... functions of human nervous system in light of the Gene Ontology (GO)profile ofhuman orthologs.ResultsCharacters and distribution of LIRs in human autosomesWe identified 2551 LIRs in human autosomes ... and human. The results obtaineddemonstrate that human orthologs have relativelymore LIRs, most of which are human- specific. These human- specific LIRs are probably essential for thedevelopment of ... approximately 27% of the human genesare pseudogenes. The occurrence of pseudogenesadjacent to LIRs is statistically significant (chi-squaretest; P < 0.0001).Sequence featuresof the human LIRsWe...
... number of times b follows a in the corpus. 2. Divide this value by the number of times a occurs in the corpus. Such a model is clearly insufficient for expressing the grammar of a natural language. ... this class may expand into the class of all nouns. Once word classes are found, lexical features can be extracted by assuming that there is a feature of the language which accounts for each word ... results and see that the lexical features found seem to be correct, but how can we judge that the features are indeed the correct ones? How can one set of hypothesized features mean- ingfully be...
... computational linguistsare often not aware of this literature, and resultsabout humanlanguage processing rarely informthe design, implementation, or evaluation of artifi-cial language processing ... enhancesour understanding of a key aspect ofhuman cog-nition, language processing.There is also an applied side to the proposedchallenge. Once computational models of human language processing ... Models ofHumanLanguage ProcessingFrank KellerSchool of Informatics, University of Edinburgh10 Crichton Street, Edinburgh EH8 9AB, UKkeller@inf.ed.ac.ukAbstractWe pose the development of cognitivelyplausible...
... 204.3 A study of discourse structure and some major linguistic features of the International Convention on Human Rights in comparison with those of the International Declaration on Human Rights ... Structure 34* Typical structure of an International Declaration on Human Rights 37* Typical structure of an International Convention on Human Rights 38* Sources of data 39* References 40* ANNEX ... MAJOR LINGUISTIC FEATURES OF THE INTERNATIONAL DECLARATION ON HUMAN RIGHTS3.1 Definition of an International Declaration 103.2 Purposes and typical legal characteristics of the International...
... Universal Declaration ofHuman Rights and European Charter on Human Rights.(European Convention on Human Rights). Charter of the United Nations; Universal Declaration ofHuman Rights; International ... insights into the problems and processes oflanguage use and language learning, and is therefore of great importance to language teachers. Traditionally, language teaching has concentrated on ... witness thereof" appears in most Endings of Conventions. This old form might internationally be a source of confusion because of the meaning of the word "witness". People often blame...
... proclaimed in the Charter of the United Nations, recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice ... activities of the United Nations for the maintenance of peace. V AnnexUniversal Declaration ofHuman RightsAdopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations,resolution 217 (III) of 10 December ... December 1948 PreambleWhereas recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the...
... overview of Java Generics, a new language feature that will be supported in the upcomingrelease of Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition 1.5. The firstinstallment—" ;Language Featuresof Java ... family of subtypes of type Number; "? super Integer" is the family of supertypes of type Integer; and "?"is the set of all types. Correspondingly, the wildcard instantiation of ... result of translation by erasure.ExplorationWe've provided an overview of all major languagefeatures related to parameterized types and methods. Naturally, coverage of a fairly complex language...
... LinguisticsThe HumanLanguage Project:Building a Universal Corpus of the World’s LanguagesSteven AbneyUniversity of Michiganabney@umich.eduSteven BirdUniversity of Melbourne andUniversity of Pennsylvaniasbird@unimelb.edu.auAbstractWe ... a bit of preamble.We aim for a digitization of each human lan-guage. What exactly does it mean to digitize anentire language? It is natural to think in terms of replicating the body of resources ... Corpus,1intwo senses of universal: in the sense of including(ultimately) all the world’s languages, and in thesense of enabling software and processing meth-ods that are language- universal.However,...
... obtained by designing a mutation in the gene of GLP-1 (7-37). This mutation resulted in the substitution of glycolamine for alanine at the second site of GLP-1 (7-37) peptide. A sequence of nucleotide ... function of protein, we designed an enterokinase cleavage site at the 5’ terminus of the gene of the gAd-GLP-1-A fusion protein, which was used to re-move the His-tag [9]. In our study, most of ... con-jugating molecule of GLP-1 in our study. This design not only may prevent the renal filtration of GLP-1, but also may yield a new protein with both function of GLP-1 and gAd [2]. We designed a mutation...