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19 pages, 1271 KiB  
Article
Reformulation in Early 20th Century Substandard Italian
by Giulio Scivoletto
Languages 2025, 10(7), 165; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10070165 - 3 Jul 2025
Viewed by 184
Abstract
This study investigates reformulation in a substandard variety of Italian, italiano popolare, from the early 20th Century, focusing on a collection of letters and postcards from semi-literate Sicilian peasants during World War I. The analysis identifies three reformulation markers: cioè, anzi [...] Read more.
This study investigates reformulation in a substandard variety of Italian, italiano popolare, from the early 20th Century, focusing on a collection of letters and postcards from semi-literate Sicilian peasants during World War I. The analysis identifies three reformulation markers: cioè, anzi, and vuol dire. These markers are affected by hypercorrection, interference, and structural simplification, reflecting the sociolinguistic dynamics of italiano popolare. Additionally, the study of these markers sheds light on the relationships between reformulation and related discourse functions, namely paraphrase, correction, addition, and motivation. By positioning occurrences of reformulation along a continuum between the spoken and written mode, the findings suggest that this discourse function is employed more as a rhetorical strategy that characterizes planned written texts, rather than as a feature of disfluency that is typical of unplanned speech. Ultimately, examining reformulation in italiano popolare provides valuable insights into the relationship between sociolinguistic variation and language change in the beginning of the 20th Century, a key phase in the spread of Italian as a national language. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Pragmatic Diachronic Study of the 20th Century)
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23 pages, 3556 KiB  
Article
The Neglected Group: Cognitive Discourse Markers as Signposts of Prosodic Unit Boundaries
by Simona Majhenič, Mitja Beras and Janez Križaj
Languages 2025, 10(7), 159; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10070159 - 27 Jun 2025
Viewed by 530
Abstract
The present paper examines and compares the role of cognitive discourse markers (DMs), such as uhm, like, or I mean, and a set of prosodic parameters as indicators of prosodic boundaries. Cognitive DMs traditionally are not studied as a separate [...] Read more.
The present paper examines and compares the role of cognitive discourse markers (DMs), such as uhm, like, or I mean, and a set of prosodic parameters as indicators of prosodic boundaries. Cognitive DMs traditionally are not studied as a separate DM group on par with the ideational, sequential, rhetorical, or interpersonal group. However, as they reflect the speaker’s mental processes during speech production, they offer an exceptional glimpse into how speakers construct their verbalisations. Along with the analysis of DMs, prosodic parameters, including pitch and intensity reset, speech rate change, and pauses, were automatically annotated to determine how well they overlapped with the manually annotated prosodic boundaries. To accommodate for the natural variability in speech, the parameters were evaluated using relative comparison methods. Among the prosodic parameters, pauses were found to overlap most often with the manually annotated prosodic boundaries. Cognitive DMs in the function of realising new information, restructuring, and emphasis indeed proved as relevant boundary indicators, however, the group of cognitive DMs as a whole fell behind the group of sequential and rhetorical DMs, which overlapped most frequently with the manually annotated prosodic boundaries. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Current Trends in Discourse Marker Research)
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20 pages, 1405 KiB  
Article
Multimodal Pragmatic Markers of Feedback in Dialogue
by Ludivine Crible and Loulou Kosmala
Languages 2025, 10(6), 117; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10060117 - 22 May 2025
Viewed by 496
Abstract
Historically, the field of discourse marker research has moved from relying on intuition to more and more ecological data, with written, spoken, and now multimodal corpora available to study these pervasive pragmatic devices. For some topics, video is necessary to capture the complexity [...] Read more.
