scholarly journals An open-source hardware and software system for acquisition and real-time processing of electrophysiology during high field MRI

2008 ◽  
Vol 175 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick L. Purdon ◽  
Hernan Millan ◽  
Peter L. Fuller ◽  
Giorgio Bonmassar
Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 1033 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alberto Molina-Cantero ◽  
Juan Castro-García ◽  
Clara Lebrato-Vázquez ◽  
Isabel Gómez-González ◽  
Manuel Merino-Monge

2018 ◽  
Vol 144 (3) ◽  
pp. 1946-1946
Author(s):  
Paul Leary ◽  
Vladimir Dobrokhodov ◽  
Kevin Jones ◽  
Kevin B. Smith

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vitor Finotti ◽  
Bruno Albertini

There is a myriad of projects that could be deployed on FPGA for architectural exploration. However, open-source platforms are scarce, and one with embedded software and operating system support to the application-specific hardware could not be found in the literature. We present an open-source soft-microcontroller architecture based on an ARM Cortex-M0, adaptable to different amounts of cores or new components, supporting an end-to-end deployment from code compilation using arm-gcc to loading the binary into the HDL memory cores. The proposed design is validated through simulation and implementation on a KC705 development kit, demonstrating busy-wait polling, DMA transfer, and deterministic real-time processing through FreeRTOS.


Author(s):  
Daiki Matsumoto ◽  
Ryuji Hirayama ◽  
Naoto Hoshikawa ◽  
Hirotaka Nakayama ◽  
Tomoyoshi Shimobaba ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
David J. Lobina

The study of cognitive phenomena is best approached in an orderly manner. It must begin with an analysis of the function in intension at the heart of any cognitive domain (its knowledge base), then proceed to the manner in which such knowledge is put into use in real-time processing, concluding with a domain’s neural underpinnings, its development in ontogeny, etc. Such an approach to the study of cognition involves the adoption of different levels of explanation/description, as prescribed by David Marr and many others, each level requiring its own methodology and supplying its own data to be accounted for. The study of recursion in cognition is badly in need of a systematic and well-ordered approach, and this chapter lays out the blueprint to be followed in the book by focusing on a strict separation between how this notion applies in linguistic knowledge and how it manifests itself in language processing.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-25
Author(s):  
Theres Grüter ◽  
Hannah Rohde

Abstract This study examines the use of discourse-level information to create expectations about reference in real-time processing, testing whether patterns previously observed among native speakers of English generalize to nonnative speakers. Findings from a visual-world eye-tracking experiment show that native (L1; N = 53) but not nonnative (L2; N = 52) listeners’ proactive coreference expectations are modulated by grammatical aspect in transfer-of-possession events. Results from an offline judgment task show these L2 participants did not differ from L1 speakers in their interpretation of aspect marking on transfer-of-possession predicates in English, indicating it is not lack of linguistic knowledge but utilization of this knowledge in real-time processing that distinguishes the groups. English proficiency, although varying substantially within the L2 group, did not modulate L2 listeners’ use of grammatical aspect for reference processing. These findings contribute to the broader endeavor of delineating the role of prediction in human language processing in general, and in the processing of discourse-level information among L2 users in particular.


2021 ◽  
pp. 100489
Author(s):  
Paul La Plante ◽  
P.K.G. Williams ◽  
M. Kolopanis ◽  
J.S. Dillon ◽  
A.P. Beardsley ◽  
...  

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