Institution
School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences
Facility•Villejuif, France•
About: School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences is a facility organization based out in Villejuif, France. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Politics. The organization has 1230 authors who have published 2084 publications receiving 57740 citations. The organization is also known as: Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales & EHESS.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The results do not support the assumption that people facing poverty might overestimate their diet healthiness and suggest that information campaigns are not enough: policies or interventions making healthy eating easier and more manageable are necessary.
7 citations
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TL;DR: This paper poses the question in a multi-premise multi-conclusion setting for the class of so-called intersective mixed consequence relations, which extends theclass of Tarskian relations, and answers extensively for 3-valued and 4-valued logics, focusing on Gentzen-regular connectives.
Abstract: Given a consequence relation in many-valued logic, what connectives can be defined? For instance, does there always exist a conditional operator internalizing the consequence relation, and which form should it take? In this paper, we pose this question in a multi-premise multi-conclusion setting for the class of so-called intersective mixed consequence relations, which extends the class of Tarskian relations. Using computer-aided methods, we answer extensively for 3-valued and 4-valued logics, focusing not only on conditional operators, but on what we call Gentzen-regular connectives (including negation, conjunction, and disjunction). For arbitrary N-valued logics, we state necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of such connectives in a multi-premise multi-conclusion setting. The results show that mixed consequence relations admit all classical connectives, and among them pure consequence relations are those that admit no other Gentzen-regular connectives. Conditionals can also be found for a broader class of intersective mixed consequence relations, but with the exclusion of order-theoretic consequence relations.
7 citations
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TL;DR: The authors propose a computational model of the early language learner (SCALa, for Socio-Computational Architecture of Language Acquisition) that makes explicit the connection between the kinds of information available to the social learner and the computational mechanisms required to extract language-relevant information and learn from it.
7 citations
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TL;DR: The authors examined who produced the input (mothers, other children, adults), how much input was child directed, and whether and how it varied across speakers, finding that input from other children was more common than input from mothers or other adults.
Abstract: Despite the fact that in most communities interaction occurs between the child and multiple speakers, most previous research on input to children focused on input from mothers. We annotated recordings of Sesotho-learning toddlers living in non-industrial Lesotho in South Africa, and French-learning toddlers living in urban regions in France. We examined who produced the input (mothers, other children, adults), how much input was child directed, and whether and how it varied across speakers. As expected, mothers contributed most of the input in the French recordings. However, in the Sesotho recordings, input from other children was more common than input from mothers or other adults. Child-directed speech from all speakers in both cultural groups showed similar qualitative modifications. Our findings suggest that input from other children is prevalent and has similar features as child-directed from adults described in previous work, inviting cross-cultural research into the effects of input from other children.
7 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the modes of creation and enactment of a diasporic patrimony as a culture to be presented in answer to foreign expectations of spectacle.
Abstract: This paper describes a recent cultural plan debated by members of the West Indian diaspora in Canada which sought to promote carnival as a multicultural expression of pan-Caribbean identity at the Hong Kong New Year International Festival, China. It deconstructs a cultural plan which did not succeed in its realization. As the Canadian West Indian carnival has its stylistic origin in the Caribbean country of Trinidad and Tobago, this proposition combines three different geographical areas and the related diasporas’ displacements under the notion of a local and global cultural promotion. In the article, I discuss the modes of creation and enactment of a diasporic patrimony as a culture to be presented in answer to foreign expectations of spectacle. The analysis approaches diasporic Canadian reflections about displacement, marginalization, and matters of cultural belonging, alongside economic dependencies, reflections that aim to gain visibility and international recognition through the production of...
7 citations
Authors
Showing all 1316 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Philippe Aghion | 122 | 507 | 73438 |
Andrew J. Martin | 84 | 819 | 36203 |
Jean-Jacques Laffont | 83 | 332 | 32930 |
Jonathan Grainger | 78 | 329 | 19719 |
Jacques Mehler | 78 | 188 | 23493 |
James S. Wright | 77 | 514 | 23684 |
Thomas Piketty | 69 | 251 | 36227 |
Dan Sperber | 67 | 207 | 32068 |
Arthur M. Jacobs | 67 | 260 | 14636 |
Jacques Mairesse | 66 | 310 | 20539 |
Andrew E. Clark | 65 | 318 | 28819 |
François Bourguignon | 63 | 287 | 18250 |
Emmanuel Dupoux | 63 | 267 | 14315 |
Marc Barthelemy | 61 | 215 | 25783 |
Pierre-André Chiappori | 61 | 230 | 18206 |