2,729 research outputs found
The application of aerospace technology to biomedical problems Quarterly report, 15 Jun. - 31 Aug. 1969
Applications of aerospace technology to biomedical problem
Unique Hue Judgment in Different Languages: A Comparison of Korean and English
Three experiments investigated unique hues (Hering, 1878) in native Korean and English speakers. Many recent studies have shown that color categories differ across languages and cultures, challenging the proposal that a particular set of color categories is universal and potentially innate. Unique hue judgments, and selection of the best examples of those categories have also been found to vary within an English-speaking population. Here we investigated unique hue judgments and possible discrepancies between unique hue and best example judgments in two languages. Experiment 1 found that the loci of unique hues were similar for English and Korean speakers. Experiment 2 replicated and extended this result, using both single and double hue scaling. Experiment 3 showed that, in both cultures, unique hue choices depended on the range, and organization of the array from which participants chose. The results of this study suggest that unique hue judgments vary according to the experimental task, in both language
Relatively Speaking: An Account of the Relationship between Language and Thought in the Color Domain
This chapter is divided into six sections. The first sets out the background of the debate about the relationship between language and cognition in the color domain. The second explains how recent studies of color recognition employing visual search tasks have clarified this relationship. This section also argues that these studies point to the existence of two separate systems that influence perception and categorization of color; one of which is linguistically based, and one of which is not affected by language. The third section critically evaluates recent claims that there are similarities between color terms in the world's languages that point to the existence of color universals. The fourth section examines children's color term acquisition in an attempt to trace the mechanisms bywhich color categories are acquired. It also discusses whether infants have an innate prepartitioned organization of color categories that is overridden during the learning process. The two final sections outline some outstanding questions, note some methodological constraints on the conclusions that can be drawn from the accumulated evidence, and argue that much more empirical investigation is still needed in this field
Biomedical applications of aerospace- generated technology Quarterly report, 1 Dec. 1968 - 28 Feb. 1969
Biomedical applications team for transferring aerospace generated technology to nonaerospace biomedical fiel
Squaring the Circle: The Cultural Relativity of 'Good' Shape
The Gestalt theorists of the early twentieth century proposed a psychological primacy for circles, squares and triangles over other shapes. They described them as 'good' shapes and the Gestalt premise has been widely accepted. Rosch (1973), for example, suggested that shape categories formed around these 'natural' prototypes irrespective of the paucity of shape terms in a language. Rosch found that speakers of a language lacking terms for any geometric shape nevertheless learnt paired-associates to these 'good' shapes more easily than to asymmetric variants. We question these empirical data in the light of the accumulation of recent evidence in other perceptual domains that language affects categorization. A cross-cultural investigation sought to replicate Rosch's findings with the Himba of Northern Namibia who also have no terms in their language for the supposedly basic shapes of circle, square and triangle. A replication of Rosch (1973) found no advantage for these 'good' shapes in the organization of categories. It was concluded that there is no necessary salience for circles, squares and triangles. Indeed, we argue for the opposite because these shapes are rare in nature. The general absence of straight lines and symmetry in the perceptual environment should rather make circles, squares and triangles unusual and, therefore, less likely to be used as prototypes in categorization tasks. We place shape as one of the types of perceptual input (in philosophical terms, 'vague') that is readily susceptible to effects of language variation
Free-Sorting of Colors Across Cultures: Are there Universal Grounds for Grouping?
These studies examined naming and free-sorting behavior by informants speaking a wide range of languages, from both industrialized and traditional cultures. Groups of informants, whose color vocabularies varied from 5 to 12 basic terms, were given an unconstrained color grouping task to investigate whether there are systematic differences between cultures in grouping behavior that mirror linguistic differences and, if there are not, what underlying principles might explain any universal tendencies. Despite large differences in color vocabulary, there were substantial similarities in grouping behavior across language groups, and substantial within-language variation across informants. It seems that all informants group stimuli based on some criterion of perceptual similarity, but those with large color vocabularies are more likely to group stimuli in line with their basic color terms. The data are best accounted for by a hybrid system that combines a universal principle of grouping by similarity with culture-specific category salience
Measurements of the Total Cross Section for the Scattering of Polarized Neutrons from Polarized He
Measurements of polarized neutron--polarized He scattering are reported.
The target consisted of cryogenically-polarized solid He, thickness 0.04
atom/b and polarization 40%. The longitudinal and transverse total
cross-section differences and were measured
for incident neutron energies 2-8 MeV. The results are compared to phase-shift
predictions based on four different analyses of n-He scattering. The best
agreement is obtained with a recent R-matrix analysis of A=4 scattering and
reaction data, lending strong suport to the He level scheme obtained in
that analysis.Comment: 19 pages RevTeX style, 5 postscript figures, excepted for publication
in the Aug96 issue of Phys. Rev. C. Revised version includes correct version
of 1 postscript figur
Measurements at low energies of the polarization-transfer coefficient Kyy' for the reaction 3H(p,n)3He at 0 degrees
Measurements of the transverse polarization coefficient Kyy' for the reaction
3H(p,n)3He are reported for outgoing neutron energies of 1.94, 5.21, and 5.81
MeV. This reaction is important both as a source of polarized neutrons for
nuclear physics experiments, and as a test of theoretical descriptions of the
nuclear four-body system. Comparison is made to previous measurements,
confirming the 3H(p,n)3He reaction can be used as a polarized neutron source
with the polarization known to an accuracy of approximately 5%. Comparison to
R-matrix theory suggests that the sign of the 3F3 phase-shift parameter is
incorrect. Changing the sign of this parameter dramatically improves the
agreement between theory and experiment.Comment: 12 pages, RevTeX, 5 eps figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Sufficient Conditions for Fast Switching Synchronization in Time Varying Network Topologies
In previous work, empirical evidence indicated that a time-varying network
could propagate sufficient information to allow synchronization of the
sometimes coupled oscillators, despite an instantaneously disconnected
topology. We prove here that if the network of oscillators synchronizes for the
static time-average of the topology, then the network will synchronize with the
time-varying topology if the time-average is achieved sufficiently fast. Fast
switching, fast on the time-scale of the coupled oscillators, overcomes the
descychnronizing decoherence suggested by disconnected instantaneous networks.
This result agrees in spirit with that of where empirical evidence suggested
that a moving averaged graph Laplacian could be used in the master-stability
function analysis. A new fast switching stability criterion here-in gives
sufficiency of a fast-switching network leading to synchronization. Although
this sufficient condition appears to be very conservative, it provides new
insights about the requirements for synchronization when the network topology
is time-varying. In particular, it can be shown that networks of oscillators
can synchronize even if at every point in time the frozen-time network topology
is insufficiently connected to achieve synchronization.Comment: Submitted to SIAD
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