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Evidence from ERP and Eye Movements as Markers of Language Dysfunction in Dyslexia
In: ISSN: 2076-3425 ; Brain Sciences ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-03641338 ; Brain Sciences, MDPI, 2022, 12 (1), pp.73. ⟨10.3390/brainsci12010073⟩ (2022)
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Brazilian left-wing activists on Facebook: the role of cultural events in political participation
In: EISSN: 2245-4373 ; Brasiliana: Journal for Brazilian Studies ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-03366403 ; Brasiliana: Journal for Brazilian Studies, King's College London, 2021, 10 (1), pp.261-284. ⟨10.25160/bjbs.v10i1.125719⟩ ; https://tidsskrift.dk/bras/article/view/125719 (2021)
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3
Eye Movement Traces of Linguistic Knowledge ...
Berzak, Yevgeni. - : Open Science Framework, 2021
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4
The Cultural Outcomes of Social Movements: A Computational Linguistics Approach ...
Cristancho, Camilo. - : University of Salento, 2021
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5
“Go, Vote, and Tweet It”: Interactivity in Online Protest-Related Discussions About the 2014 Catalan Referendum for Independence
In: International Journal of Communication; Vol 15 (2021); 23 ; 1932-8036 (2021)
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City squares as spaces for political discourse: reflections on Puerta del Sol and Taksim Square
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Effects of speech rate on anticipatory eye movements in the Visual World Paradigm: Evidence from aging, native, and non-native language processing ...
Fernandez, Leigh. - : Open Science Framework, 2021
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8
DIGITAL SITES OF PROTEST: FARMERS’ PROTEST IN INDIA AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF A COLLECTIVE IDENTITY ON FACEBOOK
In: AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research; 2021: AoIR2021 ; 2162-3317 (2021)
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9
The ‘Intense Ideological Activity’ of the 1919-20 Turin Factory Council Movement
In: International Gramsci Journal (2021)
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10
The Cultural Outcomes of Social Movements: A Computational Linguistics Approach
In: Partecipazione e conflitto; Vol. 14, No. 3 (2021). Special Issue on: "When, where and which kind of collective action matters?"; 1151-1179 (2021)
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11
Del mito global a la movilización local: Creación y resonancia del marco Greta Thunberg
In: Comunicar: Revista científica iberoamericana de comunicación y educación, ISSN 1134-3478, Nº 68, 2021, pags. 35-45 (2021)
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El héroe y la sombra: Mitos en los movimientos sociales digitales
In: Comunicar: Revista científica iberoamericana de comunicación y educación, ISSN 1134-3478, Nº 68, 2021, pags. 9-20 (2021)
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13
Análisis de los resúmenes de artículos de investigación de dos áreas científicas: un estudio multidisciplinario
In: Lingüística y Literatura, ISSN 0120-5587, null 42, Nº. 80, 2021 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Vol. 42, 80 (2021): JULY-DECEMBER, 2021), pags. 319-339 (2021)
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14
Where's the Rhetoric? Imagining a Unified Field
Graham, S. Scott. - : The Ohio State University Press, 2020
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15
Zapatista Voice, Visibility and Vision: An-other Aesthetics of Globalization
In: Revista de Estudios Globales y Arte Contemporáneo; Vol. 7, No 1 (2020): Epistemologías indígenas e imaginación artística; 343-378 ; 2013-8652 (2020)
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16
Community, Solidarity and Multilingualism in a Transnational Social Movement: A Critical Sociolinguistic Ethnography of Emmaus
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17
Deliberative identities: an ethnography of sex work and health and social services in Winnipeg Manitoba, Treaty One Territory
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18
Reading without spaces: The role of precise letter order
In: ISSN: 1943-3921 ; EISSN: 1943-393X ; Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics ; https://hal-amu.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02138871 ; Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics, Springer Verlag, 2019, 81 (3), pp.846-860. ⟨10.3758/s13414-018-01648-6⟩ (2019)
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19
Event integration mechanisms across languages and their psychological reality
In: 15th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference: "Crosslinguistic Perspectives on Cognitive Linguistics" ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02277569 ; 15th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference: "Crosslinguistic Perspectives on Cognitive Linguistics", Aug 2019, Nishinomiya, Japan ; https://iclc2019.site (2019)
