Results 251 to 260 of about 93,182 (302)
Unmuting Aesthetic Excellence: Rethinking How We Read, Write, and Review
Creativity and Innovation Management, Volume 35, Issue 2, Page 467-473, June 2026.
Patricia Wolf, Salvatore Tallarico
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Brain and Cognition, 2014
Prose reading has been shown to be a very sensitive measure of Unilateral Spatial Neglect. However, little is known about the relationship between prose reading and other measures of neglect and its severity, or between prose reading and single word reading.
Nicoletta Beschin, Sérgio Della Sala
exaly +4 more sources
Prose reading has been shown to be a very sensitive measure of Unilateral Spatial Neglect. However, little is known about the relationship between prose reading and other measures of neglect and its severity, or between prose reading and single word reading.
Nicoletta Beschin, Sérgio Della Sala
exaly +4 more sources
Abstract Prose is a fabrication, not a linguistic axiom. It has a complex history well before its intricate literary genealogy. Made, not given, prose comes down to modern use with the form, formally determined, of a world-historical invention.
Xin Wang +4 more
core +3 more sources
Prose, of varying length, tone, purpose, and style, made up the vast majority of periodical content throughout the nineteenth century. It was the vehicle for conveying news, assessing cultural, political and social events, offering personal opinions, and entertaining readers.
Palmer, BL, Beth Palmer
core +6 more sources
The Journal of General Psychology, 1998
Hypermnesia is an improvement in memory that occurs with repeated testing. In the present experiment, hypermnesia was examined with prose materials. Participants were presented with either a fairy tale or an expository passage, followed by 3 free-recall tests.
H, Otani, J D, Griffith
openaire +2 more sources
Hypermnesia is an improvement in memory that occurs with repeated testing. In the present experiment, hypermnesia was examined with prose materials. Participants were presented with either a fairy tale or an expository passage, followed by 3 free-recall tests.
H, Otani, J D, Griffith
openaire +2 more sources
Cambridge Opera Journal, 1989
Before returning to Paris in 1874 after his eventful four-year stay in England, Gounod embarked on a comic opera based on Molière's George Dandin. Recuperating in St Leonard's-on-Sea from a ‘cerebral attack’ he wrote a lengthy Preface, dated 10–11 April 1874, from which the following is drawn:The infinite variety of stress, in prose, offers the ...
openaire +1 more source
Before returning to Paris in 1874 after his eventful four-year stay in England, Gounod embarked on a comic opera based on Molière's George Dandin. Recuperating in St Leonard's-on-Sea from a ‘cerebral attack’ he wrote a lengthy Preface, dated 10–11 April 1874, from which the following is drawn:The infinite variety of stress, in prose, offers the ...
openaire +1 more source
Research Quarterly. American Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation, 1970
Abstract It has occurred to us that some of our readers who do not use computers in their work may be handicapped both in reading certain articles in the RESEARCH QUARTERLY and in their conversations with those who are familiar with the field. Computers have a vocabulary of their own, and reference to the dictionary is seldom helpful.
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Abstract It has occurred to us that some of our readers who do not use computers in their work may be handicapped both in reading certain articles in the RESEARCH QUARTERLY and in their conversations with those who are familiar with the field. Computers have a vocabulary of their own, and reference to the dictionary is seldom helpful.
openaire +2 more sources