Historically, the field of discourse marker research has moved from relying on intuition to more and more ecological data, with written, spoken, and now multimodal corpora available to study these pervasive pragmatic devices. For some topics, video is necessary to capture the complexity of interactive phenomena, such as feedback in dialogue. Feedback is the process of communicating engagement, alignment, and affiliation (or lack thereof) to the other speaker, and has attracted a lot of attention recently, from fields such as psycholinguistics, conversation analysis, or second language acquisition. Feedback can be expressed by a variety of verbal/vocal and visual/gestural devices, from questions to head nods and, crucially, discourse or pragmatic markers such as “okay, alright, yeah”. Verbal-vocal and visual-gestural forms often co-occur, which calls for more investigation of their combinations. In this study, we analyze multimodal pragmatic markers of feedback in a corpus of French dialogues, where all feedback devices have previously been categorized into either “alignment” (expression of mutual understanding) or “affiliation” (expression of shared stance). After describing the distribution and forms within each modality taken separately, we will focus on interesting multimodal combinations, such as [negative oui ‘yes’ + head tilt] or [mais oui ‘but yes’ + forward head move], thus showing how the visual modality can affect the semantics of verbal markers. In doing so, we will contribute to defining multimodal pragmatic markers, a status which has so far been restricted to verbal markers and manual gestures, at the expense of other devices in the visual modality. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Current Trends in Discourse Marker Research)
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18 pages, 342 KiB  
Article
The Mandate of the World Russian People’s Council and the Russian Political Imagination: Scripture, Politics and War
by Alar Kilp and Jerry G. Pankhurst
Religions 2025, 16(4), 466; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040466 - 4 Apr 2025
Viewed by 719
Abstract
The Mandate of the XXV World Russian People’s Council of 27 March 2024 framed the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine as a “holy war”. This paper presents an in-depth textual analysis of the Mandate followed by an extended thematic and contextual analysis. [...] Read more.
The Mandate of the XXV World Russian People’s Council of 27 March 2024 framed the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine as a “holy war”. This paper presents an in-depth textual analysis of the Mandate followed by an extended thematic and contextual analysis. The findings indicate that the Mandate’s mainstream discourses of eschatological–apocalyptic holy war and katechon state were not previously expressed at the level of official church leadership. They contribute to the ideological escalation of the Russian confrontation with Ukraine and the West around declared traditional values and the holy mission of the Russian people, while the involvement of Orthodoxy in the Russian ‘holy war’ narrative is neither exclusive of other religious referents nor of disbelief in ecclesial doctrine. The main referent of the Self (and correspondingly, of the sacred) is the (Russian) ‘nation’ or ‘people’, for which ‘spiritual’ and ‘civilizational’ are comprehensive religious markers of cultural identity. While two religious adversaries of the Russian geopolitical agenda of Ukraine—the Ecumenical Patriarchate and Ukrainian Orthodoxy—are not directly mentioned in the Mandate, it nevertheless attempts to re-formulate an Orthodox ‘just war’ theory, intensifies antagonistic inter-Orthodox relations in the Russia–Ukraine dimension and strengthens the resolve of the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) and the Russian Federation to retain Ukraine’s Orthodox Church as an exclusively Russian space. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Interreligious Dialogue and Conflict)
18 pages, 348 KiB  
Article
Acquisition of Variation in the Use of alors, donc, fait que by Advanced French-as-a-Second-Language Learners in Ontario, Canada
by Françoise Mougeon, Raymond Mougeon and Katherine Rehner
Languages 2025, 10(4), 73; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10040073 - 1 Apr 2025
Viewed by 329
Abstract
This study examines the acquisition of sociolinguistic variation in the use of French connectors alors/donc/fait que ‘so’ by two groups of advanced French-as-a-second language (FL2) learners in Ontario: (i) high school French Immersion (FI) students and (ii) university students. It considers two types [...] Read more.