Abstract: International audience ; Two different modes of visual attention are recognized in visual cognition research: (a) an early ambient mode of processing; and (b) a late focal mode –the former associated with bottom-up mechanisms guided by low-level perceptual saliency features (i.e. configuration), and the latter related to top-down processing, based on high-level (i.e. contextual) information and depending on knowledge-based features such as semantic schemas, content, co-occurrence of objects in a scene etc. (Pannasch & Velichkovsky 2009). Knowledge-based information can be related to the linguistic knowledge of the viewers. More specifically, in the domain of motion event encoding, speakers’ knowledge depends on how available spatial components (e.g. Path, Manner) are in a language and how they combine into semantic schemas to form constrained spatial arrangements (Talmy 2006). Each language has a relatively closed set of ‘pre-packaged’ schemas and focuses differently on the core schema (i.e. the Path a Figure follows in a displacement): some (i.e. French) lexicalize the core schema in the main verb; others (i.e. English) express it in the periphery of the sentence. Many psycholinguistic studies (e.g. Papafragou et al. 2008) suggest that such language differences are only surface differences that cannot influence visual processing of events (unless only momentarily). According to these authors, gaze behaviour can change due to momentary top-down language effects when people prepare to speak, but language interference, if any, occurs late in the viewing process and is therefore considered to be superficial. For others, language effects do not only occur in verbal behaviour but extend to non-verbal behaviours such as eye movements (cf. Soroli et al. 2019 for a review) and have an early effect on low-level processing (Meteyard et al. 2007). Using verbal (production) and non-verbal measures (eye tracking), we investigated how speakers of two typologically different languages (English, French) perceive motion events visually and describe them verbally. Assuming that language can only have superficial effects that occur late during processing, no language differences should be found during the first stages of visual exploration. If, on the other hand, language has deeper psychological reality, then differences should be found not only during late exploration and verbalization but also during early/low-level scene viewing. The verbal measures confirmed the typological differences across the groups: English speakers systematically encoded Path in peripheral devices and lexicalized Manner in the verb; French speakers preferred to lexicalize Path downplaying details related to Manner. With respect to eye movements, the participants of the two groups explored the scenes very differently: while both groups showed higher proportion of focal than ambient fixations, short saccades and long smooth pursuits were more frequent in the English data compared with the French participants who opted for ambient gazes with higher proportions of large saccade amplitudes at the earliest stages of visual exploration. The findings suggest that both verbal encoding and event perception can be affected to a great extent by language-specific features. Typological properties are not just surface forms that merely emerge in verbal behavior: They leave traces at the earliest stages of cognitive processing and thus have a psychological reality that should not be ignored. ReferencesMeteyard, L., Bahrami, B. & Vigliocco, G. (2007). Motion detection and motion verbs: language affects low-level visual perception. Psychological Science, 18(11), 1007–1013.Pannasch, S. & Velichkovsky, B. M. (2009). Distractor effect and saccade amplitudes: Further evidence on different modes of processing in free exploration of visual images. Visual Cognition, 17(6–7), 1109–1131.Papafragou, A., Hulbert, J. & Trueswell, J. (2008). Does Language Guide Event Perception? Evidence from Eye Movements. Cognition, 108(1), 155–184.Soroli E., Hickmann M. & Hendriks H. (2019). Casting an eye on motion events: eye tracking and its implications for linguistic typology. In M. Aurnague & D. Stosic (eds.), The semantics of dynamic space in French: Descriptive, experimental and formal studies on motion expression, 249–288. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.Talmy, L. (2006). The fundamental system of spatial schemas in language. In B. Hampe (ed.) From perception to meaning: Image Schemas in Cognitive Linguistics, 199–234. Mouton de Gruyter.
Keyword: [SCCO.LING]Cognitive science/Linguistics; [SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology; [SCCO]Cognitive science; [SDV.NEU.SC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Cognitive Sciences; [SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics; [SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology; ambient/focal attentional modes; eye movements; language effect; motion event perception
URL: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02277569
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20
Denouncing Sexual Violence: A Cross-Language and Cross-Cultural Analysis of #MeToo and #BalanceTonPorc
In: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 17th IFIP Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (INTERACT) ; https://hal.inria.fr/hal-02544580 ; 17th IFIP Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (INTERACT), Sep 2019, Paphos, Cyprus. pp.733-743, ⟨10.1007/978-3-030-29384-0_44⟩ (2019)
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