The way in which information about proportions, amounts, frequencies, probabilities, degrees of conยฎdence, and risk is portrayed in natural language is not neutral, but reยฏects presuppositions and assumed norms. In this paper we present a review of evidence in support of this position. We show that
โฆ LIBER โฆ
Glossolalic speech from a psycholinguistic perspective
โ Scribed by H. A. Osser; P. F. Ostwald; B. MacWhinney; R. L. Casey
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1973
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 577 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0090-6905
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
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Contents: Preface. I. Concurrency. 1. A concurrent semantics for concurrent constraint programs via contextual nets (Ugo Montanari and Francesca Rossi). 2. Object-oriented concurrent constraint programming in Oz (Martin Henz, Gert Smolka, and J6rg W/irtz). II. Reactive systems. 3. Constraint program