Search results for "phrase"

showing 10 items of 185 documents

Event-related potential indicators of text integration across sentence boundaries.

2007

An event-related potentials (ERPs) study examined word-to-text integration processes across sentence boundaries. In a two-sentence passage, the accessibility of a referent for the first content word of the second sentence (the target word) was varied by the wording of the first sentence in one of the following ways: lexically (explicitly using a form of the target word); conceptually (using a paraphrase of the target word), and situationally (encouraging an inference concerning the referent of the target word). A baseline condition had no coreference between the two sentences. ERP results on the target word indicated multiple effects related to word identification and word-to-referent mappi…

AdultMaleLinguistics and LanguagePhraseAdolescentExperimental and Cognitive Psychologycomputer.software_genreReferentVocabularyLanguage and LinguisticsParaphraseCognitionHumansEvoked PotentialsLanguageBrain MappingCoreferencebusiness.industryBrainLinguisticsContent wordLinguisticsWord recognitionFemaleArtificial intelligencebusinessPsychologycomputerSentenceNatural language processingWord orderJournal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition
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The neural mechanisms of word order processing revisited: electrophysiological evidence from Japanese.

2008

We present two ERP studies on the processing of word order variations in Japanese, a language that is suited to shedding further light on the implications of word order freedom for neurocognitive approaches to sentence comprehension. Experiment 1 used auditory presentation and revealed that initial accusative objects elicit increased processing costs in comparison to initial subjects (in the form of a transient negativity) only when followed by a prosodic boundary. A similar effect was observed using visual presentation in Experiment 2, however only for accusative but not for dative objects. These results support a relational account of word order processing, in which the costs of comprehen…

AdultMaleLinguistics and LanguagePhraseCognitive NeuroscienceDative caseExperimental and Cognitive PsychologylinearizationLanguage and LinguisticsSpeech and HearingAsian PeopleSubject (grammar)P600HumansN400Argument (linguistics)Evoked PotentialsLanguageInformation processingBrainElectroencephalographyLinguisticsElectrophysiologyJapaneseSpeech PerceptionVisual PerceptionFemalePsychologySentenceWord orderCognitive psychologyInitial and terminal objectsBrain and language
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Linguistic Bias Modulates Interpretation of Speech via Neural Delta-Band Oscillations.

2017

Language comprehension requires that single words be grouped into syntactic phrases, as words in sentences are too many to memorize individually. In speech, acoustic and syntactic grouping patterns mostly align. However, when ambiguous sentences allow for alternative grouping patterns, comprehenders may form phrases that contradict speech prosody. While delta-band oscillations are known to track prosody, we hypothesized that linguistic grouping bias can modulate the interpretational impact of speech prosody in ambiguous situations, which should surface in delta-band oscillations when grouping patterns chosen by comprehenders differ from those indicated by prosody. In our auditory electroenc…

AdultMalePhraseCognitive NeuroscienceElectroencephalography050105 experimental psychologyMemorization03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineBiasmedicineHumansSpeech0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesProsodyInterpretation (logic)Psycholinguisticsmedicine.diagnostic_test05 social sciencesElectroencephalographyLinguisticsLinguisticsComprehensionSpeech PerceptionFemaleNeurocomputational speech processingPsychologyComprehension030217 neurology & neurosurgeryWord (computer architecture)Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)
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‘How this holiday makes a difference’: The language of environment and the environment of nature in a cross-cultural study of ecotourism

2010

Partendo dal presupposto che le differenze culturali spesso costituiscono una fonte potenziale di problematiche traduttive, questo contributo mira a evidenziare le differenze che emergono sul piano linguistico, a livello lessicale, ma soprattutto fraseologico, in seguito a variegati orientamenti culturali che agiscono come filtri. Il linguaggio specialistico analizzato riguarda una nicchia particolare del mercato del turismo, ossia l’ecoturismo, che sta conquistando un terreno sempre più vasto in seguito ad una maggiore attenzione rivolta nei confronti di tematiche attuali, come quelle di impatto ambientale. Abbracciando una prospettiva interculturale, il lavoro indaga il diverso approccio …

