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Lisa Stewart

YouTube - Joel Burns tells gay teens "it gets better" - 2 views

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    Please watch.
Ryan Catalani

In Search of Music's Biological Roots - 3 views

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    For both English and Mandarin speakers, the major formants in vowel sounds paralleled the intervals for the most commonly used intervals in music worldwide, namely the octave, the fifth, the fourth, the major third, and the major sixth. To Purves, the upshot is a simple truth: "There's a biological basis for music, and that biological basis is the similarity between music and speech," he says. "That's the reason that we like music." "Whenever we've heard happy speech, we've tended to hear major-scale tonal ratios," Purves says. "Whenever we've heard sad speech, minor tones tend to be involved."
Ryan Catalani

Op-Ed Contributor - The Magical Properties of Everyday Numbers - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "A physicist named M. F. M. Osborne noticed that stock prices tended to cluster around numbers ending in zero and five. Why? Well, on the one hand, most people have five fingers, and on the other hand, most people have five more. [...] As it turns out, in well over 100 languages, the words that denote bigness are made with bigger sounds."
Ryan Catalani

Futurity.org - Human speech is music to our ears - 7 views

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    "Humans may love music, biologically speaking, because it mimics the sounds of our own voices. Neuroscientists say the use of 12 tone intervals in the music of many human cultures is rooted in the physics of how our vocal anatomy produces speech and conveys emotion." The study: http://purveslab.net/publications/bowling_purves_2009.pdf
Ryan Catalani

Language Log: The snow words myth: progress at last - 0 views

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    "The idea that Eskimos have many more words for snow than English speakers is a myth." See also: Language Log's collection of posts on the topic: http://j.mp/dnmNNc
Ryan Catalani

Can mirror-reading reverse the flow of time? - 2 views

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    "In cultures with left-to-right orthography (e.g., English-speaking cultures) time appears to flow rightward, but in cultures with right-to-left orthography (e.g., Arabic-speaking cultures) time flows leftward." Participants who read regular text tended to press the left button for past-oriented phrases and the right button for future-oriented phrases, but participants who read mirrored text did the opposite.
Ryan Catalani

Language Log » Tweet this - 0 views

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    "The verb tweet is gradually developing its own syntax according to what it means and what its users regard as its combinatory possibilities. That is a really interesting, though unintended, large-scale natural experiment in how syntactic change works."
Ryan Catalani

Women apologize more than men - 7 views

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    "The women reported giving 37% more apologies than the men did... The diary data suggest that women offer more apologies than men do because women have a lower threshold for what constitutes offensive behavior... [T]here was no gender difference in how men and women apologized." A comprehensive study, unfortunately not available online, although this post is pretty detailed.
Ryan Catalani

Studying Young Children's Use of Ironic Speech - NYTimes.com - 4 views

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    "It turns out that very young children [4-6 yrs] can understand and even use ironic speech, even if they cannot describe what they have done to a researcher."
Nicholas Luna

Skinner Reinforcement Theory - 3 views

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    Negative vs. Positive Language
Lisa Stewart

A Fluent Backward Talker - 2 views

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    Describes a study of a 31-year-old with an excellent ability to reverse speech sounds quickly and fluently
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