Results 181 to 190 of about 8,354 (226)
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Binding of Graphemes and Synesthetic Colors in Color-Graphemic Synesthesia
2004Abstract Most people experience their visual environment as consisting of meaningful whole objects. How does the visual system combine, or in other words bind, various visual and semantic properties together to create the experience of perceiving meaningful whole objects?
Daniel Smilek +2 more
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2022
The turn of the twentieth and twenty-first century brought about sweeping technological changes which impacted our way of functioning in society. One of those constitutes the transition from analog to digital photography. The aim of this monograph is to capture these changes and their image preserved in poetry written after 1989, based on Polish ...
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The turn of the twentieth and twenty-first century brought about sweeping technological changes which impacted our way of functioning in society. One of those constitutes the transition from analog to digital photography. The aim of this monograph is to capture these changes and their image preserved in poetry written after 1989, based on Polish ...
openaire +1 more source
Do graphemes attract spatial attention in grapheme-color synesthesia?
Neuropsychologia, 2017Grapheme-color synesthetes perceive concurrent colors for some objectively achromatic graphemes (inducers). Using oscillatory responses in the electroencephalogram, we tested the hypothesis that inducers automatically attract spatial attention and, thus, favor a conscious experience of color.
G, Volberg, A S, Chockley, M W, Greenlee
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Pupillometry of Grapheme-Color Synaesthesia
Cortex, 2006Pupil diameters of color-grapheme synaesthetes were measured with an infrared eye-tracker while Stroop-like alphanumeric symbols were passively viewed. Pupils dilated more when synaesthetes viewed incongruently-colored symbols than congruently-colored symbols or symbols printed in the standard black ink.
Helle Gaare, Paulsen, Bruno, Laeng
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Graphemic Jargon: A Case Report
Brain and Language, 1994We report on a patient with left hemispheric thromboembolic stroke whose writing performance on single word dictation following recovery from an aphasic syndrome remained severely impaired but fluent. Having only very fragmentary command of the target's written spelling she produced neologistic nonwords which were approximately the same length and ...
K, Schonauer, G, Denes
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Phoneme to grapheme conversion by rules
European Conference on Speech Technology, 1987Item does not contain ...
Boves, L.W.J. +3 more
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Segmentation and Normalisation in Grapheme Codebooks
2011 International Conference on Document Analysis and Recognition, 2011The grapheme codebook is a high-performing technique for offline writer identification. This paper considers whether the de facto standards for initial grapheme extraction are optimal for both modern and historical datasets. We examine the construction and representation of the graphemes that comprise the codebook, testing three segmentation methods ...
Tara Gilliam +2 more
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Acta Linguistica, 1960
Abstract In recent years, following upon the development of phonemic theory, there have been several discussions of the relation of phonemes to their written notation 1 , and parallel to phoneme and phonemics, the terms grapheme and graphemics have come into use.
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Abstract In recent years, following upon the development of phonemic theory, there have been several discussions of the relation of phonemes to their written notation 1 , and parallel to phoneme and phonemics, the terms grapheme and graphemics have come into use.
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Graphemes are perceptual reading units
Cognition, 2000Graphemes are commonly defined as the written representation of phonemes. For example, the word 'BREAD' is composed of the four phonemes /b/, /r/, /e/ and /d/, and consequently, of the four graphemes 'B', 'R', 'EA', and 'D'. Graphemes can thus be considered the minimal 'functional bridges' in the mapping between orthography and phonology.
Rey, Arnaud +2 more
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Spatially Adherent Graphemic Perseveration
Cognitive and Behavioral Neurology, 2010There are several forms of agraphia, including: aphasic agraphia, where patients have impairments in writing the correct words or correctly spelling words; apraxic agraphia, where patients are impaired in making the movements needed to write letters; and spatial agraphia, where patients might fail to write letters on one side of a word or write on one ...
Waldo Rigoberto, Guerrero +3 more
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