SEMANTIC CATEGORY DISCRIMINATION AND N400

2000 ◽  
Vol 87 (6) ◽  
pp. 415
Author(s):  
TAKEMI YANO
2000 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
pp. 415-422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takemi Yano ◽  
Makiko Kaga

14 subjects performed a semantic category-discrimination task in which they were presented pairs of words and asked to judge whether these belonged to the same category Three semantic distance conditions, established for the word pairs on the basis of a survey, were semantically close condition (mammals and birds condition) and two semantically distant conditions (mammals and tools condition and birds and tools condition). The reaction times and the percentage of errors were significantly greatest for the mammals and bird condition. There were no significant differences among the three different conditions in N400 latency for target, but the amplitude of N400 tended to be largest for the mammal and bird condition. Comparison N400 of prime and target for each of the conditions showed that the latency for prime was longer than for target in all three conditions.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 398
Author(s):  
Mohammed Adeeb ◽  
Ahmed Sleman ◽  
Sumaya Abdullah ◽  
Belal Al-Khateeb

Recently search services have been developed rapidly especially when the social internet appeared. It can help web users easily find their documents. So that it is very difficult to find a best search method. This paper aims to enhance the quality of the search engines results and this can be done by adding a second level category search that is able to search for the keyword and its synonyms, which enables the search engines to get more users queries related results. The proposed method showed promising results that will open further research directions


Author(s):  
Brian P. Cooper ◽  
Arthur D. Fisk

Understanding age-related similarities and differences in development of cognitive skill is important as it can inform theories of cognitive aging as well as serve the pragmatic value of informing those individuals who are developing age-related interventions for numerous activities of daily living. We investigated both the performance and learning of skilled memory search, a task that has shown age-related similarity in performance if sufficient consistent practice is provided, to determine if training guidelines for this class of processing activities is applicable to both young and old adults. Old and young adults received memory search training, and then the participants were transferred to untrained exemplars of the trained memory set categories. The results suggest that both young and old adults are, at least to some extent, learning at the semantic-category level. This study provides additional evidence that training guidelines derived from an automatic and controlled processing framework can be applied to an older adult population in tasks which have memory search components.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 3099 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng Zhao ◽  
Li Sun ◽  
Pulak Purkait ◽  
Tom Duckett ◽  
Rustam Stolkin

In this paper, a novel Pixel-Voxel network is proposed for dense 3D semantic mapping, which can perform dense 3D mapping while simultaneously recognizing and labelling the semantic category each point in the 3D map. In our approach, we fully leverage the advantages of different modalities. That is, the PixelNet can learn the high-level contextual information from 2D RGB images, and the VoxelNet can learn 3D geometrical shapes from the 3D point cloud. Unlike the existing architecture that fuses score maps from different modalities with equal weights, we propose a softmax weighted fusion stack that adaptively learns the varying contributions of PixelNet and VoxelNet and fuses the score maps according to their respective confidence levels. Our approach achieved competitive results on both the SUN RGB-D and NYU V2 benchmarks, while the runtime of the proposed system is boosted to around 13 Hz, enabling near-real-time performance using an i7 eight-cores PC with a single Titan X GPU.


1995 ◽  
Vol 57 (6) ◽  
pp. 863-874 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara E. Acker ◽  
Richard E. Pastore ◽  
Michael D. Hall

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