• Title/Summary/Keyword: declarative

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A Practical Approach to Semantics in Deductive Databases (연역적 데이터베이스의 의미론에 관한 현실적 접근)

  • Lee, Dae-Yong
    • Asia pacific journal of information systems
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    • v.2 no.2
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    • pp.85-102
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    • 1992
  • A deductive database consists of collection of stored facts and deductive rules. It can answer queries based on logical deduction from the stored facts and general rules. A deductive database has both a declarative meaning(semantics) and a procedural meaning. The declarative semantics of a deductive database provides a definition of the meaning of the program in a manner which is independent of procedural considerations, context-free, and easy to manipulate, exchange and reason about. This paper investigates various declarative semantics of deductive databases, dicusses related computational issues, and suggests another declarative semantics for deductive databases which is more practical than others.

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Algorithm for Functional and Declarative Language in Parallel Machine (Parallel Machine에 있어서의 Functional, Declarative 언어의 Algorithm)

  • Kim, Jin-Su
    • The Journal of Natural Sciences
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    • v.5 no.2
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    • pp.39-43
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    • 1992
  • Detection of parallelism by a compiler is very desirable from a user's point of view. However, even the most sophisticated techniques to detect parallelism trip on trivial impediments, such as conditionals, function calls, and input/output statements, fail to detect most of the parallelism present in a program. Some parallelizing compilers provide feedback to the user when they have difficulty in deciding about parallel execution. Under these circumstances, a programmer has to restructure the source code to aid the detection of parallelism. But, functional and declarative languages can be said to offer many advantages in this context. Functional programs are easier to reason about because their output is determinate, that is, independent of the order of evaluation. However, functional languages traditionally have lacked good facilities for manipulating arrays and matrices. In this paper, a declarative language called Id has been proposed as a solution to some of these problems.

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Prosodic Features at "Sentence Boundaries" in Oral Presentations

  • Umesaki, Atsuko-Furuta
    • MALSORI
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    • no.41
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    • pp.83-96
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    • 2001
  • It is generally said that falling intonation is used at the end of a declarative sentence. However, this is not the case with all stretches of spontaneous speech which are marked in transcription as sentences. The present paper examines intonation patterns appearing at the end of declarative sentences in oral presentations, and discusses instances where falling intonation does not appear. The texts used for analysis are eight oral presentations collected at international conferences in the field of physics. Quantitative and qualitative analyses are carried out. Three major factors related to discourse structure have been found for non-occurrence of falling intonation at sentence boundaries.

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Prosodic Features at "Sentence Boundaries" in Oral Presentations

  • Umesaki, Atsuko-Furuta
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2000.07a
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    • pp.149-164
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    • 2000
  • It is generally said that falling intonation is used at the end of a declarative sentence. However, this is not the case with all stretches of spontaneous speech which are marked in transcription as sentences. The present paper examines intonation patterns appearing at the end of declarative sentences in oral presentations, and discusses instances where falling intonation does not appear. The texts used for analysis are eight oral presentations collected at international conferences in the field of physics. Quantitative and qualitative analyses are carried out. Three major factors related to discourse structure have been found for nonoccurrence of falling intonation at sentence boundaries.

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Analysis on Science Problem Solving Process of the Elementary Science Gifted Students (초등 과학 영재의 과학 문제 해결 과정 분석)

  • Lim, Cheong-Hwan;Lim, Gui-Sook
    • Journal of Korean Elementary Science Education
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    • v.30 no.2
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    • pp.213-231
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    • 2011
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate knowledge types which the elementary science gifted students would use when solving a science problem, and to examine characteristics and types that were shown in the science problem solving process. For this study, 39 fifth graders and 38 sixth graders from Institute of Education for the Gifted Science Class were sampled in one National University of Education. The results of this study were as follows. First, for science problem solving, the elementary science gifted students used procedural knowledge and declarative knowledge at the same time, and procedural knowledge was more frequently used than declarative knowledge. Second, as for the characteristics in the understanding step of solving science problems, students tend to exactly figure out questions' given conditions and what to seek. In planning and solving stage, most of them used 3~4 different problem solving methods and strategies for solving. In evaluating stage, they mostly re-examined problem solving process for once or twice. Also, they did not correct the answer and had high confidence in their answers. Third, good solvers had used more complete or partially applied procedural knowledge and proper declarative knowledge than poor solvers. In the problem solving process, good solvers had more accurate problem-understanding and successful problem solving strategies. From characteristics shown in the good solvers' problem solving process, it is confirmed that the education program for science gifted students needs both studying on process of acquiring declarative knowledge and studying procedural knowledge for interpreting new situation, solving problem and deducting. In addition, in problem-understanding stage, it is required to develop divided and gradual programs for interpreting and symbolizing the problem, and for increasing the understanding.

The Effects of Age and Type of Imperative Statement on Behavioral Intention and Recall (명령문에 대한 행동의도와 기억에 있어서 나이와 명령문 유형이 미치는 영향)

  • Min, Dongwon
    • Journal of Digital Convergence
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.53-58
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    • 2020
  • Various imperative statements that can be represented in the way in which the product or service is used describe how or how to achieve the goals, or induce or prohibit a specific action. This study focuses on The Effects of age and type of imperative sentence (directive vs. declarative) on behavioral intention and recall. As a result of the experiment, older people who have shorter lives remaining access information in a more emotional way, so they have been rejected by directive (vs. declarative) statements that felt more negative feelings, resulting in lowered behavioral intention. Conversely, the negative feeling caused by directive statements increased salience of directive (vs. declarative) sentence for older people more, which in turn increased memory for older people. Process analysis showed that emotions when exposed to statements mediated these results. The results of this study show that in order to improve consumers' behavioral response and/or the performance of information processing, it is necessary to deeply consider their age and how to construct the statement.

