3,645 research outputs found
Infants segment words from songs - an EEG study
Children’s songs are omnipresent and highly attractive stimuli in infants’ input. Previous work suggests that infants process linguistic–phonetic information from simplified sung melodies. The present study investigated whether infants learn words from ecologically valid children’s songs. Testing 40 Dutch-learning 10-month-olds in a familiarization-then-test electroencephalography (EEG) paradigm, this study asked whether infants can segment repeated target words embedded in songs during familiarization and subsequently recognize those words in continuous speech in the test phase. To replicate previous speech work and compare segmentation across modalities, infants participated in both song and speech sessions. Results showed a positive event-related potential (ERP) familiarity effect to the final compared to the first target occurrences during both song and speech familiarization. No evidence was found for word recognition in the test phase following either song or speech. Comparisons across the stimuli of the present and a comparable previous study suggested that acoustic prominence and speech rate may have contributed to the polarity of the ERP familiarity effect and its absence in the test phase. Overall, the present study provides evidence that 10-month-old infants can segment words embedded in songs, and it raises questions about the acoustic and other factors that enable or hinder infant word segmentation from songs and speech
Competing periodicities in fractionally filled one-dimensional bands
We present a variable temperature Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and
Spectroscopy (STM and STS) study of the Si(553)-Au atomic chain reconstruction.
This quasi one-dimensional (1D) system undergoes at least two charge density
wave (CDW) transitions at low temperature, which can be attributed to
electronic instabilities in the fractionally-filled 1D bands of the
high-symmetry phase. Upon cooling, Si(553)-Au first undergoes a single-band
Peierls distortion, resulting in period doubling along the imaged chains. This
Peierls state is ultimately overcome by a competing tripleperiod CDW, which in
turn is accompanied by a x2 periodicity in between the chains. These locked-in
periodicities indicate small charge transfer between the nearly half-filled and
quarter-filled 1D bands. The presence and the mobility of atomic scale
dislocations in the x3 CDW state indicates the possibility of manipulating
phase solitons carrying a (spin,charge) of (1/2,+-e/3) or (0,+-2e/3).Comment: submitted, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Formation of atom wires on vicinal silicon
The formation of atomic wires via pseudomorphic step-edge decoration on
vicinal silicon surfaces has been analyzed for Ga on the Si(112) surface using
Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Density Functional Theory calculations. Based
on a chemical potential analysis involving more than thirty candidate
structures and considering various fabrication procedures, it is concluded that
pseudomorphic growth on stepped Si(112), both under equilibrium and
non-equilibrium conditions, must favor formation of Ga zig-zag chains rather
than linear atom chains. The surface is non-metallic and presents quasi-one
dimensional character in the lowest conduction band.Comment: submitte
Infants’ implicit rhyme perception in child songs and its relationship with vocabulary
Rhyme perception is an important predictor for future literacy. Assessing rhyme abilities, however, commonly requires children to make explicit rhyme judgements on single words. Here we explored whether infants already implicitly process rhymes in natural rhyming contexts (child songs) and whether this response correlates with later vocabulary size. In a passive listening ERP study, 10.5 month-old Dutch infants were exposed to rhyming and non-rhyming child songs. Two types of rhyme effects were analysed: (1) ERPs elicited by the first rhyme occurring in each song (rhyme sensitivity) and (2) ERPs elicited by rhymes repeating after the first rhyme in each song (rhyme repetition). Only for the latter a tentative negativity for rhymes from 0 to 200 ms after the onset of the rhyme word was found. This rhyme repetition effect correlated with productive vocabulary at 18 months-old, but not with any other vocabulary measure (perception at 10.5 or 18 months-old). While awaiting future replication, the study indicates precursors of phonological awareness already during infancy and with ecologically valid linguistic stimuli
Solution of the 2-star model of a network
The p-star model or exponential random graph is among the oldest and
best-known of network models. Here we give an analytic solution for the
particular case of the 2-star model, which is one of the most fundamental of
exponential random graphs. We derive expressions for a number of quantities of
interest in the model and show that the degenerate region of the parameter
space observed in computer simulations is a spontaneously symmetry broken phase
separated from the normal phase of the model by a conventional continuous phase
transition.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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