A broadband terahertz polarization rotator consisting of twistingly stacked silicon–air metagratings is designed based on the polarization guiding effect and experimentally shown to achieve 90° linear polarization rotation for both TE and TM incidences.
Yun‐Seok Choi +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Development and validation of the Medical Second Language Anxiety Scale for Nurses (MSLAS-N). [PDF]
Soriano GP +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
Thickness Is More Than Affective Valence: Evaluative Language Through the Lenses of Psycholinguistics. [PDF]
Cassani G, Colombo M.
europepmc +1 more source
Quantitative semiology: harnessing AI-generated teaching signals in psychiatry. [PDF]
Palaniyappan L, Sabesan P.
europepmc +1 more source
Editorial: Vitiligo: from obscurity to spotlight - Advancing care with new therapies and AI. [PDF]
Valle Y, Lotti T.
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Mitigating catastrophic forgetting in lifelong learning: a hybrid architecture integrating neural ordinary differential equations with memory-augmented transformers. [PDF]
Zhou S, Li Q.
europepmc +1 more source
The role of nodes in controlling and observing complex networks. [PDF]
Wu L.
europepmc +1 more source
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Ordinary Language and Economic Language
Recherches sémiotiques, 2023We explore the language of economics from the perspective of the relation between signs, language and ideology. The focus is on social reproduction in global communication. From the epistemological viewpoint linguistics and economics are interrelated, both are sign sciences and value sciences.
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How Ordinary Is Ordinary Language?
New Literary History, 1973IT HAS BEEN more than twenty years since Harold Whitehall declared that "no criticism can go beyond its linguistics."1 In that time linguistics itself has undergone a number of revolutions so that one of the terms in Whitehall's equation has been constantly changing.
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Ordinary language and ordinary belief
Philosophical Studies, 1954be relevant. It is my understanding that these Oxford "philosophical analysts" (if Mr. Copi will pardon the phrase) do not believe that everything that people say-whether common men or philosophers-is correct. Their position is, according to Mr. Copi, "never explicitly formulated." Not only has it been explicitly formulated in a number of papers, had ...
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