Results 1 to 10 of about 555 (97)
How the Dominant Reading Direction Changes Parafoveal Processing: A Combined EEG/Eye-Tracking Study. [PDF]
ABSTRACT Reading directions vary across writing systems. Through long‐term experience, readers adjust their visual systems to the dominant reading direction in their writing systems. However, little is known about the neural correlates underlying these adjustments because different writing systems do not just differ in reading direction, but also in ...
Huang X +6 more
europepmc +2 more sources
Chaghatay Language Is The Brıdge Between Old Turkıc And Modern Uyghur Language [PDF]
In this article mainly discussed the period of Uighur literary language of Chagatai borrowed a lot of Arabic and Persian words, in the later development, we found that borrowed Arabic words undergone some voice changes.
Ayshemgul Abdulla
doaj +2 more sources
Living with Diversity volume I documents the proceedings of the Slovenia-Japan University Cooperation Network Graduate Student Forum Series held at Ljubljana University in 2008.
AOKI Leonie +15 more
core +4 more sources
Global legal change from below and above
Abstract This article is a contribution to the occasional series dealing with a major book that has influenced the author. Previous contributors include Stewart Macaulay, John Griffith, William Twining, Carol Harlow, Geoffrey Bindman, Harry Arthurs, André‐Jean Arnaud, Alan Hunt, Michael Adler, Lawrence O. Gostin, John P.
TERENCE C. HALLIDAY
wiley +1 more source
The client net state: Trajectories of state control over cyberspace
Abstract Social media corporations have become fixtures of daily life to the extent they are regularly compared to states in size and scope. These corporations and their platforms have become the dominant stakeholders of cyberspace, operating as state‐like cyber actors, or net states.
Callum J. Harvey, Christopher L. Moore
wiley +1 more source
Abstract This article presents an overview of several significant aspects of the phonology of Uyghur (ISO: uig; pronounced [ʊjˈʁʊr]; Turkic: China). In addition to summarising previous research, we present new data and highlight its relevance for phonological theory.
Connor Mayer +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Linguistic purism as resistance to colonization
Abstract As the Mongolian language is equated with ethnic survival in Inner Mongolia, the metadiscourse of Mongolian linguistic purism has become a vital tactic for enacting Mongolian identity and creating a counterspace against Chinese linguistic and cultural hegemony.
Gegentuul Baioud, Cholmon Khuanuud
wiley +1 more source
Aesthetic Index Analysis of Fusion of Folk Martial Arts and Dance Based on Deep Learning Algorithm
In this paper, we propose a computable method to evaluate the aesthetic value of fusion images of folk martial arts and dance based on human visual and aesthetic habits, extract features and use them as evaluation indexes from three aspects: technical features, perceptual features, and social features, establish an aesthetic evaluation model by fusing ...
Yaqing Wei, Zongfeng Huang, Naeem Jan
wiley +1 more source
The third AI summer: AAAI Robert S. Engelmore Memorial Lecture
AI Magazine, Volume 43, Issue 1, Page 105-125, Spring 2022.
Henry A. Kautz
wiley +1 more source
Gradient morphophonology: Evidence from Uyghur vowel harmony [PDF]
For the Structuralists and early Generativists (e.g. Bloomfield 1933; Chomsky & Halle 1968), all grammatical knowledge was by definition discrete and categorical.
McCollum, Adam
core +2 more sources

