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    <title>Auteurs : Joël Colloc</title>
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    <description>Publications of Auteurs Joël Colloc</description>
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      <title>On how to Define Anticipation in the Verbal Flow</title>
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      <description>Few studies in French concern anticipation in language, and much of this research draws on computing and its algorithms which are based on the vocabulary of linguistics, using terms such as semantics and grammar. This raises a major problem, however, which is bound to the notion of anticipation, namely that of recursion (the role of the subject's linguistic competence and memory). These two interrelated functions of anticipation and recursion contribute to constructing sequences. However, while we can legitimately speak about sequences and concatenation in computing, this is not possible with respect to language, because language is based on a continuum, a combinatorial structure that is constantly evolving. De facto, language and its production rely on a dynamic and complex cognitive operation, anchored in space, time and the subject's knowledge: the speaking subject has to constantly adapt to this ever-changing space, time and knowledge in the continuous information flow. </description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 10 Oct 2024 10:18:28 +0200</pubDate>
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      <title>From Self-Awareness to the Consciousness of the &quot;Speaking Subject&quot;</title>
      <link>http://popups.lib.uliege.be/1373-5411/index.php?id=4414</link>
      <description>This paper concerns human language, which is linked to the process whereby the human brain developed and adapted to its environment via the body, the senses and the intelligence of the speaking subject. We can say, first, that the subject's unconscious reaction to the impact of a sensory percept, whether complex or not, is emotional stricto sensu and physiological; a statement produced in response to this impact still pertains to feeling. A fundamental point in the problem posed here and one that entails an epistemological revolution is that, in self-awareness, various levels of consciousness come into play. We shall see how these concepts can be organized into a coherent and relevant whole in order to put forward the following hypothesis: the eruption of emotion, strictly speaking, anticipates the production of language. </description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 10 Oct 2024 10:17:32 +0200</pubDate>
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