Search results for "noun"

showing 10 items of 234 documents

From Theatre to Theatricality—How to Construct Reality

1995

At the end of the nineteenth century, the dominance of language, so typical of Western culture since the Renaissance, was increasingly challenged. As early as 1876, Nietzsche wrote on Richard Wagner in Thoughts Out of Season:He was the first to recognize an evil which is as widespread as civilization itself among men; language is everywhere diseased, and the burden of this terrible disease weighs heavily upon the whole of man's development. Inasmuch as language has retreated ever more and more from its true province— the expression of strong feelings, which it was once able to convey in all their simplicity—and has always had to strain after the practically impossible achievement of communi…

CivilizationHistoryLiterature and Literary TheoryVisual Arts and Performing ArtsTechnical languagemedia_common.quotation_subjectThe RenaissanceReflexive pronounFeelingAestheticsHumanitySemioticsWestern culturemedia_commonTheatre Research International
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Beyond decomposition: Processing zero-derivations in English visual word recognition

2019

Four experiments investigate the effects of covert morphological complexity during visual word recognition. Zero-derivations occur in English in which a change of word class occurs without any change in surface form (e.g., a boat-to boat; to soak-a soak). Boat is object-derived and is a basic noun (N), whereas soak is action-derived and is a basic verb (V). As the suffix {-ing} is only attached to verbs, deriving boating from its base, requires two steps, boat(N) > boat(V) > boating(V), while soaking can be derived in one step from soak(V). Experiments 1 to 3 used masked priming at different prime durations to test matched sets of one- and two-step verbs for morphological (soaking-SOA…

Cognitive NeuroscienceSpeech recognitionExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyVerbNeuropsychological TestsVocabulary050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesPrime (symbol)0302 clinical medicineNounReaction TimeHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesLanguageBrain Mapping05 social sciencesPart of speechZero (linguistics)SemanticsNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPattern Recognition VisualCovertSuffixPsychologyPriming (psychology)030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPhotic StimulationCortex
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Transcendental Apperception: Consciousness or Self-Consciousness? Comments on Chapter 9 of Patricia Kitcher'sKant's Thinker

2014

AbstractA core thesis of Kitcher's is that thinking about objects requires awareness of necessary connections between one's object-directed representations ‘as such’ and that this is what Kant means by the transcendental unity of apperception. I argue that Kant's main point is the spontaneity or ‘self-made-ness’ of combination rather than the requirement of reflexive awareness of combination, that Kitcher provides no plausible account of how recognition of representations ‘as such’ should be constituted and that in fact Kant himself appears to lack the theoretical resources to clearly distinguish between (first-level) consciousness and self-consciousness or apperception properly so-called.

Cognitive sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectRepresentation (arts)EpistemologyReflexive pronounPhilosophyReflexivitySelf-consciousnessTranscendental numberConsciousnessFunction (engineering)PsychologyApperceptionmedia_commonKantian Review
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Classifiers, Quantifiers and Class Nouns in Hmong

1993

Four operations of nominal concretization are crucial for presenting a typology of classifier languages: individualization, classification, relationalization (possession), and referentialization. The first three of these operations are at work in the Hmong classifier system. The development of classifiers is described in connection with the degree of grammaticalization which will be measured by the three parameters of [± exact], [± entity], and cohesion. These parameters will be arranged in a three-dimensional continuum (cf. Fig. II.) which leads to the following evolutional steps of increasing grammaticalization: nouns, class nouns, quantifiers, intrinsic quantifiers (to be defined in the …

Cohesion (linguistics)Linguistics and LanguageCommunicationPossession (linguistics)NounGrammaticalizationLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsMathematicsStudies in Language
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PEMARKAH KOHESI GRAMATIKAL DALAM CERITA “KOTA EMAS” KARYA I.S.KIJNE

2018

<p>The main focus of this research is to describe and describe the types of grammatical cohesion pemarkah in the story of “Kota Emas” by I.S. Kijne. The source of this research comes from “In the Garden of Flowers”, “In Sand beach”, “Golden City”, “Expelled”, “Stone and Thorns”, “Mother Tom”, and “Where is Tom?”. A total of 184 grammatical cohesion marker data were encountered in the seven stories. There are three grammatical cohesion markers encountered, ie references / referers, ellipsis, and conjunctions. References / referers are references / referers of endoophores and exophors. The exsofora driver comprises the ecofora of the situation or condition and the first and second execu…

