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karamachida

The Impact of Listening to Music on Cognitive Performance - 7 views

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    This article discusses the correlation between listening to music and cognition. They mainly used pop music and distinguished their test subjects between extraverts and introverts.
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    Music, even your favorite music, serves as a distraction when writing. You are better off listening to no music.
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    Some studies show that listening to music improves cognitive performance and focus. Certain rhythms and beats can cause shifts in emotion, which can ultimately affect the way that we comprehend things we read. In one of their studies, a controlled group of students studied with music that caused them to feel anxiety while another listened to music that evoked concentration. They also allowed a certain controlled group to listen to their favorite song and actually performed worse on their tests.
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    Listening to music for relaxation is common among students to counter the effects of stress or anxiety while completing difficult academic tasks. Some studies supporting this technique have shown that background music promotes cognitive performance while other studies have shown that listening to music while engaged in complex cognitive tasks can impair performance.
nicktortora16

When Your Punctuation Says it All (!) - 3 views

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    While we may be punctuating less as a whole (a recent study found that only 39 percent of college students punctuate the end of texts and 45 percent the end of instant messages), the punctuation we do use is more likely to be scrutinized. "Digital punctuation can carry more weight than traditional writing because it ends up conveying tone, rhythm and attitude rather than grammatical structure," said Ben Zimmer, a linguist and the executive editor of Vocabulary.com. "It can make even a lowly period become freighted with special significance."
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    The correct use of punctuation can really improve someone's opinion of you. The author of this piece decided to go out with someone based on their use of punctuation in a text message. The author also discusses how we have been conditioned to read certain punctuation marks and how they correlate to tone of voice in the text message. Punctuation marks are an important aspect of language that can help convey a meaning in a text.
brennakata24

How to spot AI-generated text - 1 views

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    This article talks about how AI-generated texts can be distinguished from human writing. It explains why it is essential for us to tell them apart and why it is still not able to perfectly mimic humans.
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    This article discusses some of the ways AI-generated text can differ from sentences written by humans.
corasaito24

The Invention of Writing in China - 0 views

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    This is a thesis paper exploring the various theories regarding the evolution of Chinese characters. It is highly unlikely that the Chinese took inspiration from the Mesopotamian cuneiform script, which may have formed at around the same period in time. The author makes the claim that while it is true that Chinese characters may have started off as drawings or pictographs, in the most ancient form of the script, the characters are far from any recognizable images of items. It is very likely that the Chinese script went through a similar evolution process as to the Mesopotamian cuneiform, but no such archeological evidence for this theory has been found.
tdemura-devore24

Why somepeopletalkveryfast and others … take … their … time − despite stereot... - 0 views

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    This article writes about the variation in speech rate. Some languages tend to have more syllables per a second. For example, French, Japanese, and Spanish speakers tend to have speak more syllables per a second (almost 8/s) than German, Vietnamese, or Mandarin speakers (roughly 5/s). Although stereotypes exist relating to speech rate, there is no connection between intelligence and speech rate. One significant and consistent variable in speech rate is age. Children speak slowly, then speed up until their 40s, then slow down again in their 50s and 60s.
tdemura-devore24

Listen up, ladies and gentlemen, guys and dudes: Terms of address can be a minefield, e... - 3 views

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    This article writes about address terms like "guys," "y'all," "bro," "dude," etc. They wrote about how masculine terms evolve tend to lose their gender over-time. This is the case because they are seen as more powerful and therefore more acceptable to be used for non-male addressees. People may take offense to being addressed as "ladies" because "ladies" puts attention towards their femininity when gender is usually irrelevant to the situation.
johdd22

In Literature, Women are Beautiful and Sexy, Men are Rational and Brave | aka: did you ... - 3 views

http://www.sci-news.com/othersciences/linguistics/literature-women-men-07558.html

words biases sexism research language writing books

started by johdd22 on 19 May 22 no follow-up yet
solomonlee24

Teaching Sexuality Through Media - 0 views

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    A writing of Bowling Green University professor Becca Cragin in which she explores the various ways sexuality is taught in the media, classrooms, and other social settings and what have been, in her experience, the most effective methods to inform others on the sensitive topic.
brixkozuki24

The Language Shift - 0 views

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    This article describes the situation of the language shift in Ireland from Irish Gaelic to English. It discusses the dilemma poets and writers face when choosing to write in the native tongue of the land or English.
tdemura-devore24

An Investigation into the Factors that Affect Miscommunication between Pilots and Air T... - 0 views

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    This article writes general information about the standard measures taken to ensure clear communication, as it is very important in aviation. These measures include speaking slowly (under 100 wpm), highly coded language, and the difficulties that non-native speakers have with Aviation English. The topic that the article studies is the different errors accented and native speakers commit when communication with air traffic controllers.
tdemura-devore24

An English Town Drops Apostrophes From Street Signs. Some Aren't Happy. - 0 views

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    This article writes about how there is a trend for towns to drop apostrophes from street signs because of database lookup issues. Many people were against it because they felt like it was a loss of culture or teaching kids bad grammar. Some do not mind the change because people still understand what it is trying to say.
cbisho24

Shakespeare's language | Royal Shakespeare Company - 0 views

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    This article talks about how Shakespeare was one of the first people to write down words, created new ones and even used existing words differently than how they used it.
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