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brandontakao15

Music Education Improves Students' Academic Performance, But Active Participation Is Required - 0 views

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    This article discusses the effect of music education on academic performance and language.
anonymous

Why linguistics? - 0 views

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    Summary of what linguistics is and its importance.
Aleina Radovan

Antisocial Networking? - 3 views

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    An article explaining how technology affects teenagers social communication and friendships
Lynn Takeshita

Is Language a Technology? - 5 views

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    How language may actually be a form of technology
caitlingreen15

Bird Brains - 0 views

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    This article and video explains how recent research on bird brains could give us clues as to how human language evolved.
dsobol15

Why Wait? The Science Behind Procrastination - 1 views

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    Believe it or not, the Internet did not give rise to procrastination. People have struggled with habitual hesitation going back to ancient civilizations. The Greek poet Hesiod, writing around 800 B.C., cautioned not to "put your work off till tomorrow and the day after." The Roman consul Cicero called procrastination "hateful" in the conduct of affairs.
nicktortora16

Spotting Lies: Listen, Don't Look - 0 views

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    Contrary to popular belief, liars don't actually give many visual giveaways to their lies. The better cues are in their speech. The common misconceptions about liars and their body language are actually signs of anxiety. More often than not, truth-tellers are assumed to be liars because they are anxious to recount the correct details
nicktortora16

The Language of Lies - 0 views

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    Despite contrary belief, there are not many tip-offs to whether or not someone is lying. There are not usually any clear indicators that can tell you right off the bat if someone is lying. There are different pieces to be put together. There is a whole language to lying and understanding what liars say is just the first step.
dsobol15

How to Detect a Liar - 2 views

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    Parents teach their children to lie. The teaching process is subtle but just as effective as if they had sent their children to formal classes in deception. How many times have parents told their kids "Look me in the eye and then tell me what you did?"
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    Research demonstrates that liars maintain more deliberate eye contact than do truthful people.
tylermakabe15

Txtng Rules - 0 views

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    I'm surprised by how much texting and "fingered speech" has evolved throughout the years. "lol" doesn't literally mean "laugh out loud" anymore. In a way, it just evokes more empathy of a certain topic. Just like in the Japanese language, "ね"at the end of a sentence adds emphasis on the subject.
alanasilva

Researchers discover environment influences children's ability to form, comprehend complex sentences - 0 views

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    This article explains how children who are raised in an environment with lots of social interaction, and a wide range of vocabulary, tend to have a higher language comprehension.
amywestphalen15

Swifty Teaches Apple's New Programming Language On Your iPhone - 1 views

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    Last summer, Apple surprised almost everyone at WWDC with the announcement of Swift, a new programming language for iOS and Mac development. The language feels like something Apple would invent. Like several of the languages currently popular in web development, it has a concise, readable syntax that's easier to pick up than Apple's older language, Objective-C.
Lara Cowell

Reading Harry Potter: Carnegie Mellon Researchers Identify Brain Regions That Encode Words, Grammar, Character Development-Carnegie Mellon News - Carnegie Mellon University - 1 views

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    Wednesday, November 26, 2014 By Byron Spice / 412-268-9068 PITTSBURGH-Some people say that reading "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" taught them the importance of friends, or that easy decisions are seldom right. Carnegie Mellon University scientists used a chapter of that book to learn a different lesson: identifying what different regions of the brain are doing when people read.
nikkirousslang15

Steven Pinker's Bad Grammar - The New Yorker - 1 views

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    When it comes to language, many people distinguish between "prescriptivism" (the idea that correct usage should be defined by authorities) and "descriptivism" (the idea that any way a lot of people use the language is correct).
alexcooper15

Lost in Translation: An Illustrated Catalog of Beautiful Untranslatable Words from Around the World - 1 views

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    by Maria Popova The euphoria experienced as you begin to fall in love, the pile of books bought but unread, the coffee "threefill," and other lyrical linguistic delights. "Words belong to each other," Virginia Woolf said in the only surviving recording of her voice, a magnificent meditation on the beauty of language.
nikkirousslang15

Dogs Hang on Our Every Spoken Word : DNews - 1 views

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    Dogs mull over human speech much the way we do, and they try hard to decipher what we're saying to them, a new study suggests. The research, published in the journal Current Biology, shows that our dogs are riveted to our words.
dominiquehicks15

My View: Why language study should be part of your college experience - 0 views

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    I can relate and I completely agree.
Andrea Liu

'Lost' first language leaves a mark on the brain: study - 0 views

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    A study has shown that children who were born in China but adopted and raised in France picked up on Mandarin tones, even if they no longer understood the language.
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