Universal and Specific Features in Intonation Perception

  • Makarova, Veronika
    • MALSORI
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    • no.41
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    • pp.73-81
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    • 2001
  • This paper reports the results of an experimental phonetic study of intonation contrasts perception by speakers of British English, Japanese and Russian. Six series of re-synthesized two-syllable rise-fall contours with manipulated parameters of the rise in the first and the fall in the second syllable were employed in the experiment. Modifications of pitch height were executed in 2 st steps, and of duration in 30ms steps. The subjects, who were native speakers of British English, Japanese and Russian, identified the sentence type of presented re-synthesized stimuli. The results of the experiments demonstrate overall similarity of the perception strategies across the three groups of subjects, especially regarding the thresholds of declarative' sentence type judgement. Non-declarative judgements are more language-specific. The results can be employed for the teaching of English, Japanese and Russian as foreign languages as well as for speech synthesis and recognition.

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UNIVERSAL AND SPECIFIC FEATURES IN INTONATION PERCEPTION

  • Makarova, Veronika
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2000.07a
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    • pp.139-148
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    • 2000
  • This paper reports the results of an experimental phonetic study of intonation contrasts perception by speakers of British English, Japanese and Russian. Six series of re-synthesized two-syllable rise-fall contours with manipulated parameters of the rise in the first and the fall in the second syllable were employed in the experiment. Modifications of pitch height were executed in 2 st steps, and of duration - in 30ms steps. The subjects, who were native speakers of British English, Japanese and Russian, identified the sentence type of presented re-synthesized stimuli. The results of the experiments demonstrate overall similarity of the perception strategies across the three groups of subjects, especially regarding the thresholds of 'declarative' sentence type judgement. Non-declarative judgements are more language-specific. The results can be employed for the teaching of English, Japanese and Russian as foreign languages as well as for speech synthesis and recognition.

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Cognitive Modeling of Unusual Association with Declarative Knowledge by Positive Affect (긍정적 감정에 따른 선언적 지식에 관한 비전형적 연상 과정에 대한 인지모델링)

  • Park, Sung-Jin;Myung, Ro-Hae
    • Journal of Korean Institute of Industrial Engineers
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    • v.41 no.1
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    • pp.43-49
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    • 2015
  • The aim of this study was to model unusual association with declarative knowledge by positive affect using ACT-R cognitive architecture. Existing research related with cognitive modeling tends to pay a lot of attention to strong and negative cognitive moderator. Mild positive affect, however, has far-reaching effects on problem solving and decision making. Typically, subjects with positive affect were more likely to respond to unusual associates in a word association task than subjects with neutral affect. In this study, a cognitive model using ACT-R cognitive architecture was developed to show the effect of positive affect on the cognitive organization related with memory. First, we organized the memory structure of stimulus word 'palm' based on published results in a word association task. Then, we decreased an ACT-R parameter that reflects the amount of weighting given to the dissimilarity between the stimulus word and the associate word to represent reorganized memory structure of the model by positive affect. As a result, no significant associate probability difference between model prediction and existing empirical data was found. The ACT-R cognitive architecture could be used to model the effect of positive affect on the unusual association by decreasing (manipulating) the weight of the dissimilarity. This study is useful in conducting model-based evaluation of the effects of positive affect in complex tasks involving memory, such as creative problem solving.

An Analysis of the Scientific Problem Solving Strategies according to Knowledge Levels of the Gifted Students (영재학생들의 지식수준에 따른 과학적 문제해결 전략 분석)

  • Kim, Chunwoong;Chung, Jungin
    • Journal of Korean Elementary Science Education
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.73-86
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    • 2019
  • The purpose of this study is to investigate the characteristics of problem solving strategies that gifted students use in science inquiry problem. The subjects of the study are the notes and presentation materials that the 15 team of elementary and junior high school students have solved the problem. They are a team consisting of 27 elementary gifted and 29 middle gifted children who voluntarily selected topics related to dimple among the various inquiry themes. The analysis data are the observations of the subjects' inquiry process, the notes recorded in the inquiry process, and the results of the presentations. In this process, the knowledge related to dimple is classified into the declarative knowledge level and the process knowledge level, and the strategies used by the gifted students are divided into general strategy and supplementary strategy. The results of this study are as follows. First, as a result of categorizing gifted students into knowledge level, six types of AA, AB, BA, BB, BC, and CB were found among the 9 types of knowledge level. Therefore, gifted students did not have a high declarative knowledge level (AC type) or very low level of procedural knowledge level (CA type). Second, the general strategy that gifted students used to solve the dimple problem was using deductive reasoning, inductive reasoning, finding the rule, solving the problem in reverse, building similar problems, and guessing & reviewing strategies. The supplementary strategies used to solve the dimple problem was finding clues, recording important information, using tables and graphs, making tools, using pictures, and thinking experiment strategies. Third, the higher the knowledge level of gifted students, the more common type of strategies they use. In the case of supplementary strategy, it was not related to each type according to knowledge level. Knowledge-based learning related to problem situations can be helpful in understanding, interpreting, and representing problems. In a new problem situation, more problem solving strategies can be used to solve problems in various ways.