This study examines the acquisition of sociolinguistic variation in the use of French connectors alors/donc/fait que ‘so’ by two groups of advanced French-as-a-second language (FL2) learners in Ontario: (i) high school French Immersion (FI) students and (ii) university students. It considers two types of functions fulfilled by these connectors: (i) the grammatical function of expressing consequence between two clauses and (ii) a range of discursive functions, a dual focus not present in previous research, which considered only one or the other of these two types of functions. Our study shows that: (i) although these two FL2 groups’ use of the connectors is distant from the norms of FL1 speech, the university students achieve a more advanced level of acquisition of this case of variation than do the FI students, reflecting the positive effect of continued learning of French at the postsecondary level; (ii) ‘level of opportunities to interact in French with native speakers’ has a greater positive impact on the acquisition of alors/donc/fait que than ‘time spent learning French’; and (iii) both groups of students evidence incomplete acquisition of the linguistic constraints of connector choice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Acquisition of L2 Sociolinguistic Competence)
23 pages, 597 KiB  
Article
“Okay We’re Doing My Idea”: How Students Enact Epistemic Agency and Power in a Design-Based Engineering Context
by Christina L. Baze, María González-Howard, Victor Sampson, Richard Crawford and Xiaofen Hamilton
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(4), 402; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15040402 - 23 Mar 2025
Viewed by 724
Abstract
Science and engineering practices are intended to engage students authentically in the work that scientists and engineers do in order to provide opportunities for meaningful engagement in disciplinary work, including design-based learning. Meaningful engagement, particularly for sensemaking purposes, requires a shift in who [...] Read more.
Science and engineering practices are intended to engage students authentically in the work that scientists and engineers do in order to provide opportunities for meaningful engagement in disciplinary work, including design-based learning. Meaningful engagement, particularly for sensemaking purposes, requires a shift in who is leading the classroom community’s intellectual work, from the teacher to the students. When students are positioned with the intellectual responsibility of producing and evaluating ideas, there is potential for them to act with epistemic agency. Enacting epistemic agency involves socially negotiated framing and power dynamics. The purpose of this study is to determine the ways in which gendered power dynamics influence the negotiation of epistemic agency in a design-based learning context. Using a qualitative case study methodology, student negotiations of epistemic and positional framing from a mixed-gender group were observed. Transcripts from their discourse during two design challenges were mapped, and focal group interviews were holistically analyzed to understand students’ perceptions and navigation of epistemic and positional framings in a design-based learning context and to understand how power dynamics influence these negotiations. Students understood the epistemic goals of the design challenges to involve designing solutions to real-world problems. During the first challenge, the group distributed positions of epistemic authority among the members. However, the group experienced a change in composition, resulting in changed power dynamics and epistemic oppression. These findings have implications regarding the critical impact that classroom culture and interactional practices might have on students’ epistemic agency, especially considering their multiple identity markers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advancing Science Learning through Design-Based Learning)
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13 pages, 546 KiB  
Systematic Review
Skin Lesions as Signs of Neuroenhancement in Sport
by Sorana-Cristiana Popescu, Roman Popescu, Vlad Voiculescu and Carolina Negrei
Brain Sci. 2025, 15(3), 315; https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci15030315 - 17 Mar 2025
Viewed by 1031
Abstract
Background: Neuroenhancement in sports, through pharmacological and non-pharmacological methods, is a complex and highly debated topic with no definitive regulatory framework established by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). The hypothesis that dermatological changes could serve as observable biomarkers for neurodoping introduces a novel [...] Read more.
