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1
A Systematic Investigation of KB-Text Embedding Alignment at Scale ...
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2
Common Brain Substrates Underlying Auditory Speech Priming and Perceived Spatial Separation
In: Front Neurosci (2021)
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3
Voice quality in Mandarin sarcastic speech (Li et al., 2020) ...
Shanpeng Li; Wentao Gu; Liu, Lei. - : ASHA journals, 2020
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4
Voice quality in Mandarin sarcastic speech (Li et al., 2020) ...
Shanpeng Li; Wentao Gu; Liu, Lei. - : ASHA journals, 2020
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5
Additional file 1: of Geographic distribution of echinococcosis in Tibetan region of Sichuan Province, China ...
Liu, Lei; Guo, Bing; Li, Wei. - : figshare, 2018
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6
Additional file 1: of Geographic distribution of echinococcosis in Tibetan region of Sichuan Province, China ...
Liu, Lei; Guo, Bing; Li, Wei. - : figshare, 2018
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7
Modeling ontology evolution with SetPi
In: Information sciences. - New York, NY : Elsevier Science Inc. 255 (2014), 155-169
OLC Linguistik
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8
Eine korpusbasierte Untersuchung der Kohäsionsmittel bei der Textproduktion chinesischer Germanistikstudenten
In: Muttersprache. - Wiesbaden : Ges. für Dt. Sprache 123 (2013) 2, 145-169
BLLDB
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9
Trajectories of collaborative scientific conceptual change: middle school students learning about ecosystems in a CSCL environment
Liu, Lei. - 2008
Abstract: The dissertation aims to achieve two goals. First, it attempts to establish a new theoretical framework -- the collaborative scientific conceptual change model, which explicitly attends to social factor and epistemic practices of science, to understand conceptual change. Second, it report the findings of a classroom study to investigate how to apply this theoretical framework to examine the trajectories of collaborative scientific conceptual change in a CSCL environment and provide pedagogical implications. Two simulations were designed to help students make connections between the macroscopic substances and the aperceptual microscopic entities and underlying processes. The reported study was focused on analyzing the aggregated data from all participants and the video and audio data from twenty focal groups' collaborative activities and the process of their conceptual development in two classroom settings. Mixed quantitative and qualitative analyses were applied to analyze the video/audio data. The results found that, overall participants showed significant improvements from pretest to posttest on system understanding. Group and teacher effect as well as group variability were detected in both students' posttest performance and their collaborative activities, and variability emerged in group interaction. Multiple data analyses found that attributes of collaborative discourse and epistemic practices made a difference in student learning. Generating warranted claims in discourse as well as the predicting, coordinating theory-evidence, and modifying knowledge in epistemic practices had an impact on student's conceptual understanding. However, modifying knowledge was found negatively related to students' learning effect. The case studies show how groups differed in using the computer tools as a medium to conduct collaborative discourse and epistemic practices. Only with certain combination of discourse features and epistemic practices can the group interaction lead to successful convergent understanding. The results of the study imply that the collaborative scientific conceptual change model is an effective framework to study conceptual change and the simulation environment may mediate the development of successful collaborative interactions (including collaborative discourse and epistemic practices) that lead to collaborative scientific conceptual change. ; Ph.D. ; Includes bibliographical references (p. 120-129) ; by Lei Liu
Keyword: Computer-assisted instruction; Education; Group work in education; Science--Study and teaching
URL: http://hdl.rutgers.edu/1782.2/rucore10001600001.ETD.000051090
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10
On The Evidence Inference Theory
In: Information sciences. - New York, NY : Elsevier Science Inc. 89 (1996) 3-4, 245-260
OLC Linguistik
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11
On the evidence inference theory
In: Information sciences. - New York, NY : Elsevier Science Inc. 89 (1996) 3-4, 245-260
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