enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Attentional shift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attentional_shift

    Additionally, this study reported that covert shifts of attention showed greater activity levels than in the overt attention condition. However, it is important to note that different tasks were used for the covert versus the overt condition.

  3. Prestige (sociolinguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prestige_(sociolinguistics)

    [6] [7] There are thus the concepts of overt and covert prestige. Overt prestige is related to standard and "formal" language features, and expresses power and status; covert prestige is related more to vernacular and often patois, and expresses solidarity, community and group identity more than authority. [8]

  4. Covert prestige - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covert_prestige

    Covert prestige refers to the relatively high value placed towards a non-standard form of a variety in a speech community. This concept was pioneered by the linguist William Labov, in his study of New York City English speakers that while high linguistic prestige is usually more associated with standard forms of language, this pattern also implies that a similar one should exist for working ...

  5. Attention - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attention

    Attention may be differentiated into "overt" versus "covert" orienting. [50] Overt orienting is the act of selectively attending to an item or location over others by moving the eyes to point in that direction. [51] Overt orienting can be directly observed in the form of eye movements.

  6. Posner cueing task - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posner_cueing_task

    This method is used to differentiate overt and covert attention. Overt attention involves directed eye movements, known as saccades, to consciously focus the eye on a target stimulus. Covert attention involves mental focus or attention to an object without significant eye movement, and is the predominant area of interest when using the Posner ...

  7. Orienting system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orienting_system

    The brain pathway that orients visual attention to a stimulus is referred to as the orienting system.There are two main types of visual orientations, covert (exogenous) which occurs when a salient environmental change causes a shift in attention and overt (endogenous) which occurs when the individual makes a conscious decision to orient attention to a stimuli [1] During a covert orientation of ...

  8. Triangulation (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangulation_(psychology)

    The Perverse Triangle was first described in 1977 by Jay Haley [6] as a triangle where two people who are on different hierarchical or generational levels form a coalition against a third person (e.g., "a covert alliance between a parent and a child, who band together to undermine the other parent's power and authority".) [7] The perverse triangle concept has been widely discussed in ...

  9. PRO (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PRO_(linguistics)

    A consequence of the EPP is that clauses that lack an overt subject must necessarily have an "invisible" or "covert" subject; with non-finite clauses this covert subject is PRO. [ 5 ] Motivation for a PRO subject comes from the grammaticality of sentences such as (1) and (2), where the subject of the infinitival to -clause, though not overtly ...