1,726,668 research outputs found

    Artigo | Luisa Crepaldi Machado e Andrea Hofstaetter apresentam proposta de livro sobre a temática com o intuito de suprir lacunas no ensino das Artes Visuais

    Full text link
    Frente a lacunas de material educativo sobre a arte indígena, as autoras apresentam um livro com artistas indígenas e suas obras para utilização por crianças em sala de aula.Ilustração monocromática da flora e fauna brasileiras. À esquerda, consta o título "Arte indígena brasileira: artistas e atividades artísticas para crianças". Por Luisa Crepaldi Machado, do Programa de Extensão Histórias e Práticas Artísticas, do Instituto de Artes/UFRGS

    La domanda di partecipazione alla gara

    No full text
    La prima parte del lavoro riguarda la domanda di partecipazione alla gara ed e' a cura di G. Crepaldi (pagg. 809-827). La seconda parte del commento e' a cura di M. Andreis ed esamina l'offerta sotto il profilo del termine, delle modalità di presentazione e del contenuto (pagg. 828-852)

    RaBBiT (Raising Biilingual Babies in Talk)

    No full text
    The RaBBiT (Raising Bilingual Babies in Talk) initiative aims to provide research-informed guidance on how to raise bilingual children to expecting parents and parents with young children aged 0 to 6. The production of the videos and booklets are supported by the Lee Kuan Yew Fund for Bilingualism (MOE), Singapore. The initiative is led by Dr. Yvonne Tse Crepaldi and supported by a team of experts in bilingualism from Singapore and overseas. They include Prof. Suzy Styles and Prof. Ng Bee Chin from NTU, Prof. Seetha Lakshmi and Prof. Mukhlis Abu Bakar from NIE, and Prof. Elizabeth Lanza from the University of Oslo

    Archbishop Giampaolo Crepaldi เยี่ยมชมมหาวิทยาลัยอัสสัมชัญ

    No full text
    พระอัครสังฆราช Giampaolo Crepaldi, secretary of the Vatican Commission on Justice and Peace เยี่ยมชมมหาวิทยาลัยอัมสัมชัญ วิทยาเขตสุวรรณภูมิ เมื่อวันที่ 28 มีนาคม 2551 โดยมี ภราดาบัญชา แสงหิรัญ อธิการบดี และ Mr.Glen Vivian Chatelier ผู้อำนวยการสำนักงานวิเทศสัมพันธ์ ให้การต้อนรั

    Processing Differences Across Regular and Irregular Inflections Revealed Through ERPs

    Full text link
    Copyright © 2015 American Psychological AssociationResearch strongly suggests that printed words are recognized in terms of their constituent morphemes, but researchers have tended to consider the recognition of derivations and inflections in separate theoretical debates. Recently, Crepaldi et al. (2010) proposed a theory that claims to account for the recognition of both derivations and inflections. We investigated brain potentials in the context of masked priming to test 2 key predictions of this theory: (a) that regular inflections should prime their stems to a greater degree than irregular inflections should prime their stems and (b) that priming for regular inflections should arise earlier in the recognition process than priming for irregular inflections. Significant masked priming effects were observed for both regular and irregular inflections, though these effects were greater for regular inflections. ERP data further suggested that masked priming effects for regular and irregular inflections had different time courses. Priming for regular but not irregular inflections emerged in a time window reflecting processing up to 250 ms post target onset, and although priming for regular and irregular inflections was observed in a time window reflecting processing 400 to 600 ms post target onset, these effects arose earlier and were of greater magnitude for the regular inflections. These findings support a form-then-meaning characterization of the visual word processing system such as that proposed by Crepaldi et al. (2010) and raise challenges for alternative approaches. (PsycINFO Database RecordESRCItalian Ministry of Educatio

    Seeing Stems Everywhere and Being Blind to Affixes

    No full text
    Recent evidence has shown that suffixes influence nonword processing only when they follow an existing stem (e.g., in 'shootment', but not in 'mentshoot'), suggesting that their mental representation is position-locked (Crepaldi, Rastle & Davis, 2010). These results raise questions about the nature of morpheme position coding, an issue that has typically been neglected in morphological research; although it is clear that morphemes must be coded for position during word identification (otherwise we could not distinguish between words like 'overhang' and 'hangover'), even the most recent theoretical attempts (e.g., Crepaldi, Rastle, Coltheart & Nickels, 2010; Taft, 2006) have not addressed this issue. In the present experiments we asked whether prefix and stem identification is also sensitive to positional constraints (as suffix identification is). In Experiment 1 we showed that the rejection time of pseudo-prefixed nonwords (e.g., predrink) is longer than that of matched control nonwords (e.g., pledrink), which was not the case when the prefix followed the stem (e.g., drinkpre took as long as drinkple to be rejected). This result suggests that prefix identification is position-specific. In Experiment 2 we showed that the rejection time of reversed compounds (e.g., moonhoney) is longer than that of matched control nonwords (e.g., moonbasin), indicating that 'honey' and 'moon' were identified within 'moonhoney', and the representations of these morphemes then activated (at least partially) the word 'honeymoon'. This result suggests that stems are coded is a position-independent fashion. This latter conclusion was strengthened by the results of Experiment 3, in which the masked presentation of reversed compounds (e.g., moonhoney) facilitated the identification of compound words (honeymoon). In contrast monomorphemic control pairs did not produce a similar pattern (i.e., rickmave did not prime maverick), indicating that the effect for ‘moonhoney’ pairs was not due simply to orthographic similarity

    Villa Mensa (Mauro Crepaldi - Patrimonio Copparo s.r.l.)

    No full text
    Il contributo nel volume “Architettura e preesistenze”. Premio Internazionale Domus Restauro e Conservazione Fassa Bortolo si riferisce al progetto di restauro di Villa Mensa (Copparo, Ferrara, Italia) realizzato da Mauro Crepaldi (Patrimonio Copparo s.r.l.), il quale ha ottenuto la Medaglia Speciale durante la terza edizione del Premio Internazionale Domus Restauro e Conservazione Fassa Bortolo nel 2012The essay in “Architettura e preesistenze”. Premio Internazionale Domus Restauro e Conservazione Fassa Bortolo volume refers to the restoration project of the Villa Mensa (Copparo, Ferrara, Italy) designed by Mauro Crepaldi (Patrimonio Copparo s.r.l.), which he earned the Special Mention during the third edition of the International Domus Restoration and Conservation Award Fassa Bortolo in 201

    An effective AMS Top-Down Methodology Applied to the Design of a Mixed-SignalUWB System-on-Chip

    Full text link
    The design of Ultra Wideband (UWB) mixed-signal SoC for localization applications in wireless personal area networks is currently investigated by several researchers. The complexity of the design claims for effective top-down methodologies. We propose a layered approach based on VHDL-AMS for the first design stages and on an intelligent use of a circuit-level simulator for the transistor-level phase. We apply the latter just to one block at a time and wrap it within the system-level VHDL-AMS description. This method allows to capture the impact of circuit-level design choices and non-idealities on system performance. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the methodology we show how the refinement of the design affects specific UWB system parameters such as bit-error rate and localization estimations

    Pontificio Consiglio della Giustizia e della Pace, Dizionario di dottrina sociale della Chiesa. [A cura di] Giampaolo Crepaldi e Enrique Colom, Libreria Ateneo Salesiano, Roma 2005

    No full text
    Il contributo presenta la recensione del volume: Pontificio Consiglio della Giustizia e della Pace, Dizionario di dottrina sociale della Chiesa. [A cura di] Giampaolo Crepaldi e Enrique Colom, Libreria Ateneo Salesiano, Roma 200
    corecore