People often seem to understand language before they have actually heard enough words to determine its structure. In everyday ...
Researchers discover that the brain proactively builds sentence structures during speech using predictive processing, explaining why second-language listening is difficult.
KAIST Professor Hyun Wook Ka >KAIST announced on the 13th that a research team led by Professor Hyun Wook Ka of the Assistive AI Lab within the ...
Abstract: The potential of current machine translation (MT) of natural languages is discussed by comparing the output of embedded structure sentence, ambiguous sentence and garden path sentence. The ...
But what if the biggest giveaway that a text was written by AI isn’t a word, phrase, or punctuation mark, but a particular sentence structure instead? The idea that certain rhythms of sentences might ...
In the Paris example, if the researchers were testing proper responses based on syntax, why did they posit that "France" is the correct response to "Can you tell me where to find Paris?"? The correct ...
Emphases mine to make a point. "This suggests models absorb both meaning and syntactic patterns, but can overrely...." No, LLMs do not "absorb meaning," or anything like meaning. Meaning implies ...
In a recent study published in Communications Psychology, researchers from NYU led by Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering at NYU Tandon and Neurology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine Adeen ...
The film follows a young student named Jimmy as he learns about sentences in school. Through various examples, he discovers the difference between telling sentences, which end with a period, and ...
Do speakers of different languages build sentence structure in the same way? In a neuroimaging study, scientists recorded the brain activity of participants listening to Dutch stories. In contrast to ...
Do speakers of different languages build sentence structure in the same way? In a neuroimaging study published in PLOS Biology, scientists from the Max Planck institute for Psycholinguistics, Donders ...