Results 101 to 110 of about 1,804,155 (330)
CHILD LABOR ISSUE AS DEPICTED IN ELIZABETH BARRET-BROWNING’S POEM THE CRY OF THE CHILDREN
The Cry of the Children is a poem by Elizabeth Barret-Browning which was published in 1842. Through this poem, Elizabeth shows her objection to child labor in factories and mines in England.
Nindi Astuti, Okki Irviana
core +1 more source
Abstract Many theories of human information behavior (HIB) assume that information objects are in text document format. This paper argues four important HIB theories are insufficient for describing users' search strategies for data because of assumptions about the attributes of objects that users seek.
Anthony J. Million +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Social Construction of an Abstract Lexicon
word meanings, being purely mental constructs, depend on the mediation of language to be learnt, as well as recalled and used. Recent findings showed that adult native speakers of the same language do not share the same mental grammar and vocabularies ...
Anita Peti-Stantić
doaj +1 more source
COMPARING THE L1 AND L2 MENTAL LEXICON
This paper explores the possibility that, contrary to the findings of past studies, the L1 and L2 mental lexicon may in fact be structurally similar, with depth of individual word knowledge determining a given word's degree of integration into the mental
Brent Wolter
core +1 more source
Abstract Context‐centric proactive information delivery (PID) is a relatively underexplored domain within recommender systems (RS) aimed at enhancing Knowledge Workers' productivity by proactively providing relevant information during digital tasks.
Mahta Bakhshizadeh +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Formal Language Decomposition into Semantic Primes
This paper describes an algorithm for semantic decomposition. For that we surveys languages used to enrich contextual information with semantic descriptions. Such descriptions can be e.g.
Johannes FÄHNDRICH +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Prosodically controlled derivations in the mental lexicon
Swedish morphemes are classified as prosodically specified or prosodically unspecified, depending on lexical or phonological stress, respectively. Here, we investigate the allomorphy of the suffix -( i ) sk , which indicates the distinction between ...
Hatice Zora, T. Riad, Sari Ylinen
semanticscholar +1 more source
Sleep‐trackers in the wild: A faceted taxonomy for information and interaction design
Abstract Consumer‐grade sleep‐tracking technologies (CSTs) have brought sleep into everyday data practices, reframing it from a clinical concern into a site of personal optimization and reflection. Yet existing taxonomies of sleep‐tracking often medicalize users and overlook the complexity of sleep‐tracking technologies. This paper presents SleepTax, a
Sanonda Datta Gupta +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Are Prosodic Variants Stored in the French Mental Lexicon?
A long-term priming experiment examined the way stress information is processed and represented in French speakers' mind. Repeated prime and target words either matched (/bã'do/ - /bã'do/ "headband") or mismatched their stress pattern (/bãdo/ - /bã'do/).
Amandine Michelas, S. Dufour
semanticscholar +1 more source
When AI outputs become documents: Documentation activity in human–AI dialogue
Abstract Large language models (LLMs) generate texts that increasingly circulate as documents in knowledge infrastructures, yet their documentary status remains theoretically underdetermined. Unlike traditional documents, LLM outputs lack identifiable authorship, stable provenance, or testimonial grounding.
Sascha Donner
wiley +1 more source

