Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
More Writing Workshop Use care with words like “thing” and “where”. For example: – “things like vision” – “visual illusions where colours are distorted”
2
More Writing Workshop Correlate means – Determine the mathematical relationship between two sets of numbers – Determine the quantitative relationship between two processes (using numbers) Correlate doesn’t mean “to investigate”
3
More Writing Workshop “affects” is a verb “effects” is a noun – For example: Nicotine affects memory I will study the effects of nicotine on memory.
4
More Writing Workshop Read more.
5
More Writing Workshop Don’t constantly and redundantly use unnecessary, unneeded and gratuitous modifiers. For example: – Parkinson’s disease is an extremely tragic disease that very negatively impacts the happiness of the unfortunate patients who suffer from it. – Parkinson’s disease negatively impacts quality of life. – Or consider leaving this unsaid...
6
More Writing Workshop The goal of the background section is that, by the end of it, the reader has the same theory as you!
7
More Writing Workshop Don’t use the word “now” unless you actually mean “right now” (and you almost certainly do not). For example: – “Now, the visual system is very complex.”
8
More Writing Workshop Be concise.
9
More Writing Workshop Be even more concise.
10
More Writing Workshop Here’s an example of a tricky-to-compose sentence: – “This could be interpreted as absolute pitch can be obtained through vigorous practice starting at a young age. “ – “This could be interpreted to mean that absolute pitch can be obtained through vigorous practice starting at a young age” (better) – “This suggests that absolute pitch can be obtained through vigorous practice starting at a young age (even better) – … therefore absolute pitch probably develops through early practice” (best)
11
More Writing Workshop On your drafts I tended to provide a lot of comment only on one or two paragraphs (usually the first two). I’ll trust you to take those comments and apply them throughout your document. – This means that sentences or paragraphs with little or no comment aren’t necessarily “good”.
12
Spoken Input – Phonology – how the word sounds; acoustic Phonemes are not invariant – different acoustic inputs are “mapped” onto the same phoneme
13
Spoken Input The Segmentation Problem: – The stream of acoustic input is not physically segmented into discrete phonemes, words, phrases, etc. – Silent gaps don’t always indicate (aren’t perceived as) interruptions in speech
14
Spoken Input The Segmentation Problem: – The stream of acoustic input is not physically segmented into discrete phonemes, words, phrases, etc. – Continuous speech stream is sometimes perceived as having gaps
15
Spoken Input The Segmentation Problem: – How do we solve the segmentation problem? Overlay additional information: Prosody – Inflection, syllabic stress, pauses
16
Spoken Input The Segmentation Problem: – How do we solve the segmentation problem? Overlay additional information: Vision – Read lips! – Demonstrated by the McGurk effect
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.