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Confucianism, Social Norms and Household Saving Rates in China
Confucianism, Social Norms and Household Saving Rates in China

... children as a substitute for life-cycle saving. Empirically, Banerjee et. al. (2010) show that families with sons tend to save less than those with only daughters, a finding that’s consistent with the life-cycle hypothesis and in line with the Confucian tradition in which adult sons have more obliga ...
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Is perception informationally encapsulated? The issue of the theory-ladenness of perception
Is perception informationally encapsulated? The issue of the theory-ladenness of perception

... be. The reason is that these theories require that the perceptual analysis have access to background knowledge, and not just to the theory that is inherent in the system. But this is not true in view of the various implasticities of perception (as the Muller-Lyer illusion), which show that how thing ...


... toward various products, services, and events through large-scale analysis of online user-generated content. Many current automatic emotion detection systems utilize knowledge-based methods (i.e., using emotion lexicons or ontologies) and statistical methods to detect emotions in text. An important ...
Number and Size Matter: Discrete versus continuous
Number and Size Matter: Discrete versus continuous

... matching objects mattered. Given a choice between a material matching item or an array of one or two larger objects, participants selected the shape match—suggesting that objects at this level are seen as discrete. However, when the number of objects increased to 4 or more, the adults frequently sel ...
NV:World Religions - Switzer Wiki - home
NV:World Religions - Switzer Wiki - home

... To abstain from slanderous/malicious speech To abstain from harsh/hurtful speech ...
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Paper titles and abstracts Dan Arnold: "Perception and the

... from sense perception? This is because they stipulate the notion of mental consciousness simultaneous with the five sensory consciousnesses (mānasa-pratyakṣa in Dignāga and wuju yishi 五俱意識 in Kuiji) so that vitarka is ascribed to the mental perception rather than to sense perception. This is why the ...
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How Bodies Matter to Minds - Action

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... However, Nyaya differs from Aristotelian logic in that it is more than logic in its own right. Its followers believed that obtaining valid knowledge was the only way to obtain release from suffering. They therefore took great pains to identify valid sources of knowledge and to distinguish these from ...
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331CognitionWhatIsIt

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Slide 1
Slide 1

... Two New Guinea groups (Dani and Fore) Cultural differences were found in Extension factors: 1. Organization of categories into superordinated categories 2. Category boundaries 3. Classification of blended emotions 4. The rules for when categories of emotion can be used 5. The number of terms that ex ...
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What is optimal about perception?

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Introduction to Perception
Introduction to Perception

... sends an electrical signal that stands for “hello.” The signal that reaches cell phone #2 is the same as the signal sent from cell phone #1. (b) The nervous system sends electrical signals that stand for the moth. The nervous system processes these electrical signals, so the signal responsible for p ...
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Kant: The Ethics of Duty - Language Through Philosophy

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Abstract Representations and Embodied Agents: Prefrontal Cortex

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Modules 16-21: Sensation and Perception

... to recognize meaningful objects and events (psychological) ● Bottom-up processing- analysis that begins with sensory receptors and works up to the brain’s integration of sensory information (data-driven) ● Top-down processing- information processing guided by higher-level mental processes, as when w ...
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MIND: The Cognitive Side of Mind and Brain

... assess aspects of perception, attention, and memory.  Models of mental structures and processes of human perception, attention, memory, etc. based on data obtained from solid experimental procedures ...
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Perception
Perception

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Project 2: The situated view of perception and action conceives of
Project 2: The situated view of perception and action conceives of

1

Categorical perception

Categorical perception is the experience of percept invariances in sensory phenomena that can be varied along a continuum. Multiple views of a face, for example, are mapped onto a common identity, visually distinct objects such as cars are mapped into the same category and distinct speech tokens are identified as belonging to the same phonetic distinct and separate percept. Within a particular part of the continuum, the percepts are perceived as the same, with a sharp change of perception at the position of the continuum where there is identity change. Categorical perception is opposed to continuous perception, the perception of different sensory phenomena as being located on a smooth continuum.How the neural systems in the brain engages in this many-to-one mapping is a major issue in cognitive neuroscience. Categorical perception (CP) can be inborn or can be induced by learning. Initially it was taken to be peculiar to speech and color perception. However CP turns out to general, and related to how neural networks in our brains detect the features that allow us to sort the things in the world into separate categories by ""warping"" perceived similarities and differences so that they compress some things into the same category and separate others into different ones.An area in the left prefrontal cortex has been localized as the place in the brain responsible for phonetic categorical perception and possibly other types of categorical perception.
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