AmbienteAmbiente; natura; territorio; ecoturismo; orientamenti culturalicorpus linguisticsnatureenvironment; nature; corpus linguistics; phraseology; cultural orientationsSettore L-LIN/12 - Lingua E Traduzione - Lingua Inglesecultural orientationsQuaderni del CeSLiC. Occasional papersenvironment; nature; phraseology; cultural orientations; corpus linguisticsnaturaecoturismoenvironment nature corpus linguistics phraseology cultural orientationsL-LIN/12 Lingua e traduzione - Lingua inglesephraseologyterritorioorientamenti culturalienvironment
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The Sound of Emotion

2014

What is the effect of performers’ experienced emotions on the auditory characteristics of their performances? By asking performers to play a music phrase in response to three different instructions we attempted to answer this question. Performers were instructed to do the following: 1) play while focusing on the technical aspects of their playing; 2) give an expressive performance; and 3) focus on their experienced emotions, prior to which they were subjected to a sadness-inducing mood induction task. Performers were interviewed after each playing condition. We analyzed the tempo, articulation, dynamics, timbre, and vibrato of the performances obtained as well as the interview data. A focus…

Articulation (music)Extraversion and introversionPhraseDynamics (music)Exploratory researchPsychologyTimbreSocial psychologyMusicCognitive psychologyFocus (linguistics)VibratoMusic Perception
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Fixed constructions in French and Chinese

2017

Languages are not just instruments of communication. Claude Hagège (2012: 181) reminds that all languages are rooted in a pool of knowledge, sensations, memories, images, dreams, which are the fabric of a speaker's competence. Languages are very complex and multidimensional phenomena. However, it is impossible to carry out a complete study of languages, without taking into account a generalized and pervasive phenomenon: the fixedness.In light of a great deal of progress which has been made by the research on phraseology, we realize that many gray areas still exist; indeed, some true mysteries remain to be unraveled. Contrastive studies have always helped to advance knowledge of language, es…

ChinoisChineseFrenchPhraseologyCultureTerminologyTerminologie[SHS.LANGUE] Humanities and Social Sciences/LinguisticsFrançaisPhraséologie[ SHS.LANGUE ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics[SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/LinguisticsFixed expressionFigement
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More Support for More-Support

2009

This book provides the most comprehensive account so far of novel and hitherto unexplained factors operative in the choice between synthetic ( prouder ) and analytic ( more proud ) comparatives. It argues that the underlying motivation in using the analytic variant is to mitigate processing demands – a compensatory strategy referred to as more -support. The analytic variant is claimed to be better suited to environments of increased processing complexity – presumably owing to its ability to facilitate early phrase structure recognition, the more transparent one-to-one relation between form and function and possibly because the degree marker more can serve as a structural signal foreshadowin…

Cognitive scienceBridging (networking)Variation (linguistics)Relation (database)Computer scienceForm and functionPhrase structure rulesCognitive complexity
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On the Finite Satisfiability Problem for the Guarded Fragment with Transitivity

2005

We study the finite satisfiability problem for the guarded fragment with transitivity. We prove that in case of one transitive predicate the problem is decidable and its complexity is the same as the general satisfiability problem, i.e. 2Exptime-complete. We also show that finite models for sentences of GF with more transitive predicate letters used only in guards have essentially different properties than infinite ones.

CombinatoricsDiscrete mathematicsTransitive relationTheoryofComputation_MATHEMATICALLOGICANDFORMALLANGUAGESPhraseComputational complexity theoryComputer Science::Logic in Computer SciencePredicate (mathematical logic)Decision problemBoolean satisfiability problemSentenceDecidabilityMathematics
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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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Passive in motion: the Early Italian auxiliary andare (‘to go’)

2014

The Italian construction andare ‘to go’ + (transitive) past participle expresses a passive meaning when occurring in a perfective past tense (1), whereas it conveys an additional deontic sense of (impersonal) obligation when used in an imperfective tense (2) (Bertinetto 1991; Giacalone Ramat 2000). A further constraint on the passive reading is represented by the semantics of the participle, necessarily expressing a negative value of ‘loss/destruction’; this value is moreover conceived as ‘non-intentional’, as the impossibility to express the agent (*da qualcuno) shows: (1) I documenti andarono distrutti. (*da qualcuno) the documents go. prf.3pl destroy.pst.ptcp.pl (by someone) ‘The documen…

Computer sciencebusiness.industryComputer visionArtificial intelligenceAncient Italo-Romance passive constructions agentive phrases grammaticalizationbusinessMotion (physics)Settore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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