Cohesion (linguistics)PronounHistoryThird personMaterials ChemistryPersonaLinguisticsMelanesia : Jurnal Ilmiah Kajian Bahasa dan Sastra
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Perspective in the Processing of the Chinese Reflexive ziji: ERP Evidence

2011

We investigated the comprehension of the Chinese reflexive ziji, which is typically subject to long-distance binding. However, this preference can be overridden by verb semantics (some verbs require local binding) as well as by subtle feature combinations of intervening noun phrases (NPs) (e.g., 1st/2nd person pronouns block dependencies with more distant 3rd person antecedents). The processing of ziji was examined in sentences containing two verb types (local/self-oriented, distant/other-oriented) and three different intervening NPs (1st, 2nd , 3rd person). The event-related potential data revealed an early interaction of verb and intervener: other-oriented verbs showed more processing eff…

ComprehensionFeature (linguistics)Blocking (linguistics)Reflexive verbSubject (grammar)VerbPsychologyAnimacyNoun phraseLinguistics
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Word sense disamibiguation combining conceptual distance, frequency and gloss

2004

Word sense disambiguation (WSD) is the process of assigning a meaning to a word based on the context in which it occurs. The absence of sense tagged training data is a real problem for the word sense disambiguation task. We present a method for the resolution of lexical ambiguity which relies on the use of the wide-coverage noun taxonomy of WordNet and the notion of conceptual distance among concepts, captured by a conceptual density formula developed for this purpose. The formula we propose, is a generalised form of the Agirre-Rigau conceptual density measure in which many (parameterised) refinements were introduced and an exhaustive evaluation of all meaningful combinations was performed.…

Computer sciencebusiness.industryBrown CorpusWordNetcomputer.software_genreHand codingSemEvalTaxonomy (general)NounArtificial intelligenceComputational linguisticsbusinesscomputerNatural language processingNatural languageInternational Conference on Natural Language Processing and Knowledge Engineering, 2003. Proceedings. 2003
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Resolving ambiguities in a grounded human-robot interaction

2009

In this paper we propose a trainable system that learns grounded language models from examples with a minimum of user intervention and without feedback. We have focused on the acquisition of grounded meanings of spatial and adjective/noun terms. The system has been used to understand and subsequently to generate appropriate natural language descriptions of real objects and to engage in verbal interactions with a human partner. We have also addressed the problem of resolving eventual ambiguities arising during verbal interaction through an information theoretic approach.

Computer sciencebusiness.industryContext (language use)computer.software_genreInformation theoryHuman–robot interactionHuman-Robot InteractionVisualizationRoboticNounMachine learningLanguage modelArtificial intelligencebusinesscomputerAdjectiveNatural language processingNatural language
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Multiword Units in Machine Translation and Translation Technology

2018

This article describes a new word alignment gold standard for German nominal compounds and their multiword translation equivalents in English, French, Italian, and Spanish. The gold standard contains alignments for each of the ten language pairs, resulting in a total of 8,229 bidirectional alignments. It covers 362 occurrences of 137 different German compounds randomly selected from the corpus of European Parliament plenary sessions, sampled according to the criteria of frequency and morphological complexity. The standard serves for the evaluation and optimisation of automatic word alignments in the context of spotting translations of German compounds. The study also shows that in this text…

Computer sciencebusiness.industryGold standardContext (language use)Spottingcomputer.software_genreTranslation (geometry)language.human_languageGermanNounlanguageArtificial intelligenceddc:410.2businesscomputerNatural language processingWord (computer architecture)
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Nomi predicativi. Articoli, verbi supporto, finiture sintattiche

2022

The idea that the verb is always the sentence core (verbocentrism) has a long history. In the last century a number of researchers started doubting it. This book shows some of the reasons why verbs should not some times be considered the kernel of a sentence. The investigated constructions come from Italian and English and have properties which clearly derive from the post-verbal noun. Some new arguments are presented, in relation to copulative constructions, support verb constructions, and serial verbs. The overall picture which these investigations produce show first how weak verbocentrism is and, second, how verbocentrism can be easily overcome.

Copulative constructionsupport verb construction noun predicatesSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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