Re: Fw: Intro to natural language processing
Jack Ring wrote
> Although this to sympathetic kinesics phenomenon may apply to the aspects
> of language such as mimicing speaking or learning lip reading, be cautious
> about extrapolating this brain function to intellectual or emotional
> aspects.
True, I haven't seen any experiments to validate this guess. It just seems
to
help me think about how to organize software to work with linguistic
processes. More of an abstraction of structure than a belief about
realistic
brain function.
Rich
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Rich Cooper" <richcooper@mindspring.com>
> To: "John F. Sowa" <sowa@BESTWEB.NET>; "John Bateman"
> <bateman@uni-bremen.de>
> Cc: "Rob Freeman" <rjfreeman@EMAIL.COM>; <cg@CS.UAH.EDU>;
> <wlawvere@buffalo.edu>; <standard-upper-ontology@IEEE.ORG>;
> <jld@club-internet.fr>; <S.Polovina@shu.ac.uk>
> Sent: Thursday, December 23, 2004 1:19 PM
> Subject: Re: Fw: Intro to natural language processing
>
>
>> Based on the following article
>> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4113891.stm
>> it appears that learning in the mirror neurons changes
>> the way we watch other people move. Since dance
>> is an emotional form of communication, probably
>> there is a similar effect in language. The more we
>> know a language through experience, the better we
>> are at hearing others speak it or reading written forms
>> of the language.
>>
>> JMHO,
>> Rich
>>
>>
>