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Institution

School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences

FacilityVillejuif, 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
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that the central nervous system makes use of the discrepancy between the left and right vestibular activity to orientate the response: equivalent afferent flows would result in an anteroposterior body response whereas lateral sway is obtained with discrepant ones.

37 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper showcases the use of Bayesian models for real-time strategy (RTS) games AI in three distinct core components: micromanagement (units control), tactics, and strategy (economy, technology, production, army types).
Abstract: This paper showcases the use of Bayesian models for real-time strategy (RTS) games AI in three distinct core components: micromanagement (units control), tactics (army moves and positions), and strategy (economy, technology, production, army types). The strength of having end-to-end probabilistic models is that distributions on specific variables can be used to interconnect different models at different levels of abstraction. We applied this modeling to StarCraft, and evaluated each model independently. Along the way, we produced and released a comprehensive data set for RTS machine learning.

37 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is indicated that reducing the difficulty of a task by increasing the predictability of critical stimuli produces increases in intentional mind wandering, but, contrary to theoretical expectations, decreases in unintentional mind wandering.

37 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluate the notion that a central function of commitments within joint action is to reduce various kinds of uncertainty, and argue that this accounts for the prevalence of commitments in joint action.
Abstract: In this paper, we evaluate the proposal that a central function of commitments within joint action is to reduce various kinds of uncertainty, and that this accounts for the prevalence of commitments in joint action. While this idea is prima facie attractive, we argue that it faces two serious problems. First, commitments can only reduce uncertainty if they are credible, and accounting for the credibility of commitments proves not to be straightforward. Second, there are many other ways in which uncertainty is commonly reduced within joint actions, which raises the possibility that commitments may be superfluous. Nevertheless, we argue that the existence of these alternative uncertainty reduction processes does not make commitments superfluous after all but, rather, helps to explain how commitments may contribute in various ways to uncertainty reduction.

36 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An attempt is made to bridge the gap between phonological theory and experimental psychology, and some recent experimental work is considered in the light of phonological theories and new research avenues are sketched.
Abstract: Infants' phonological acquisition during the first 18 months of life has been some 30 years. Current research themes include statistical learning mechanisms, early lexical development, and models of phonetic category perception. So far, linguistic theories have hardly been taken into account. These theories are based upon the assumption that there is a common core of innate phonological knowledge across speakers of all human languages, and they contain detailed proposals concerning phonological representations and the derivations by which abstract underlying forms are mapped onto concrete surface forms. It remains to be investigated experimentally if there is innate phonological knowledge and how the language-specific phonological grammar is acquired. In the present article, the contributions to this special issue are introduced, and an attempt is made to bridge the gap between phonological theory and experimental psychology. In particular, some recent experimental work is considered in the light of phonological theories and new research avenues are sketched. What might be innate, what needs to be acquired, and how this acquisition might take place are questions that are addressed with respect to several aspects of phonological knowledge, specifically segmental representations, phonotactics, phonological processes, and the architecture of the phonological grammar.

36 citations


Authors

Showing all 1316 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Philippe Aghion12250773438
Andrew J. Martin8481936203
Jean-Jacques Laffont8333232930
Jonathan Grainger7832919719
Jacques Mehler7818823493
James S. Wright7751423684
Thomas Piketty6925136227
Dan Sperber6720732068
Arthur M. Jacobs6726014636
Jacques Mairesse6631020539
Andrew E. Clark6531828819
François Bourguignon6328718250
Emmanuel Dupoux6326714315
Marc Barthelemy6121525783
Pierre-André Chiappori6123018206
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202318
2022134
2021121
2020149
2019119
2018118