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- Language Log - University of Pennsylvania
This proves that the first hunter-gatherers arriving in Europe already developed a system of intentional and conventional signs on mobile artifacts Our study more broadly relates to research into statistical properties of human language and writing compared to other sign systems
- Language Log » About
Language Log was started in the summer of 2003 by Mark Liberman and Geoffrey Pullum For nearly five years, it ran on the same elderly linux box, with the same 2003-era blogging software, sitting in a dusty corner of a group office at the Institute for Research in Cognitive Science at the University of Pennsylvania
- Language Log » Crash blossoms
" Crash blossoms," as we've often discussed here on Language Log, are headlines that are so ambiguously phrased that they suggest alternate (comical) readings (The headline that gave "crash blossoms" their name appeared in the newspaper Japan Today in 2009: "Violinist Linked to JAL Crash Blossoms "
- Language Log - University of Pennsylvania
This afternoon, I received the following communication from his father: This is James (Jim) Dreibelbis, father of the Steven Dreibelbis mentioned in the original post on your Language Log Steven's son, Esteban Dreibelbis, a student at Drexel, found and sent me this interesting discussion on our family name
- Language Log » Where did the PIEs come from; when was that?
Where did the PIEs come from; when was that? July 28, 2023 @ 1:34 pm · Filed by Victor Mair under Historical linguistics, Language and archeology, Language and genetics « previous post | next post » The language family began to diverge from around 8,100 years ago, out of a homeland immediately south of the Caucasus
- Language Log » Ignorance of linguistics
Many Language Log readers have been complaining about the absence of any recognition of April Fool's Day at this site I can only lament your lack of perceptiveness There have been pranks all over the place and you simply didn't see them because you are too gullible
- Language Log » 2024 » October
We call on industry practitioners to ameliorate these language-model-based hallucinations in Whisper, and to raise awareness of potential biases amplified by hallucinations in downstream applications of speech-to-text models
- Language Log » Fast talking
The topic of this post is one that deeply fascinates me personally, but also has a bearing on many of the main concerns of the denizens of Language Log: information, efficiency, density, complexity, meaning, pronunciation, prosody, speed, gender… It was prompted by this new article: What’s the Fastest Language in the World?
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