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How Do We Know That We Know? The Accessibility Model
How Do We Know That We Know? The Accessibility Model

... The assumption, then, is that subjects have direct access to the information pertaining to the presence of the solicited item in memory and that this information appears in a ready-made format. At first sight, this solution to the question of how one knows that one knows appears to raise the homuncu ...
Updating Empiricist Mentalist Semantics
Updating Empiricist Mentalist Semantics

... published in 1690. Whether Locke intended to give a semantic theory or rather a theory of knowledge is not entirely clear, but his work includes at least some proposals that might be characterized as components of an empiricist mentalist semantic theory. Just as other contemporary philosophers, Lock ...
The interaction of focus particles and information structure in
The interaction of focus particles and information structure in

Memory, Concepts, and Mental Representations
Memory, Concepts, and Mental Representations

... • Crisp and precise definitions can be hard, if not impossible, to find because of all the exceptions (e.g. not all cats have 4 legs; not all birds fly) • Under the assumption that concepts are effected by experience, concepts probably gradually develop, going through subtle changes over time. The f ...
Inferential Knowledge of the Occurrence of Something
Inferential Knowledge of the Occurrence of Something

... In very few, but significant, passages, Dharmakīrti expressed by the term saṃbhavānumāna an inferential knowledge concerning the occurrence of something. In one passage, in particular, the subject under discussion are the mental qualities. The paper will expose the use of saṃbhavānumāna in Dharmakīr ...
Brain Teasers - Dartmouth Math Home
Brain Teasers - Dartmouth Math Home

... Therefore, we would recommend that future projects be performed on a large population of students from many different grade-levels and institutions, that a more time-oriented cognitive task be chosen, and that the subjects be truly isolated in the testing situation. ...
EXEMPT CATEGORY CLAIMED
EXEMPT CATEGORY CLAIMED

... office; or (ii) federal statue(s) require(s) without exception that the confidentiality of the personally identifiable information will be maintained throughout the research and thereafter. Research which deals with sensitive aspects of the subject’s own behavior such as illegal conduct, drug use, s ...
1

Subject (documents)

In library and information science documents (such as books, articles and pictures) are classified and searched by subject - as well as by other attributes such as author, genre and document type. This makes ""subject"" a fundamental term in this field. Library and information specialists assign subject labels to documents to make them findable. There are many ways to do this and in general there is not always consensus about which subject should be assigned to a given document. To optimize subject indexing and searching, we need to have a deeper understanding of what a subject is. The question: ""what is to be understood by the statement 'document A belongs to subject category X'?"" has been debated in the field for more than 100 years (cf., below).
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