(1) Both are furthermore accessible to the ideographic discourse of subjective meanings and intentional acts.
(2) Of special note was the patient's superior written transcription of the ideographic symbols and the superior oral reading of the phonogrammic symbols.
(3) The result of our study showed that alexia in Chinese ideographic language differs from alexia in western phonographic languages.
(4) Areas for further investigation are identified, for example: the use of multiple outcome measures, the use of single-case studies and the development of ideographic assessment measures, the interaction of biological and environmental influences, the alleviation of the burden of care, the involvement of the consumer in services, the development of behavioral formulations and analysis of family engagement and compliance, staff training in intervention methods, and the translation of research results into clinical practice.
(5) The model indicates that aggregation effects should be controlled in analyses of matching and that the comparison of molecular theories of concurrent operant behavior with molecular models of matching performance affords ideographic analyses of choice behavior.
(6) The ability to transcode integers from ideographic to alphabetic script was assessed in patients with dementia of Alzheimer type.
(7) This antiquity is spelled out dramatically in the ancient Chinese-Japanese ideographs (in Japan called kanji), which remain in use today.
(8) Dyslexic and normal readers in second grade (age-range seven to eight years) and sixth grade (11 to 12 years) were given tachistoscopic presentations of novel visual stimuli (Chinese ideographs), randomly presented to the left and right visual fields and to the central fixation point.
(9) The population for this ideographic research consisted of a convenience sample of 10 children over the age of 5 years, attending an oncology clinic which served a medium-sized city and its surrounding area.
(10) Ideographic analyses further demonstrated consistencies in prevalence rates of DSM-III-R personality disorders.
(11) Outcome assessment was obtained from three sources: patient, therapist, and independent judge, using both nomothetic and ideographic measures.
(12) Chinese ideographs evoked it for subjects whose native language was Chinese, but not for subjects unfamiliar with that language.
(13) Stenography, a non-orthographic and syllabic-ideographic writing system, could be a model to investigate different hemispheric reading processes in Western subjects.
(14) According to Biederman and Tsao (1979), ideographic script yields more interference than phonetic script in Stroop color-naming task.
(15) Ideographic analyses suggested possible sex-linked and early experience twin effects.
(16) Two kinds of Japanese script were used as stimuli: Kanji, an ideographic script, and Kana, a syllabic script.
(17) When phonological processing is not possible (e.g., for arabic digits and other ideographic orthographies), the right hemisphere may have an advantage because of its superior visuospatial processing capabilities.
(18) Systematic errors in the transcoding processes were observed that could not be accounted for by the peculiarities of the two ideographic coding systems or by difficulties with direct transcoding rules.
(19) For example, the ancient Chinese ideograph for spleen does not mean spleen in the modern sense, instead it refers to the entire gastrointestinal system.
(20) Similarly, the ancient ideograph for kidney does not mean kidney in the modern sense, and can mean the entire endocrine system.
Logographic
Definition:
(a.) Alt. of Logographical
Example Sentences:
(1) A reading battery composed of eight different subtests was given to each patient (reading of letters, reading of syllables, reading of pseudowords, reading of words, reading of sentences, understanding commands, reading and comprehension of texts, and logographic reading).
(2) F. Identification of japanese letters: Kana (phonetic symbols) and Kanji (essentially nonphonetic logographic symbols representing lexical morphemes).
(3) I'd reply "aye right" using respectful Japanese logographs, but this computer doesn't have the character set.
(4) For its explanation in terms of script differences, it has been believed that lexical access is more direct or quicker for Chinese logographs than for alphabetic words.
(5) It is proposed that semantic paralexias in English (and other languages) depend upon the partial logographic nature of the reading system.
(6) Finally, Chinese logographs have been considered to facilitate recall through their graphic features that classify Chinese words into categories.
(7) Abstract and concrete non-phonetic logographic symbols (Kanji) were unilaterally presented in either the left or right visual field.
(8) Frith, 1985) propose an initial logographic phase in which printed word recognition is based on salient visual features of the print.
(9) The visual superiority effect (a reverse long-term modality effect) has been consistently found with Chinese logographs.
(10) Only in the logographic reading subtest were some word-recognition errors found, resembling semantic paralexias.
(11) Two experiments were designed based on Neisser's visual searching paradigm to compare visual, phonological and semantic processing times of two-character compound Kanji, the Japanese logographic script.
(12) Results support a continuum of visual and phonological analysis skills in first-grade reading consistent with Frith's (1985) logographic, alphabetic, and orthographic skill levels.
(13) It has also been believed that Chinese logographs are more unique in shape or more discriminable than alphabetic words.