. The children with OME were further divided into two subgroups based on their severity and pattern of hearing loss using a h…

MaleSocial Scienceslcsh:MedicineOtologyAudiologyMonauralDeafnessMandarin Chinese0302 clinical medicineHearingSociologyMedicine and Health SciencesMedicinePsychology030223 otorhinolaryngologyChildlcsh:ScienceHearing Disordersmedia_commonLanguageMultidisciplinarySchoolsmedicine.diagnostic_testPhysicsQuietQUIETPhysical ScienceslanguageSpeech PerceptionAudiometry Pure-ToneSensory PerceptionFemalemedicine.symptomAnatomyAlgorithmsResearch Articlemedicine.medical_specialtyChinaSpeech perceptionHearing lossmedia_common.quotation_subjectEducation03 medical and health sciencesPerceptionotorhinolaryngologic diseasesSpeechHumansActive listeningbusiness.industryOtitis Media with Effusionlcsh:RMiddle EarBiology and Life SciencesLinguisticsAcousticslanguage.human_languageOtorhinolaryngologyEarsCase-Control Studieslcsh:QAudiometrybusinessHead030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeurosciencePLoS ONE
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Forced Flowering in Mandarin Trees Under Phytotron Conditions

2019

[EN] Phytotron has been widely used to assess the effect of numerous parameters on the development of many species. However, less information is available on how to achieve fast profuse flowering in young fruit trees with this plant growth chamber. This study aimed to outline the design and performance of a fast clear methodology to force flowering in young mandarin trees (cv. Nova and cv. Clemenules) and to analyze the influence of induction intensity on inflorescence type. The combination of a short water stress period with simulated spring conditions (day 13 h, 22 °C, night 11 h, 12 °C) in the phytotron allowed flowers to be obtained only after 68-72 days from the time the experiment beg…

Plant growthCitrusGeneral Chemical EngineeringPhotoperiodWater stressBOTANICAFlowersInflorescence typemedicine.disease_causeMandarin ChineseGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyTreesFlower productionCitrus floweringGene Expression Regulation PlantPollenmedicineForced floweringChamber experimentsFloral induction intensityInflorescenceMandarin treesphotoperiodismGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyGeneral NeurosciencefungiWater stressGrowth chamberfood and beveragesEDAFOLOGIA Y QUIMICA AGRICOLAlanguage.human_languageCold TemperatureEnvironmental sciencesHorticultureIssue 145InflorescencePhytotronGerminationCv. ClemenuleslanguagePhytotronCv. Nova
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