Results 251 to 260 of about 101,725 (312)
‘I See Her Instrument Is Open’: (Dis)playing the Musical Body in the Work of Jane Austen
Abstract This article contextualizes Jane Austen's depictions of musicians and instruments within contemporary philosophical perceptions of music as a means of ‘unvirtuous’ corporeal stimulation in order to examine Austen's attitude towards female sexuality.
Maggie Stanton
wiley +1 more source
A step-by-step method for cultural annotation by LLMs. [PDF]
Dubourg E, Thouzeau V, Baumard N.
europepmc +1 more source
Alexandre Gefen (dir.), Territoires de la non-fiction : cartographie d’un genre émergent
openaire +1 more source
Abstract William Shakespeare ascended to the status of English national poet over the course of the eighteenth century. His literary work entered the cultural imagination not only through theatrical performances and printed texts, but the playwright's corpus was also represented visually — in painted and printed media, and as or on material culture ...
Anna Myers
wiley +1 more source
Swamped: On Depression and Vision
ABSTRACT “Swamped” cracks open my experience of depression by exploring how a specific place—a swamp—acted on me to bring social and emotional injuries, but also modes of seeing that ultimately moved me out of the depression, to the fore. In writing from this specific place, I build on moments in which something—a desire for beauty, the luminosity of ...
Petra Rethmann
wiley +1 more source
Summon a demon and bind it: A grounded theory of LLM red teaming. [PDF]
Inie N, Stray J, Derczynski L.
europepmc +1 more source
Can Large Language Models Simulate Spoken Human Conversations?
Abstract Large language models (LLMs) can emulate many aspects of human cognition and have been heralded as a potential paradigm shift. They are proficient in chat‐based conversation, but little is known about their ability to simulate spoken conversation. We investigated whether LLMs can simulate spoken human conversation.
Eric Mayor+2 more
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Frankfurt gave an account of “bullshit” as a statement made without regard to truth or falsity. Austin argued that a large amount of language consists of speech acts aimed at goals other than truth or falsity. We don't want our account of bullshit to include all performatives.
Kenny Easwaran
wiley +1 more source
The survival of survival auditions: The effects of cultural memes in the Korean TV broadcasting industry. [PDF]
Kim D, Shin D.
europepmc +1 more source