scholarly journals Intensional Gaps: Relating veridicality, factivity, doxasticity, bouleticity, and neg-raising

2022 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. 570
Author(s):  
Benjamin Kane ◽  
Will Gantt ◽  
Aaron Steven White

We investigate which patterns of lexically triggered doxastic, bouletic, neg(ation)-raising, and veridicality inferences are (un)attested across clause-embedding verbs in English. To carry out this investigation, we use a multiview mixed effects mixture model to discover the inference patterns captured in three lexicon-scale inference judgment datasets: two existing datasets, MegaVeridicality and MegaNegRaising, which capture veridicality and neg-raising inferences across a wide swath of the English clause-embedding lexicon, and a new dataset, MegaIntensionality, which similarly captures doxastic and bouletic inferences. We focus in particular on inference patterns that are correlated with morphosyntactic distribution, as determined by how well those patterns predict the acceptability judgments in the MegaAcceptability dataset. We find that there are 15 such patterns attested. Similarities among these patterns suggest the possibility of underlying lexical semantic components that give rise to them. We use principal component analysis to discover these components and suggest generalizations that can be derived from them.

2022 ◽  
Vol 355 ◽  
pp. 02024
Author(s):  
Haojing Wang ◽  
Yingjie Tian ◽  
An Li ◽  
Jihai Wu ◽  
Gaiping Sun

In view of the limitation of “hard assignment” of clusters in traditional clustering methods and the difficulty of meeting the requirements of clustering efficiency and clustering accuracy simultaneously in regard to massive data sets, a load classification method based on a Gaussian mixture model combining clustering and principal component analysis is proposed. The load data are fed into a Gaussian mixture model clustering algorithm after principal component analysis and dimensionality reduction to achieve classification of large-scale load datasets. The method in this paper is used to classify loads in the Canadian AMPds2 public dataset and is compared with K-Means, Gaussian mixed model clustering and other methods. The results show that the proposed method can not only achieve load classification more effectively and finely, but also save computational cost and improve computational efficiency.


VASA ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 41 (5) ◽  
pp. 333-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kirchberger ◽  
Finger ◽  
Müller-Bühl

Background: The Intermittent Claudication Questionnaire (ICQ) is a short questionnaire for the assessment of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in patients with intermittent claudication (IC). The objective of this study was to translate the ICQ into German and to investigate the psychometric properties of the German ICQ version in patients with IC. Patients and methods: The original English version was translated using a forward-backward method. The resulting German version was reviewed by the author of the original version and an experienced clinician. Finally, it was tested for clarity with 5 German patients with IC. A sample of 81 patients were administered the German ICQ. The sample consisted of 58.0 % male patients with a median age of 71 years and a median IC duration of 36 months. Test of feasibility included completeness of questionnaires, completion time, and ratings of clarity, length and relevance. Reliability was assessed through a retest in 13 patients at 14 days, and analysis of Cronbach’s alpha for internal consistency. Construct validity was investigated using principal component analysis. Concurrent validity was assessed by correlating the ICQ scores with the Short Form 36 Health Survey (SF-36) as well as clinical measures. Results: The ICQ was completely filled in by 73 subjects (90.1 %) with an average completion time of 6.3 minutes. Cronbach’s alpha coefficient reached 0.75. Intra-class correlation for test-retest reliability was r = 0.88. Principal component analysis resulted in a 3 factor solution. The first factor explained 51.5 of the total variation and all items had loadings of at least 0.65 on it. The ICQ was significantly associated with the SF-36 and treadmill-walking distances whereas no association was found for resting ABPI. Conclusions: The German version of the ICQ demonstrated good feasibility, satisfactory reliability and good validity. Responsiveness should be investigated in further validation studies.


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