Results 301 to 310 of about 5,827,073 (337)
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The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 2003
Chapter 2 explains perception as a sensory capacity controlled by present stimulation. The capacity’s distinguishing conditions include representation with accuracy conditions as an aspects of the capacity’s nature. An objectifying process marks the capacity in perception-formation.
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Chapter 2 explains perception as a sensory capacity controlled by present stimulation. The capacity’s distinguishing conditions include representation with accuracy conditions as an aspects of the capacity’s nature. An objectifying process marks the capacity in perception-formation.
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Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2007
Recent experiences have left me with the troubling perception that a tool developed to open and enhance patient-clinician communication may have moved to being a shorthand replacement for such communication. Recently, I was hospitalized three times in quick succession for a total of 20 days for cellulitis with panniculitis complications—a painful ...
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Recent experiences have left me with the troubling perception that a tool developed to open and enhance patient-clinician communication may have moved to being a shorthand replacement for such communication. Recently, I was hospitalized three times in quick succession for a total of 20 days for cellulitis with panniculitis complications—a painful ...
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Annual Review of Psychology, 2004
This chapter focuses on one of the first steps in comprehending spoken language: How do listeners extract the most fundamental linguistic elements—consonants and vowels, or the distinctive features which compose them—from the acoustic signal? We begin by describing three major theoretical perspectives on the perception of speech.
Randy L, Diehl +2 more
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This chapter focuses on one of the first steps in comprehending spoken language: How do listeners extract the most fundamental linguistic elements—consonants and vowels, or the distinctive features which compose them—from the acoustic signal? We begin by describing three major theoretical perspectives on the perception of speech.
Randy L, Diehl +2 more
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Nursing Management, 2017
The National Centre for Social Research's annual British Social Attitudes survey records the British public's views on the NHS and healthcare.
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The National Centre for Social Research's annual British Social Attitudes survey records the British public's views on the NHS and healthcare.
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British Journal of Psychiatry, 1991
This paper reviews the phenomenology of delusional perception and discusses its differentiation from similar phenomena, its diagnostic value, and its pathogenesis. The study of delusional perception is of particular interest, because, unlike other delusions, its identification rests on form as well as content. Also, it is one of the first-rank symptoms
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This paper reviews the phenomenology of delusional perception and discusses its differentiation from similar phenomena, its diagnostic value, and its pathogenesis. The study of delusional perception is of particular interest, because, unlike other delusions, its identification rests on form as well as content. Also, it is one of the first-rank symptoms
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Language and Speech, 1976
The paper reviews selected studies in speech perception, most of them published in the past five years. Topics include the contributions of prosody to segmental perception, the problems of segmentation and invariance, categorical perception of speech and non-speech, the role of feature detectors, the scaling of speech sounds to an auditory ...
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The paper reviews selected studies in speech perception, most of them published in the past five years. Topics include the contributions of prosody to segmental perception, the problems of segmentation and invariance, categorical perception of speech and non-speech, the role of feature detectors, the scaling of speech sounds to an auditory ...
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Physics Today, 1992
To understand the physics of color, one must first understand the basics of color perception. Color is, first and foremost, a perception. Even though the stimulus that enters our eyes and produces the perception can be described and measured in physical terms, the actual color that we perceive is the result of a complex series of processes in the human
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To understand the physics of color, one must first understand the basics of color perception. Color is, first and foremost, a perception. Even though the stimulus that enters our eyes and produces the perception can be described and measured in physical terms, the actual color that we perceive is the result of a complex series of processes in the human
openaire +2 more sources

