a b s t r a c tSigned languages are articulated through simultaneous upper-body movements and are seen; spoken languages are articulated through sequential vocal-tract movements and are heard. But word recognition in both language modalities entails segmentation of a continuous input into discrete lexical units. According to the Possible Word Constraint (PWC), listeners segment speech so as to avoid impossible words in the input. We argue here that the PWC is a modality-general principle. Deaf signers of British Sign Language (BSL) spotted real BSL signs embedded in nonsense-sign contexts more easily when the nonsense signs were possible BSL signs than when they were not. A control experiment showed that there were no articulatory differences between the different contexts. A second control experiment on segmentation in spoken Dutch strengthened the claim that the main BSL result likely reflects the operation of a lexical-viability constraint. It appears that signed and spoken languages, in spite of radical input differences, are segmented so as to leave no residues of the input that cannot be words.Crown
Just as 3 → He can be approximately characterized as a polarized neutron target, polarized 6 LiD has been advocated as a good isoscalar nuclear target for the extraction of the polarized gluon content of the nucleon. The original argument rests upon a presumed "alpha + deuteron" picture of 6 Li, with the polarization of the nucleus carried by the polarization of the deuteron. We have calculated the polarization of the constituents of 6 Li as a three-body bound state of α+n+p interacting with local potentials fitted to the scattering data. It is necessary to include partial waves up to j = 17/2 (75 channels, or, when including the T = 1 state, 150 channels) in the Faddeev equations before the energy eigenvalue converges. The longitudinal formfactors are then described well by the wave function. Various combinations of αN and NN strong and Coulomb potentials yield a straight line in the charge radius vs. energy plane which, unlike those of previous calculations, passes through the experimental datum. We find for all cases a polarization of the valence neutron in excess of 90%. This may make polarized 6 LiD an attractive target for many nuclear physics purposes, since its neutrons are effectively 45% polarized.
We present a method based on hyperspherical harmonics to solve the nuclear manybody problem. It is an extension of accurate methods used for studying few-body systems to many bodies and is based on the assumption that nucleons in nuclei interact mainly via pairwise forces. This leads to a two-variable integro-differential equation which is easy to solve. Unlike methods that utilize effective interactions, the present one employs directly nucleon-nucleon potentials and therefore nuclear correlations are included in an unambiguous way. Three body forces can also be included in the formalism. Details on how to obtain the various ingredients entering into the equation for the A-body system are given. Employing our formalism we calculated the binding energies for closed and open shell nuclei with central forces where the bound states are defined by a single hyperspherical harmonic. The results found are in agreement with those obtained by other methods.
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