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Results for 'H. -C. Hung'

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  1.  33
    Knowledge is a dangerous thing: Authority relations, ideological conservatism, and creativity in confucian-heritage cultures.H. O. Fai &H. O.Hung -2008 -Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 38 (1):67–86.
  2.  31
    Investigative research as a knowledge-generation method: Discovering and uncovering.H. O. Fai,H. O.Hung &N. G. Man -2006 -Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 36 (1):17–38.
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  3.  29
    Learning discriminative sequence models from partially labelled data for activity recognition.Hung H. Bui,Dinh Q. Phung &Svetha Venkatesh -2008 - In Tu-Bao Ho & Zhi-Hua Zhou,PRICAI 2008: Trends in Artificial Intelligence. Springer. pp. 903--912.
  4.  67
    Flexible spatial mapping of different notations of numbers in Chinese readers.Yi-huiHung,Daisy L.Hung,Ovid J.-L. Tzeng &Denise H. Wu -2008 -Cognition 106 (3):1441-1450.
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  5.  36
    Eliciting Self-Explanations Improves Understanding.Michelene T. H. Chi,Nicholas De Leeuw,Mei-Hung Chiu &Christian Lavancher -1994 -Cognitive Science 18 (3):439-477.
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  6.  402
    Country Reports.Ma'N. H. Zawati,Don Chalmers,Sueli G. Dallari,Marina de Neiva Borba,Miriam Pinkesz,Yann Joly,Haidan Chen,Mette Hartlev,Liis Leitsalu,Sirpa Soini,Emmanuelle Rial-Sebbag,Nils Hoppe,Tina Garani-Papadatos,Panagiotis Vidalis,Krishna Ravi Srinivas,Gil Siegal,Stefania Negri,Ryoko Hatanaka,Maysa Al-Hussaini,Amal Al-Tabba',Lourdes Motta-Murgía,Laura Estela Torres Moran,Aart Hendriks,Obiajulu Nnamuchi,Rosario Isasi,Dorota Krekora-Zajac,Eman Sadoun,Calvin Ho,Pamela Andanda,Won Bok Lee,Pilar Nicolás,Titti Mattsson,Vladislava Talanova,Alexandre Dosch,Dominique Sprumont,Chien-Te Fan,Tzu-HsunHung,Jane Kaye,Andelka Phillips,Heather Gowans,Nisha Shah &James W. Hazel -2019 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 47 (4):582-704.
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  7.  62
    Semantic Feature Training in Combination with Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation for Progressive Anomia.JinyiHung,Ashley Bauer,Murray Grossman,Roy H. Hamilton,H. B. Coslett &Jamie Reilly -2017 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11.
  8.  33
    Corrigendum to “Flexible spatial mapping of different notations of numbers in Chinese readers” [Cognition 106 (3) (2008) 1441–1450]. [REVIEW]Yi-huiHung,Daisy L.Hung,Ovid J.-L. Tzeng &Denise H. Wu -2010 -Cognition 116 (2):302.
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  9. All problems are not equal : implications for problem-based learning.David H. Jonassen &WoeiHung -2015 - In Andrew Walker, Heather Leary & Cindy E. Hmelo-Silver,Essential readings in problem-based learning. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press.
     
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  10.  20
    Preference for Object Relative Clauses in Chinese Sentence Comprehension: Evidence From Online Self-Paced Reading Time.Kunyu Xu,Jeng-Ren Duann,Daisy L.Hung &Denise H. Wu -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 10:476094.
    Most prior studies have reported that subject-extracted relative clauses (SRCs) are easier to process than object-extracted relative clauses (ORCs). However, whether such an SRC preference is universal across different languages remains an open question. Several reports from Chinese have provided conflicting results; thus, in the present study, we conducted two self-paced reading experiments to examine the comprehension of Chinese relative clauses. The results demonstrated a clear ORC preference that Chinese ORCs were easier to comprehend than Chinese SRCs. These findings were (...) most compatible with the prediction of the integration cost account, which claims that the processing difference between SRCs and ORCs arises at the point of dependency formation. The ORC preference in Chinese poses a challenge to the universality of the SRC preference assumed by the structural distance hypothesis and highlights the values of cross-linguistic research. (shrink)
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  11.  45
    Is There a Processing Preference for Object Relative Clauses in Chinese? Evidence From ERPs.Talat Bulut,Shih-Kuen Cheng,Kun-Yu Xu,Daisy L.Hung &Denise H. Wu -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  12. Das Kausalproblem in der heutigen Physik.TschaHung -1999 - In Herbert Feigl, Rudolf Haller & Thomas Binder,Zufall und Gesetz: Drei Dissertationen unter Schlick: H. Feigl – M. Natkin – Tscha Hung. Atlanta, GA: Brill | Rodopi.
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  13.  47
    LiHung-chang and the Huai Army; A Study in Nineteenth-Century Chinese RegionalismIntroduction: Regionalism in Nineteenth-Century China.E. H. S.,Stanley Spector &Franz Michael -1964 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 84 (4):489.
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  14.  65
    "bad Women": Asian American Visual Artists Hanh Thi Pham,Hung Liu, And Yong Soon Min.Elaine H. Kim -1996 -Feminist Studies 22 (3):573.
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  15.  25
    DasHung-ming chi und die Aufnahme des Buddhismus in ChinaGumyōshū kenkyū ("Studies on theHung-ming chi")Gumyoshu kenkyu.Victor H. Mair,Helwig Schmidt-Glintzer,Makita Tairyō &Makita Tairyo -1979 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 99 (2):317.
