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Interactive Hawai`i Place Name Map - 0 views

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    Interested in finding out the meaning of place names in Hawai`i? Check this map out.
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The Language of Persuasion - 1 views

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    Suppose you are preparing for a potentially contentious meeting with someone with whom you've worked closely for years. She could be a fellow manager you want to convince to support an initiative but whose position in the matter differs from yours: how do you convince that person? While coercion and logic are not effective, "relationship-raising" is. According to a 2002 psychology study by Oriña, Wood, and Simpson, before making a request for change, mention your existing relationship with the other person and any mutually-shared goals/objectives, before delivering your appeal. " Or, in the most streamlined version of the relationship-raising approach, incorporate the pronouns "we," "our," and "us" into the request. The outcome? The relationship partners exposed to this technique shifted significantly in the requested direction. Similarly, in a British longitudinal study of effective professional negotiators, researchers found that the most successful bargainers spent 400% more time looking for areas of mutuality (e.g., shared interests) than did their mediocre counterparts.
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Yes, I can use chopsticks: the everyday 'microaggressions' that grind us down | The Jap... - 5 views

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    Interesting article on racialized "microaggressions" directed towards gaijin living in Japan.

Bilingual - 2 views

started by Kalen Chong on 16 May 12 no follow-up yet
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The Neuroscience of Your Brain On Fiction - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    Interesting follow-up to the handout on reading creating simulations in the brain. The brain, it seems, does not make much of a distinction between reading about an experience and encountering it in real life; in each case, the same neurological regions are stimulated. Reading provides a strong simulation of reality.
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Language and the Brain - 0 views

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    I found this really interesting while researching for my field research project. It talks about how humans have the ability to read words that are spelled incorrectly.

Speech and Communication disorders - 1 views

started by Nicholas Vore on 22 May 12 no follow-up yet
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Subtractive Bilingualism Proven - 0 views

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    Interesting experiment done on various Inuit populations.
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BBC News - Brain changes seen in cabbies who take "The Knowledge" - 1 views

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    "They scanned a total of 79 trainees, just before they started to learn the "All-London" Knowledge [memorizing "25,000 streets and 20,000 landmarks and places of interest"], which can take between two and four years to complete. ... those who had attempted the Knowledge had increased the size of the posterior hippocampus - the rear section of the hippocampus which lies at the front of the brain. ... this advantage appeared to come at a price, as the non-cabbies outperformed them in other memory tasks, such as recalling complex visual information." The full study: http://www.pnas.org/content/97/8/4398.full.pdf+html
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Violent Video Games Alter Brain Function in Young Men - Indiana University School of Me... - 10 views

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    "Sustained changes in the region of the brain associated with cognitive function and emotional control were found in young adult men after one week of playing violent video games ... The results showed that after one week of violent game play, the video game group members showed less activation in the left inferior frontal lobe during the emotional Stroop task and less activation in the anterior cingulate cortex during the counting Stroop task."
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    Several Words students were looking for such a study. I am interested in finding a version of the emotional stroop test that is used.
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    Here's some basic information about the Stroop test they used, but I can't find anything more detailed: "During fMRI, the participants completed 2 modified Stroop tasks. During the emotional Stroop task, subjects pressed buttons matching the color of visually presented words. Words indicating violent actions were interspersed with nonviolent action words in a pseudorandom order. During the counting Stroop task, subjects completed a cognitive inhibition counting task." - http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/754368
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    Actually, there are some studies just about emotional Stroop tests that sound similar to the one in the violent video games study. This looks like a good presentation about how emotional Stroop tests work: http://frank.mtsu.edu/~sschmidt/Cognitive/Emotion1.pdf This one talks about why those Stroop tests work: "In this task, participants name the colors in which words are printed, and the words vary in their relevance to each theme of psychopathology.The authors review research showing that patients are often slower to name the color of a word associated with concerns relevant to their clinical condition." - http://brainimaging.waisman.wisc.edu/~perlman/papers/stickiness/WilliamsEmoStroop1996.pdf This is a meta-analysis of emotional Stroop test studies that describes (actually, it's critical of) how such studies are done: http://www.psych.wustl.edu/coglab/publications/LarsenMercerBalota2006.pdf
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    Thanks, Ryan! I will take a look at these.
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Speaking American - A History of English in the United States - By Richard W. Bailey - ... - 6 views

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    An interesting article of how Americans have tinkered with English and how they believe their way is the proper one.
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New social media? Same old, same old, say Stanford experts - 1 views

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    "Two scholars of the 17th and 18th centuries say the earlier era prefigured the "information overload," with its own equivalents of Twitter, Facebook and Google+. Social networks have been key to almost all revolutions - from 1789 to the Arab Spring." Also includes an short, interesting video interview with the researchers.
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How the States Got Their Shapes - Accents and Difference in Language - 6 views

shared by Parker Tuttle on 13 Feb 12 - No Cached
Parker Tuttle liked it
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    If any of you like History Channel, this would be an interesting video to watch. This film explains why American citizens have different accents and how their take on the American language has affected the shapes of our states. Note: This video does not contain great quality in terms of sound or picture but is still a cool video to watch if you have time :)

what affect does language have? - 0 views

started by Kalen Chong on 24 Feb 12 no follow-up yet
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Formal vs Informal French - 2 views

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    An interesting guide to French grammar...This website explains how the French distinguish between "tu" and "vous", which are both translated as "you", depending on who they are adressing. How did this develop? Who decides? Why do some languages (like French) have this system, and others don't?
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A Picture of Language - 0 views

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    Interesting. Analyzed the way children learn language called parsing.
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"'Friend' is a Verb," in the APA Newsletter on Philosophy and Computers (Fall 2012) - 0 views

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    In this essay, D.E. Whittkower, in the Dept. of Philosophy at Old Dominion University, attempts to establish that social media communications constitute a secondary literacy, which shares many of the features of spoken language ("orality"). Whittkower's discussion of Facebook, in particular, is thought-provoking; he suggests that the site is a "remarkably well-suited site for the activity of friendship," providing opportunities for relationships and interests to grow and intensify and for participants to engage in linguistic and post-linguistic social grooming.
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Why Chaucer Said Ax Instead of Ask and Why Some Still Do - 0 views

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    Interesting NPR story on the use of "ax"--apparently not simply the oft-maligned African-American Vernacular English version of "ask". That particular pronunciation of the word has a more distinguished pedigree, dating back to Chaucer.
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Federal Bureaucrats Declare 'Hunger Games' More Complex Than 'Grapes of Wrath' - 0 views

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    Interesting article on setting a standardized scale for literary complexity.
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If Your Shrink is a Bot, How Do You Respond? - 1 views

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    An interesting story--my students, you might recall Sheryl Turkle of MIT referencing robot therapists in her TED talk. USC has developed a robot therapist, Ellie, designed to talk to people who are struggling emotionally, and to take their measure in a way no human can. Originally developed to work with military PTSD patients, Ellie's purpose: to gather information and provide real human therapists detailed analysis of patients' movements and vocal features, in order to give new insights into people struggling with emotional issues. The body, face and voice express things that words sometimes obscure. Ellie's makers believe that her ability to do this will ultimately revolutionize American mental health care.
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