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Perception --- Human information processing --- Information, Traitement de l', chez l'homme --- Congresses --- Congrès --- 159.93 --- -Perception --- -Supraliminal perception --- Cognition --- Apperception --- Senses and sensation --- Thought and thinking --- Information processing, Human --- Bionics --- Information theory in psychology --- Zintuiglijke waarnemingen --- Congresses. --- -Zintuiglijke waarnemingen --- 159.93 Zintuiglijke waarnemingen --- -159.93 Zintuiglijke waarnemingen --- Supraliminal perception --- Congrès
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Complexity approaches, developed in physics and biology for almost two decades, show today a huge potential for investigating challenging issues in Humanities and Cognitive Sciences and obviously in the study of language(s). Theoretical approaches that integrate self-organization, emergence, non linearity, adaptive systems, information theory, etc., have already been developed to provide a unifying framework that sheds new light on the duality between linguistic diversity on the one hand and unique cognitive capacity of language processing on the other hand. Nevertheless, most of the linguistics literature written in this framework focuses on the syntactic level addressed through computational complexity or performance optimization, while other linguistic components have been somewhat neglected.In this context, the proposed volume draws on an interdisciplinary sketch of the phonetics-phonology interface in the light of complexity. Composed of several first-order contributions, it will consequently be a significant landmark at the time of the rise of several projects linking complexity and linguistics around the world.
Complexity (Linguistics) --- Phonetics. --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Phonology --- Articulatory phonetics --- Orthoepy --- Linguistics --- Speech --- Linguistic analysis (Linguistics) --- Phonology. --- Philology --- Grammar, Comparative and general Phonology
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Phonetically reduced forms are plentiful, theoretically interesting, and a key challenge for automatic speech recognition systems. Yet canonical forms are still central to models of production and perception. Drawing from different fields and diverse languages, this volume brings new insights to the debate on abstractions and canonical forms in linguistics: their psychological reality, descriptive adequacy, and technical implementability.
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