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  16.  26
    Research on the Impacts of Cognitive Style and Computational Thinking on College Students in a Visual Artificial Intelligence Course.Chi-Jane Wang,Hua-Xu Zhong,Po-Sheng Chiu,Jui-Hung Chang &Pei-Hsuan Wu -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Visual programming language is a crucial part of learning programming. On this basis, it is essential to use visual programming to lower the learning threshold for students to learn about artificial intelligence to meet current demands in higher education. Therefore, a 3-h AI course with an RGB-to-HSL learning task was implemented; the results of which were used to analyze university students from two different disciplines. Valid data were collected for 65 students in the Science -student group and 39 students in (...) the Humanities -student group. Independent sample t-tests were conducted to analyze the difference between cognitive styles and computational thinking. No significant differences in either cognitive style or computational thinking ability were found after the AI course, indicating that taking visual AI courses lowers the learning threshold for students and makes it possible for them to take more difficult AI courses, which in turn effectively helping them acquire AI knowledge, which is crucial for cultivating talent in the field of AI. (shrink)
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  17.  59
    The Desire for the Sovereign and the Logic of Reciprocity in the Family of Nations.Lydia H. Liu -1999 -Diacritics 29 (4):150-177.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diacritics 29.4 (1999) 150-177 [Access article in PDF] The Desire for the Sovereign and the Logic of Reciprocity in the Family of Nations Lydia H. Liu It may sound like a truism that the modern nation cannot imagine itself except in sovereign terms. But what is this truism saying or, rather, withholding from us? When Benedict Anderson wrote his influential study of nationalism in 1983, he circumscribed the imagining (...) of the nation as "both inherently limited and sovereign" and relied on this basic understanding to explain the global transformation of dynastic empires into nation-states [Imagined Communities 6]. That insight, however, has not drawn to itself as much attention or scrutiny as some of his other concepts, like "print capitalism" or "creole nationalisms." If one were to name a few of the blind spots in the contemporary discussions of nationalism, cosmopolitanism, and diaspora, one of them would be the place and placing of sovereignty and sovereign right. To those of us whose initial purpose has been to historicize the nation and nationalism, this blind spot cannot but raise some serious methodological and interpretive questions. Insofar as sovereignty articulates a major mode of exchange between nation and empire in recent history and moreover figures prominently in the realm of what Anderson calls "quotidian universals" [Spectre of Comparisons 33], the truism of its truth needs to be unpacked carefully.Hence, I would like to raise some tentative questions about desire and sovereignty, not in terms of legal studies, but in light of what we have learned about colonial exchange and its production of difference, fetishism, identity, and the logic of reciprocity. I am going to show that these intellectual and material developments have had significant bearings on the making of international law such that our inquiry into the latter can no longer be confined to the self-explanatory evolution of legal discourse. For sovereign thinking is one of those areas that must be reexamined, to borrow Edward Said's words, "according to a detailed logic governed not simply by empirical reality but by a battery of desires, repressions, investments, and projections" [18].In this essay, I begin with a critical analysis of Benedict Anderson's work, focusing on the interplay of the historical and the universal in his study of the nation. I am particularly interested in examining what Anderson chose to do, or not to do, with sovereignty in his theory of nationalism, and I raise some questions about his idea of the "modular," whereby the universal takes on the role of a migrant figure making histories [End Page 150] here and there. Section two introduces the subject of fetishism and desire into the discussion by linking the display of the thrones of the Emperor Qianlong in British museums to significant moments of sovereign thinking in the reign of Queen Victoria and the Empress Dowager of China at the turn of the century. In section three, I attempt a detailed discussion of the sovereignty complex of KuHung-ming, a diasporic subject who grew up in colonial Malaysia, was educated in Europe, and ended up serving China as his adopted sovereign country. My analysis centers on Ku's well-known defense of the Empress Dowager during the popular nationalist uprising of 1900 and his work as a translator and publicist in Anglo-Chinese military confrontations. Finally, I turn to the theories of international law itself and ask how nineteenth-century jurists revised the notion of sovereignty to arrive at a new constitutive theory of recognition in the heyday of imperialist expansion. I argue that any attempt to explain the rise of the modern nation-state must take full account of this significant revision in the early nineteenth century, because the revision signaled a paradigmatic shift from natural law to positivist jurisprudence to the effect that a constitutive understanding of sovereign right would eventually overcome and displace the natural law notion of universal sovereignty. Sovereign Thinking in Migrant Nationalisms In Imagined Communities, Anderson pointed to sovereignty as a necessary condition in thinking about the nation when, for example, he... (shrink)
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  18.  18
    Zufall und Gesetz: Drei Dissertationen unter Schlick: H. Feigl – M. Natkin – TschaHung.Herbert Feigl,Rudolf Haller &Thomas Binder (eds.) -1999 - Atlanta, GA: Brill | Rodopi.
    Gesamtinhaltverzeichnis: Vorwort (Rudolf Haller). -Einleitung (Rudolf Haller). - Editorische Vorbemerkung (Thomas Binder). - I. Herbert Feigl: Zufall und Gesetz. - II. Marcel Natkin: Einfachheit, Kausalitaet und Induktion. - III. TschaHung: Das Kausalproblem in der heutigen Physik.".
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  19. Zufall und Gesetz.Herbert Feigl -1999 - In Herbert Feigl, Rudolf Haller & Thomas Binder,Zufall und Gesetz: Drei Dissertationen unter Schlick: H. Feigl – M. Natkin – Tscha Hung. Atlanta, GA: Brill | Rodopi.
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  20. Einfachheit, Kausalität, und Induktion.Marcel Natkin -1999 - In Herbert Feigl, Rudolf Haller & Thomas Binder,Zufall und Gesetz: Drei Dissertationen unter Schlick: H. Feigl – M. Natkin – Tscha Hung. Atlanta, GA: Brill | Rodopi.
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