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Hits 1 – 11 of 11

1
Piloting an integrated SARS-CoV-2 testing and data system for outbreak containment among college students: A prospective cohort study.
In: PloS one, vol 16, iss 1 (2021)
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2
Effect of voicing and articulation manner on aerosol particle emission during human speech.
In: PloS one, vol 15, iss 1 (2020)
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3
A human-machine partnered approach for identifying social media signals of elevated traumatic grief in Chicago gang territories.
In: PloS one, vol 15, iss 7 (2020)
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4
Differential asthma odds following respiratory infection in children from three minority populations.
In: PloS one, vol 15, iss 5 (2020)
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5
Survivorship Care Plan Information Needs: Perspectives of Safety-Net Breast Cancer Patients.
In: PloS one, vol 11, iss 12 (2016)
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6
Survivorship Care Plan Information Needs: Perspectives of Safety-Net Breast Cancer Patients.
In: PloS one, vol 11, iss 12 (2016)
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7
Natural speech reveals the semantic maps that tile human cerebral cortex.
In: Nature, vol 532, iss 7600 (2016)
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8
Neural Correlates of Attention to Human-Made Sounds: An ERP Study.
In: PloS one, vol 11, iss 10 (2016)
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9
The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis and Probabilistic Inference: Evidence from the Domain of Color.
In: PloS one, vol 11, iss 7 (2016)
Abstract: The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis holds that our thoughts are shaped by our native language, and that speakers of different languages therefore think differently. This hypothesis is controversial in part because it appears to deny the possibility of a universal groundwork for human cognition, and in part because some findings taken to support it have not reliably replicated. We argue that considering this hypothesis through the lens of probabilistic inference has the potential to resolve both issues, at least with respect to certain prominent findings in the domain of color cognition. We explore a probabilistic model that is grounded in a presumed universal perceptual color space and in language-specific categories over that space. The model predicts that categories will most clearly affect color memory when perceptual information is uncertain. In line with earlier studies, we show that this model accounts for language-consistent biases in color reconstruction from memory in English speakers, modulated by uncertainty. We also show, to our knowledge for the first time, that such a model accounts for influential existing data on cross-language differences in color discrimination from memory, both within and across categories. We suggest that these ideas may help to clarify the debate over the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis.
Keyword: Adolescent; BRII recipient:Regier; Clinical Research; Cognition; Color; Color Perception; Female; General Science & Technology; Humans; Language; Male; Mental Health; Models; Statistical; Thinking; Uncertainty; Young Adult
URL: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/87v1f6wm
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10
Functional organization of human sensorimotor cortex for speech articulation.
In: Nature, vol 495, iss 7441 (2013)
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11
Language proficiency modulates the recruitment of non-classical language areas in bilinguals.
In: PloS one, vol 6, iss 3 (2011)
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