234 research outputs found

    Introductory notes to a grammar of Cahuilla : [to appear in Linguistic Studies offered to Joseph Greenberg on the occasion of his 60th birthday]

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    These notes grew out of my preoccupation with writing a grammar of a particular language, Cahuilla, which is spoken in Southern California and belongs to the Uto-Aztecan family. [...] The Introduction to the Grammar as a whole – of which two sections are reproduced here in a modified version – tries to integrate the synoptic views of the different chapters into a series of comprehensive statements. The statements cluster around two topics: 1. A presentation of Cahuilla as a type of language. 2. Remarks on writing a grammar

    sj-pdf-6-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 - Supplemental material for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity

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    Supplemental material, sj-pdf-6-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity by Claudia Chien, Moritz Seiler, Fabian Eitel, Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch, Friedemann Paul and Kerstin Ritter in Multiple Sclerosis Journal – Experimental, Translational and Clinical</p

    sj-docx-1-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 - Supplemental material for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity by Claudia Chien, Moritz Seiler, Fabian Eitel, Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch, Friedemann Paul and Kerstin Ritter in Multiple Sclerosis Journal – Experimental, Translational and Clinical</p

    sj-tiff-2-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 - Supplemental material for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-tiff-2-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity by Claudia Chien, Moritz Seiler, Fabian Eitel, Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch, Friedemann Paul and Kerstin Ritter in Multiple Sclerosis Journal – Experimental, Translational and Clinical</p

    sj-docx-4-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 - Supplemental material for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-4-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity by Claudia Chien, Moritz Seiler, Fabian Eitel, Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch, Friedemann Paul and Kerstin Ritter in Multiple Sclerosis Journal – Experimental, Translational and Clinical</p

    sj-tiff-3-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 - Supplemental material for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-tiff-3-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity by Claudia Chien, Moritz Seiler, Fabian Eitel, Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch, Friedemann Paul and Kerstin Ritter in Multiple Sclerosis Journal – Experimental, Translational and Clinical</p

    sj-docx-5-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 - Supplemental material for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-5-mso-10.1177_20552173221109770 for Prediction of high and low disease activity in early MS patients using multiple kernel learning identifies importance of lateral ventricle intensity by Claudia Chien, Moritz Seiler, Fabian Eitel, Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch, Friedemann Paul and Kerstin Ritter in Multiple Sclerosis Journal – Experimental, Translational and Clinical</p

    A functional view on prototypes

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    The human mind may produce prototypization within virtually any realm of cognition and behavior. A "comparative prototype-typology" might prove to be an interesting field of study – perhaps a new subfield of semiotics. This, however, would presuppose a clear view on the samenesses and differences of prototypization in these various fields. It seems realistic for the time being that the linguist first confine himself to describing prototypization within the realm of language proper. The literature on prototypes has steadily grown in the past ten years or so. I confine myself to mentioning the volume on Noun Classes and Categorization, edited by C. Craig (1986), which contains a wealth of factual information on the subject, along with some theoretical vistas. By and large, however, linguistic prototype research is still basically in a taxonomic stage - which, of course, represents the precondition for moving beyond. The procedure is largely per ostensionem, and by accumulating examples of prototypes. We still lack a comprehensive prototype theory. The following pages are intended, not to provide such, a theory, but to do the first steps in this direction. Section 2 will feature some elements of a functional theory of prototypes. They have been developed by this author within the frame of the UNITYP model of research on language universals and typology. Section 3 will bring a discussion of prototypization with regard to selected phenomena of a wide range of levels of analysis: Phonology, morphosyntax, speech acts, and the lexicon. Prototypization will finally be studied within one of the universal dimensions, that of APPREHENSION - the linguistic representation of the concepts of objects – as proposed by Seiler (1986)

    A Twitter Streaming Data Set collected before and after the Onset of the War between Russia and Ukraine in 2022

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    Social media can be mirrors of human interaction, society, and world events. Their reach enables the global dissemination of information in the shortest possible time and thus the individual participation of people all over the world in global events in almost real-time. However, equally efficient, these platforms can be misused in the context of information warfare in order to manipulate human perception and opinion formation. The outbreak of war between Russia and Ukraine on February 24, 2022, demonstrated this in a striking manner. Here we publish a dataset of raw tweets collected by using the Twitter Streaming API in the context of the onset of the war which Russia started on Ukraine on February 24, 2022. A distinctive feature of the dataset is that it covers the period from one week before to one week after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. We publish the IDs of all tweets we streamed during that time, the time we rehydrated them using Twitter's API as well as the result of the rehydration. If you use this dataset, please cite our related Paper: Pohl, Janina Susanne and Seiler, Moritz Vinzent and Assenmacher, Dennis and Grimme, Christian, A Twitter Streaming Dataset collected before and after the Onset of the War between Russia and Ukraine in 2022 (March 25, 2022). Available at SSRN: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=406654

    Lutz Seiler und das „Territorium der Müdigkeit“

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    International audienceThe article focuses on two essays from Sonntags dachte ich an Gott (2004) by Lutz Seiler, in particular on two excerpts both establishing a special bond between tiredness, radioactivity of Seiler’s birthplace and his literary creativity. Far from merely being a paradoxical praise of the atom, the author describes the very origin of the act of writing in drawing upon his early years in eastern Thuringia: his receptiveness and awareness of the physical world and matter, which may have been fostered by his childhood spent in an uranium mining district.L’article est consacré à deux essais de Lutz Seiler parus dans le recueil Sonntags dachte ich an Gott (2004) et plus particulièrement aux sections respectives de ces essais qui établissent une relation singulière entre la fatigue, la radioactivité de la région de RDA natale de l’auteur et sa créativité littéraire. Il tente de montrer que, loin de se livrer seulement à un éloge paradoxal de l’atome, l’auteur décrit la source même de l’acte d’écriture, remontant à son enfance : une porosité et une attention face au monde physique et à la matière, qui pourraient précisément avoir été favorisées par son enfance passée près des mines d’uranium
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