134,515 research outputs found
PP licensing in nominalizations
In this paper we compare the distribution of PPs introducing external arguments in nominalizations with PPs introducing external arguments in the verbal domain. We show that several mismatches exist between the behavior of PPs in nominalizations and PPs in the verbal domain. This leads us to suggest that while PPs in the verbal domain are licensed by functional structure alone, within the nominal domain, PPs can also be licensed via an interplay of the encyclopaedic meaning of the root involved and the properties of the preposition itself. This second mechanism kicks in in the absence of functional structure
Medial adjunct PPs in English: implications for the syntax of sentential negation
This paper provides evidence that medial adjunct PPs in English are possible. On the basis of corpus data, it is shown that sentence-medial adjunct PPs are not unacceptable and are attested. Our corpus data also reveal a sharp asymmetry between negative and non-negative adjunct PPs. The analysis of the corpus revealed the following pattern: Non-negative adjunct PPs such as at that time resist medial position and instead tend to be postverbal; negative adjunct PPs such as at no time appear medially rather than postverbally. In the second part of the paper, we broaden the empirical domain and include negative complement PPs in the discussion. It is shown that when it comes to the licensing of question tags, English negative complement PPs, which are postverbal, pattern differently from postverbal negative adjunct PPs. That is, sentences with a postverbal negative adjunct PP pattern with negative sentences in taking a positive question tag, while sentences containing a postverbal negative argument PP pattern with affirmative sentences in taking a negative tag. To account for the observed adjunct-argument asymmetry in the licensing of question tags, we propose that clauses are typed for polarity and we explore the hypothesis that a polarity head in the left periphery of the clause is crucially involved in the licensing of sentential negation
Testing for New Physics: Neutrinos and the Primordial Power Spectrum
We test the sensitivity of neutrino parameter constraints from combinations
of CMB and LSS data sets to the assumed form of the primordial power spectrum
(PPS) using Bayesian model selection. Significantly, none of the tested
combinations, including recent high-precision local measurements of
and cluster abundances, indicate a signal for massive neutrinos
or extra relativistic degrees of freedom. For PPS models with a large, but
fixed number of degrees of freedom, neutrino parameter constraints do not
change significantly if the location of any features in the PPS are allowed to
vary, although neutrino constraints are more sensitive to PPS features if they
are known a priori to exist at fixed intervals in . Although there is
no support for a non-standard neutrino sector from constraints on both neutrino
mass and relativistic energy density, we see surprisingly strong evidence for
features in the PPS when it is constrained with data from Planck 2015, SZ
cluster counts, and recent high-precision local measurements of .
Conversely combining Planck with matter power spectrum and BAO measurements
yields a much weaker constraint. Given that this result is sensitive to the
choice of data this tension between SZ cluster counts, Planck and
measurements is likely an indication of unmodeled systematic
bias that mimics PPS features, rather than new physics in the PPS or neutrino
sector.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, 8 tables; matches version published in JCA
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Salient selves in uncertain futures
We examined possible selves during three distinct periods of uncertainty. Cancer survivors (Study 1a) and survivorsâ romantic partners (Study 1b) rated the salience of possible selves in which the cancer did (negative possible self; NPS) and did not (positive possible self; PPS) return. Study 2 mapped PPS and NPS salience throughout the four-month wait for bar exam results. Study 3 experimentally primed possible selves among participants awaiting medical test results. PPS salience correlated positively, and NPS negatively, with indicators of health and well-being, and inducing focus on oneâs NPS led to greater negative emotion and worry compared to a PPS induction, but not less positive emotion. These results illustrate the well-being implications of possible selves during periods of uncertainty
German particle verbs and pleonastic prepositions
This paper discusses the behaviour of German particle verbs formed by two-way prepositions in combination with pleonastic PPs including the verb particle as a preposition. These particle verbs have a characteristic feature: some of them license directional prepositional phrases in the accusative, some only allow for locative
PPs in the dative, and some particle verbs can occur with PPs in the accusative and in the dative. Directional particle verbs together with directional PPs present an additional problem: the particle and the preposition in the PP seem to provide redundant information. The paper gives an overview of the semantic verb classes inuencing this phenomenon, based on corpus data, and explains the underlying reasons for the behaviour of the particle verbs. We also show how the restrictions on particle verbs and pleonastic PPs can be expressed in a grammar theory like Lexical Functional Grammar (LFG)
Development and performance of power processor system for 2-gigahertz, 200-watt amplifier for communications technology satellite
The electrical and environmental requirements for a power processor system (PPS) designed to supply the appropriate voltages and currents to a 200-watt traveling wave tube (TWT) for a communication technology satellite is described. A block diagram of the PPS, the interface requirements between the PPS and spacecraft, the interface requirements between the PPS and 200-watt TWT, and the environmental requirements of the PPS are presented. Also included are discussions of protection circuits, interlocking sequences, and transient requirements. Predictions of the flight performance, based on ground test data, are provided
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