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How Much Does Tokenization Affect Neural Machine Translation?

Conference on Intelligent Text Processing and Computational Linguistics, 2018
Tokenization or segmentation is a wide concept that covers simple processes such as separating punctuation from words, or more sophisticated processes such as applying morphological knowledge.
Miguel Domingo   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Noise affects auditory and linguistic processing differently

NeuroReport, 2000
We investigated the influence of noise on brain responses to spoken sentences in MEG. Sixteen subjects had to listen to acoustically presented sentences and judge their syntactic correctness. Sentences were either presented on a silent background or with noise. Noise had differential effects on early auditory and syntactic processes.
Herrmann, C.   +4 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Affective text trajectories: Toward a linguistic anthropology of critique

Journal of Pragmatics, 2021
Abstract In their studies of culture and society, many if not most scholars from the social sciences and humanities aspire to a critical approach. Recently, this practice of academic critique has become an object of study in its own right. Contributing to this “critique of critique,” I propose ideas for a linguistic anthropology of critique.
openaire   +2 more sources

Linguistic marking, strategy, and affect in syllogistic reasoning

Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 1979
It has repeatedly been shown that three-term-series problems with unmarked comparatives (e.g., taller, higher) are solved more quickly than otherwise identical problems using their marked opposites (e.g., shorter, lower). Clark's principle of lexical marking accounts for these results in terms of a simpler semantic featural coding of the unmarked ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Logical Linguistic and Affective Prosodic Speech

2015
Most intimate to the localization controversy was Paul Broca’s (1861) discovery of the role of the left inferior posterior frontal region or frontal operculum in expressed speech and the derivation of the fluency construct in the neuropsychological literature.
openaire   +2 more sources

The music of speech to infants: Affective and linguistic functions

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1990
The prosodic contours of mothers' speech to infants are typically exaggerated in pitch range and slower in tempo, compared to the prosody of adult-adult speech. Cross-language acoustic analyses reveal that mothers use similar pitch contours in similar communicative contexts with preverbal infants.
openaire   +2 more sources

Constructing comparative sentences: Linguistic marking and affect

Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 1981
Past research has demonstrated a greater “naturalness” of comparative constructions with the unmarked adjective. Not only do subjects typically create sentences of the form “A is longer than B” more frequently than “B is shorter than A,” but such constructions are also more quickly verified. One explanation for this preference is in terms of Linguistic
openaire   +2 more sources

Practitioners respond to Michael Swan's ‘Applied Linguistics: A consumer's view’

Language Teaching, 2019
Nathan Thomas is an active practitioner and teacher-researcher working predominately in East and Southeast Asia for the past ten years. He has taught at all levels, beginning with young learners before shifting his focus to the upper secondary and ...
N. Thomas, P. Brereton
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Production of affective and linguistic prosody by brain-damaged patients

Aphasiology, 1997
Abstract To test a number of hypotheses concerning the functional lateralization of speech prosody, the ability of unilaterally right-hemisphere-damaged (RHD), unilaterally left-hemisphere-damaged (LHD), and age-matched control subjects (NC) to produce linguistic and affective prosodic contrasts at the sentence level was assessed via acoustic analysis.
Shari R. Baum, Marc D. Pell
openaire   +2 more sources

How discrete or independent are ''affective prosody'' and ''linguistic prosody''? [PDF]

open access: possibleAphasiology, 2002
Background: Research on sentence- or phrase-level pitch (intonation) production and perception in brain-damaged populations has traditionally been guided by the assumption that intonation is a dichotomous phenomenon with discrete affective and linguistic categories. To date, however, no strong evidence has emerged in support of this notion.
openaire   +1 more source

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