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: Politics & Context (language use). 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: A series of picture- and word-naming experiments in which the masked priming paradigm with prime exposures brief enough to prevent prime identification were used demonstrates that the prior presentation of the same word prime facilitates both picture and word naming independently of target frequency.
Abstract: We report a series of picture- and word-naming experiments in which the masked priming paradigm with prime exposures brief enough to prevent prime identification were used. Experiment 1 demonstrates that the prior presentation of the same word prime facilitates both picture and word naming independently of target frequency. In Experiments 2 and 3, primes that were pseudohomophones of picture targets produced facilitatory effects compared with orthographic controls, but these orthographically similar nonword primes did not facilitate picture naming compared with unrelated controls. On the other hand, word targets were primarily facilitated by orthographic prime— target overlap. This marked dissociation in the priming effects obtained with picture and word targets is discussed in relation to different explanations of masked form priming effects in visual word recognition and current models of picture and word naming.
88 citations
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TL;DR: It is argued that mirror neurons do not by themselves provide a sufficient basis for the forms of agentive understanding and shared intentionality involved in cooperative collective actions, but they provide the basic constituents of implicit agent-neutral representations and are useful elements in a process of online mutual adjustment of participants' actions.
86 citations
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TL;DR: Using historical income tax statistics and a common methodology, the authors constructed annual top income shares series (often broken down by income source) for over 20 countries covering most of the 20th century.
Abstract: This paper offers an overview of what we have learned from a collective research project on income distribution in the long run. Using historical income tax statistics and a common methodology, we have constructed annual top income shares series (often broken down by income source) for over 20 countries covering most of the 20th century. One important con- clusion is that the decline in income inequality that took place during the first half of the 20th century was mostly accidental, and does not seem to have much to do with a Kuznets-type process. Top capital incomes were hit by major shocks during the 1914-1945 period, and were never able to fully recover from these shocks, probably because of the dynamic impact of pro- gressive income and estate taxation. Our database also allows us to readdress the cross-country analysis of the interplay between inequality and growth with better prospects than with standard databases. (JEL: D31)
86 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the relative explanatory power of various hypotheses: institutional complementarity, institutional hierarchy, coevolution, simple compatibility or isomorphism is investigated and three distinct institutional complementarities are at the origin of the more successful national economies since the 90s.
Abstract: What are the forces that make relatively and transitorily coherent the institutional configurations of capitalism? In response to the literature on the variety of capitalisms, this article investigates the relative explanatory power of various hypotheses: institutional complementarity, institutional hierarchy, coevolution, simple compatibility or isomorphism. Compatibility is too often confused with complementarity and it is frequently an ex-post recognition, rarely an ex ante design. Both hybridization and endometabolism are the driving forces in the transformation of institutional configurations. Uncertainty and the existence of some slack in the coupling of various institutions are key features that call for the mixing of various methodologies in order to detect complementarities. This framework is then used in order to show that three distinct institutional complementarities are at the origin of the more successful national economies since the 90s. Thus, institutional diversity is being recreated and the existence of complementarities plays a role in this process.
86 citations
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TL;DR: The authors generalize this result to French, a language in which the function word system allows patterns that are potentially detrimental to a frame-based analysis procedure and show that the discontinuity of the chosen environments (i.e., the fact that target words are framed by the context words) is crucial for the mechanism to be efficient.
Abstract: Mintz (2003) described a distributional environment called a frame, defined as the co-occurrence of two context words with one intervening target word. Analyses of English child-directed speech showed that words that fell within any frequently occurring frame consistently belonged to the same grammatical category (e.g. noun, verb, adjective, etc.). In this paper, we first generalize this result to French, a language in which the function word system allows patterns that are potentially detrimental to a frame-based analysis procedure. Second, we show that the discontinuity of the chosen environments (i.e. the fact that target words are framed by the context words) is crucial for the mechanism to be efficient. This property might be relevant for any computational approach to grammatical categorization. Finally, we investigate a recursive application of the procedure and observe that the categorization is paradoxically worse when context elements are categories rather than actual lexical items. Item-specificity is thus also a core computational principle for this type of algorithm. Our analysis, along with results from behavioural studies (Gomez, 2002; Gomez and Maye, 2005; Mintz, 2006), provides strong support for frames as a basis for the acquisition of grammatical categories by infants. Discontinuity and item-specificity appear to be crucial features.
85 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 |