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301
1 Linguistic Differences and Language Design
In: http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~mabaker/papers to add/Language-diffs-TICS.pdf
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302
B. Krithika et.al / International Journal on Computer Science and Engineering (IJCSE) Performance of machine learning methods for classification tasks
In: http://www.enggjournals.com/ijcse/doc/IJCSE13-05-06-018.pdf
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303
c © 2002 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Manufactured in The Netherlands. Improved Speech Synthesis Using Fuzzy Methods
In: http://www.etc.tuiasi.ro/sibm/old/Alte_cursuri/Improved Speech Synthesis Using Fuzzy Methods.pdf
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304
F0 Contour Modeling for Arabic Text-to-Speech Synthesis Using Fujisaki Parameters and Neural Networks
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305
Signal, Image and Pattern Recognition
In: http://www.ijcaonline.org/volume12/number1/pxc3872206.pdf
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306
MPEG-4 COMPLIANT REPRODUCTION OF FACE ANIMATION CREATED IN MAYA
In: http://poseidon.csd.auth.gr/papers/PUBLISHED/CONFERENCE/pdf/Laftsidis04a.pdf
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307
Ageing voices: The effect of changes in voice parameters on ASR performance
In: http://www.cstr.ed.ac.uk/downloads/publications/2010/vipperla-eurasip10.pdf
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308
Adverse Conditions and ASR Techniques for Robust Speech User Interface
In: http://www.ijcsi.org/papers/IJCSI-8-5-3-440-449.pdf
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309
©ARC Page | 1 A Study of Chomsky’s Universal Grammar in Second Language Acquisition
In: http://www.arcjournals.org/pdfs/ijsell/v2-i12/1.pdf
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310
Counting the languages we could speak
In: http://cdm.unimo.it/home/dipslc/guardiano.cristina/gualar.pdf
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311
NEGATION IN MOKPE AND TWO RELATED COASTAL BANTU LANGUAGES OF CAMEROON
In: http://jambo.africa.kyoto-u.ac.jp/kiroku/asm_normal/abstracts/pdf/26-4/26-4-2.pdf
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312
Counting the Languages We Could Speak Contando le lingue che potremmo parlare
In: http://old.sis-statistica.org/files/pdf/atti/rs08_poster_16.pdf
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313
www.elsevier.com/locate/specom Acoustic parameters for automatic detection of nasal manner
In: http://www.isr.umd.edu/Labs/SCL/publications/journal/pruthi_espy_sc_04.pdf
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314
The I3MEDIA speech database: a trilingual annotated corpus for the analysis and synthesis of emotional speech
In: http://www.lrec-conf.org/proceedings/lrec2012/pdf/865_Paper.pdf
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315
Prosodic Parameters of Perceived Emotions in Vocal Server Voices
In: http://www.lpl.univ-aix.fr/sp2002/pdf/ehrette-etal.pdf
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316
Phi-Agree, A-movement, and Complementizer-Tense Relations in Chinese.
Abstract: This dissertation reveals an apparent paradox presented by Chinese which confronts current theories of Universal Grammar, parametric variation, and typology of human languages. Specifically, Chinese presents a problem for the feature inheritance hypothesis (Richards 2007; Chomsky 2007, 2008; Miyagawa 2010) because Chinese seems to manifest neither phi-features/Agree on T nor the freedom to raise any topic phrase to spec-TP (a hallmark feature of discourse-configurational languages like Finnish). That is, the UG-typology advanced under the feature inheritance hypotheses seems to exclude Chinese. In view of this apparent paradox, I investigate the distribution and motivation of A-movement in Chinese in chapter 2 and argue that Chinese is in fact compatible with Miyagawa’s feature inheritance approach. I contend that Chinese displays A-movement motivated by two distinct forces: the Case feature (see Epstein and Seely 2006, Bošković 2002) and the Topic feature (as in Miyagawa 2010). Chapter 3 investigates the question of whether Chinese lacks phi-features/Agree altogether by examining the blocking effects observed in the long-distance construal of the reflexive ziji (see Huang and Liu 2001) and the formation of Chinese wh-the-hell questions (see Huang and Ochi 2004 and Chou 2012). I contend that these two types of blocking effects receive a unified analysis if we assume phi-Agree exists at the CP level in Chinese, and involves [Speaker] and [Participant] features. Chapter 4 examines the derivation of locative inversion in English and Chinese, particularly focusing on why T-to-C inversion is not allowed in English locative inversion, whereas the counterpart operation is allowed in Chinese. I argue that (i) locative inversion in both English and Chinese is topic A-movement, and (ii) the possible presence of φ-features on T and the categorial status of the locative phrase jointly determine whether a language can implement T-to-C inversion in locative inversion. Chapter 5 discusses two foundational theoretical implications, including (i) how to express the A/A'-distinction in languages without φ-features on T, and (ii) the postulation of featurally crash-proof grammar in which uninterpretable features present at the CI interface do not cause crash (see Frampton and Guttman 2002; Carstens 2011; Epstein, Kitahara and Seely 2010; Putnam 2010). ; PhD ; Linguistics ; University of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies ; http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/99859/1/ctchou_1.pdf
Keyword: A-movement; Chinese Syntax; Humanities; Linguistics; Minimalist Syntax; Parameters; Phi-features/Agreement; Universal Grammar
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/99859
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317
Documentation of Bayesian parameter estimation Web Service
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318
A condicionalidade como zona conceitual
In: DELTA: Documentação de Estudos em Lingüística Teórica e Aplicada, Vol 33, Iss 1, Pp 291-313
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