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THE RELATION OF VISUAL PERCEPTION, AUDITORY PERCEPTION AND ONE ASPECT OF CONCEPTUALIZATION TO WORD RECOGNITIONGoldmark, Bernice Fabian Kern, 1925- January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
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CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN WORD RECOGNITION AND COMPREHENSION OF SECOND AND FIFTH GRADE CHILDRENHays, Warren Sherman, 1926- January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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DIFFERENTIAL CLUES EMPLOYED IN WORD RECOGNITION FOR KNOWN AND UNKNOWN WORDSFreeman, Joseph Francis, 1931- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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AUTOMATIC RECOGNITION OF PICTORIAL-PATTERNS BY DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS AND CLASSIFICATIONTodd, Henry Swan, 1933- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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EXTENSION OF THE STROOP INTERFERENCE EFFECT TO PICTURES AND WORDSLassen, Gary Lynn, 1947- January 1974 (has links)
No description available.
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SYNTACTIC/SEMANTIC ACCEPTABILITY AND SEMANTIC SIMILARITY OF ORAL READING ERRORS AS FUNCTIONS OF VARIATION IN ATTAINED COMPREHENSIONThomas, Keith John, 1943- January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Long-term autocorrelation coefficients in automatic speech recognitionOdom, Warren Edward, 1952- January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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Multinational Democracy and Political Recognition in Spain, 1978-2010Baglioni, Sebastian 07 January 2014 (has links)
In this dissertation I attempt to build a bridge between normative discussions about multinational democracy and political recognition, and a contextually-sensitive empirical analysis of the Spanish case. I argue that, by looking at the characteristics and political dynamic of Catalonia, the Basque Country and Galicia, we can gain a better understanding of the definition, composition and viability of a multinational democracy.
Combining normative discussions and a description of an empirical case (Spain) I seek to bridge both normative and empirical literatures about political recognition and multinationality highlighting the fruitful interconnections between them. In doing so, I attempt to provide adequate tools to normatively assess concrete and actual processes of political recognition in a context-sensitive manner.
The dissertation also emphasises the possibilities (and limits) of federalism as a viable political and institutional framework to accommodate multinational demands in a democratic fashion. By looking at the Spanish case and the controversies and challenges that Catalonia, the Basque Country and Galicia present, I believe I offer a better understanding of political recognition. I defend a view of democracy and politics that is open by definition and is amenable to contestation and ongoing negotiations. I contend that the temptation to arrive at a solution as if it were a final and permanent state of affairs should be avoided; rather, the indeterminate and open-ended nature of the processes analysed should be not only tolerated but rather assessed according to the conditions and dynamic of the process of political recognition identified and discussed in my dissertation.
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Multinational Democracy and Political Recognition in Spain, 1978-2010Baglioni, Sebastian 07 January 2014 (has links)
In this dissertation I attempt to build a bridge between normative discussions about multinational democracy and political recognition, and a contextually-sensitive empirical analysis of the Spanish case. I argue that, by looking at the characteristics and political dynamic of Catalonia, the Basque Country and Galicia, we can gain a better understanding of the definition, composition and viability of a multinational democracy.
Combining normative discussions and a description of an empirical case (Spain) I seek to bridge both normative and empirical literatures about political recognition and multinationality highlighting the fruitful interconnections between them. In doing so, I attempt to provide adequate tools to normatively assess concrete and actual processes of political recognition in a context-sensitive manner.
The dissertation also emphasises the possibilities (and limits) of federalism as a viable political and institutional framework to accommodate multinational demands in a democratic fashion. By looking at the Spanish case and the controversies and challenges that Catalonia, the Basque Country and Galicia present, I believe I offer a better understanding of political recognition. I defend a view of democracy and politics that is open by definition and is amenable to contestation and ongoing negotiations. I contend that the temptation to arrive at a solution as if it were a final and permanent state of affairs should be avoided; rather, the indeterminate and open-ended nature of the processes analysed should be not only tolerated but rather assessed according to the conditions and dynamic of the process of political recognition identified and discussed in my dissertation.
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The influence of alexithymia and sex in the recognition of emotions from visual, auditory, and bimodal cuesSanchez Cortes, Diana January 2013 (has links)
Alexithymia is a personality trait associated with impairments in emotional processing. This study investigated the influence of alexithymia and sex in the ability to recognize emotional expressions presented in faces, voices, and their combination. Alexithymia was assessed by the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) and participants (n = 122) judged 12 emotions displayed uni- or bimodally in two sensory modalities as measured by the Geneva Multimodal Emotion Portrayals Core Set (GEMEP-CS). According to their scores, participants were grouped into low, average, and high alexithymia. The results showed that sex did not moderate the relationship between alexithymia and emotional recognition. The low alexithymia group recognized emotions more accurately than the other two subgroups, at least in the visual modality. No group differences were found in the voice and the bimodal tasks. These findings illustrate the importance of accounting for how different modalities influence the presentation of emotional cues, as well as suggesting the use of dynamic instruments such as GEMEP-CS that increment ecological validity and are more sensitive in detecting individual differences, over posed techniques such as still pictures / Genetic and neural factors underlying individual differences in emotion recognition ability
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