26 research outputs found

    Phonemes:Lexical access and beyond

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    Experiencing Museums. A Qualitative and Quantitative Description About Igers’ Narration of an Exhibit Space

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    The purpose of this study is to investigate the Instagram users’ experience when they have to exhibit spaces, such as museum or squares, in which there are artwork and artefacts. We carry out a qualitative and quantitative analysis starting from a collection of 56,000 posts. The mined resources allowed us to recognized 21 groups of images representing different relationships between Igers (e.g. Instagram users who publish their shots on thematic groups reserved for a specific topic), the exhibit space and the exhibited objects. Results indicate that by re-categorizing and re-configuring the museum environment, Igers contribute to the creation of particular context and build their own narratives from their visits. Our analysis stimulates some reflections about the information management of cultural heritage institutions: taking in consideration the visitors’ perception could enrich and optimize the exhibition planning, in order to improve the fruition of art and its digital storytelling

    Using Markets to Measure Pre-War Threat Assessments: The Nordic Countries facing World War II

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    Nordic historians have asserted for a long time that in the Nordic countries only few people, if any, perceived increased threats of war prior to the World War II outbreak. This would explain, and possibly excuse, why their governments did not mobilize their armies until it was too late. This paper questions this established notion by deriving new estimates of widely held war threat assessments from the fluctuations of sovereign market yields collected from all Nordic bond markets at this period. Our results show that the Nordic contemporaries indeed perceived significant war risk increases around the time of major war-related geopolitical events. While these findings hence question some, but not all, of the standard Nordic World War II historiography, they also demonstrate the value of analyzing historical market prices to reassess the often tacit views and opinions of large groups of people in the past

    Imagining organization through metaphor and metonymy: Unpacking the process-entity paradox

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    Within organization studies, Morgan’s seminal book Images of Organization has laid the groundwork for an entire research tradition of studying organizational phenomena through metaphorical lenses. Within Morgan’s list of images, that of ‘organization as flux and transformation’ stands out in two important regards. First, it has a strong metonymic dimension, as it implies that organizations consist of and are constituted by processes. Second, the image invites scholars to comprehend organizations as a paradoxical relation between organization (an entity) and process (a non-entity). In this article, we build on Morgan’s work and argue that flux-based images of organization vary in their ability to deal with the process-entity paradox, depending on the degree to which its metaphorical and metonymic dimensions are intertwined. We also examine three offsprings of the flux image: Organization as Becoming, Organization as Practice, and Organization as Communication. We compare these images regarding their metaphor–metonymy dynamics, the directionality of their process of imagination, and their degree of concreteness. We contribute to Morgan’s work, and to organization studies more generally, by offering an analytical grid for unpacking different processes of imagining organization. Moreover, our grid helps explain why images of organization vary in their ability to comprehend organizations in dialectical and paradoxical ways

    Minimal influence of reduced Arctic sea ice on coincident cold winters in mid-latitudes

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    Observations show that reduced regional sea-ice cover is coincident with cold mid-latitude winters on interannual timescales. However, it remains unclear whether these observed links are causal, and model experiments suggest that they might not be. Here we apply two independent approaches to infer causality from observations and climate models and to reconcile these sources of data. Models capture the observed correlations between reduced sea ice and cold mid-latitude winters, but only when reduced sea ice coincides with anomalous heat transfer from the atmosphere to the ocean, implying that the atmosphere is driving the loss. Causal inference from the physics-based approach is corroborated by a lead–lag analysis, showing that circulation-driven temperature anomalies precede, but do not follow, reduced sea ice. Furthermore, no mid-latitude cooling is found in modelling experiments with imposed future sea-ice loss. Our results show robust support for anomalous atmospheric circulation simultaneously driving cold mid-latitude winters and mild Arctic conditions, and reduced sea ice having a minimal influence on severe mid-latitude winters
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