Results 171 to 180 of about 818 (218)
ABSTRACT Music and language are both hierarchically structured: syllables combine into words, and meters are groupings of musical beats. Statistical learning (SL) supports speech segmentation through computation of transitional probabilities between syllables, and individual differences in SL ability were found predictive of further language ...
Iris van der Wulp +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Event‐related potentials (ERPs) to a repeating pseudoword and mismatch responses (MMRs) to five deviances were recorded at 4–5 years and compared with a previously reported follow‐up at 28 months, in subgroups with versus without familial dyslexia risk (n ~ 150).
Sergio Navarrete‐Arroyo +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract This essay aims to reveal the conceptual unity of an ensemble of concepts of organic, animal, and anthropological life articulated by the young Karl Marx between 1842 and 1844. To lay the groundwork for my analysis, I begin with Marx's general account of “life as activity.” I argue that Marx articulates a hylomorphic theory of organic form in ...
Christopher Shambaugh
wiley +1 more source
Bridging the research‐practice divide: Insights from a Korean online Community of Practice
Abstract This study introduces the case of a Korean online Community of Practice (CoP) as a venue for researcher‐practitioner dialogue, following persistent calls from instructed second language acquisition researchers to foster links between research and practice.
Nari Kim
wiley +1 more source
Abstract This article addresses bias in Spoken Language Systems (SLS) that involve both Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) and Natural Language Processing (NLP) and reports experiments to improve the performance of SLS for automated language and literacy‐related assessments with students who are under served in the U.S. educational system.
Alison L. Bailey +5 more
wiley +1 more source
To find molecular reasons why a genetic rat model (Wistar Audiogenic Rat, WAR) moves from sound‐triggered brainstem seizures to longer‐lasting limbic (temporal‐lobe) epilepsy after repeated loud‐noise exposure. WAR and normal Wistar rats received a 10‐day audiogenic kindling (twice‐daily loud noise).
Tays Araújo Camilo +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Listening, Reading, or Both? Rethinking the Comprehension Benefits of Reading‐While‐Listening
Abstract The rising popularity of audiobooks in language learning has highlighted the need to understand their potential benefits in enhancing comprehension and the mechanisms driving these effects. In this registered report, we explored the hypothesis that reading‐while‐listening can enhance lower‐level decoding skills, in turn freeing up cognitive ...
Bronson Hui, Aline Godfroid
wiley +1 more source
Review Of Rents, Taxes, And Peasant Resistance: The Lower Yangzi Region, 1840-1950 By K. Bernhardt [PDF]
Li, Lillian M.
core +1 more source
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2023
“Um trabalho de arte abriga uma posição. Em qualquer um há algo de astromancia. Apoia-se numa eletiva afinidade que se deixa borrada quando desponta. E, como o nascimento solicita a 'carta', a partir da forma absolutamente anterior que se dá entre alguma coisa e outra coisa a ocorrer ao além, em certeiro momento de certa conjugação, um trabalho de arte
Marcus Alexandre Motta +1 more
openaire +1 more source
“Um trabalho de arte abriga uma posição. Em qualquer um há algo de astromancia. Apoia-se numa eletiva afinidade que se deixa borrada quando desponta. E, como o nascimento solicita a 'carta', a partir da forma absolutamente anterior que se dá entre alguma coisa e outra coisa a ocorrer ao além, em certeiro momento de certa conjugação, um trabalho de arte
Marcus Alexandre Motta +1 more
openaire +1 more source
Phonology, 1996
One of the fundamental claims of modern phonology is that generalisations about phonemes are based on a small, universal set of phonetically defined features. The theory of distinctive features is a very powerful idea, insofar as it predicts that sets of phonemes will act together in specific ways within and across languages, allowing the voiceless ...
Elizabeth Hume, David Odden
openaire +1 more source
One of the fundamental claims of modern phonology is that generalisations about phonemes are based on a small, universal set of phonetically defined features. The theory of distinctive features is a very powerful idea, insofar as it predicts that sets of phonemes will act together in specific ways within and across languages, allowing the voiceless ...
Elizabeth Hume, David Odden
openaire +1 more source