Background: Neuroenhancement in sports, through pharmacological and non-pharmacological methods, is a complex and highly debated topic with no definitive regulatory framework established by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA). The hypothesis that dermatological changes could serve as observable biomarkers for neurodoping introduces a novel and promising approach to detecting and understanding the physiological impacts of cognitive enhancers in athletes. As neurodoping methods become increasingly sophisticated, developing objective, reliable, and non-invasive detection strategies is imperative. Utilizing dermatological signs as a diagnostic tool for internal neurophysiological changes could offer critical insights into the safety, fairness, and ethical considerations of cognitive enhancement in competitive sports. A systematic correlation between skin manifestations, the timeline of neurodoping practices, and the intensity of cognitive enhancement methods could provide healthcare professionals valuable tools for monitoring athletes’ health and ensuring strict compliance with anti-doping regulations. Methods: Due to the limited body of research on this topic, a systematic review of the literature was conducted, spanning from 2010 to 31 December 2024, using databases such as PubMed, Science Direct, and Google Scholar. This study followed the 2020 PRISMA guidelines and included English-language articles published within the specified period, focusing on skin lesions as adverse reactions to pharmacological and non-pharmacological neuroenhancement methods. The research employed targeted keywords, including “skin lesions AND rivastigmine”, “skin lesions AND galantamine”, “skin lesions AND donepezil”, “skin lesions AND memantine”, and “skin lesions AND transcranial direct electrical stimulation”. Given the scarcity of studies directly addressing neurodoping in sports, the search criteria were broadened to include skin reactions associated with cognitive enhancers and brain stimulation. Eighteen relevant articles were identified and analyzed. Results: The review identified rivastigmine patches as the most used pharmacological method for neuroenhancement, with pruritic (itchy) skin lesions as a frequent adverse effect. Donepezil was associated with fewer and primarily non-pruritic skin reactions. Among non-pharmacological methods, transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) was notably linked to skin burns, primarily due to inadequate electrode–skin contact, prolonged exposure, or excessive current intensity. These findings suggest that specific dermatological manifestations could serve as potential indicators of neurodoping practices in athletes. Conclusions: Although specific neuroenhancement methods demonstrate distinctive dermatological side effects that might signal neurodoping, the current lack of robust clinical data involving athletes limits the ability to draw definitive conclusions. Athletes who engage in neurodoping without medical supervision are at an elevated risk of adverse dermatological and systemic reactions. Skin lesions, therefore, could represent a valuable early diagnostic marker for the inappropriate use or overuse of cognitive-enhancing drugs or neuromodulation therapies. The findings emphasize the need for focused clinical research to establish validated dermatological criteria for detecting neurodoping. This research could contribute significantly to the ongoing neuroethical discourse regarding the legitimacy and safety of cognitive enhancement in sports. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Behavioral Neuroscience)
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25 pages, 272 KiB  
Article
Persuasion Strategies Used by Medical Experts vs. Political Figures: A Study of Coronavirus-Related Media Discourse
by Mohammad Mohtasham, Fatemeh Mahdavirad, Ali Akbar Jabbari and Golnar Mazdayasna
Journal. Media 2025, 6(1), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia6010034 - 27 Feb 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 888
Abstract
Concentrating on different types of persuasion strategies used by medical experts and political figures, the present study aims to examine persuasion strategies in medical vs. political discourse. Four corpora of speeches and interviews of four different groups of politicians and health professionals related [...] Read more.
Concentrating on different types of persuasion strategies used by medical experts and political figures, the present study aims to examine persuasion strategies in medical vs. political discourse. Four corpora of speeches and interviews of four different groups of politicians and health professionals related to COVID-19 were selected. Two corpora belonged to Iranian figures, and two corpora represented Western figures. Then, using a framework which encompasses textual and interpersonal markers, the persuasive properties of the four corpora were investigated. The results indicated that logical markers emerge as the most frequent elements in textual subcategories of the persuasive metadiscourse observed in all four corpora. Moreover, in the case of the interpersonal subcategories, it was found that although hedges have a key role in the persuasive qualities of the texts, certainty markers appear to be largely absent within this corpus, which could suggest that the speakers are reluctant to take a stance while discussing a divisive and new issue such as COVID-19. The results provide insights into how the public’s understanding of the situation can be shaped and shifted in times of crisis, using persuasive devices by public figures. Full article
13 pages, 266 KiB  
Article
Turbat al-Ḥusayn: Modern Presentation of an Early Shīʿī Practice
by S. M. Hadi Gerami and Zinab Aghagolizadeh
Religions 2025, 16(1), 98; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16010098 - 20 Jan 2025
Viewed by 1527
Abstract
This article explores the historical and contemporary evolution of turbat al-ḥusayn, the sacred soil of Karbala, as a central element in shaping Shīʿī identity and ritual practices. From the early Islamic centuries, turbat al-ḥusayn has served not only as a symbol of [...] Read more.
This article explores the historical and contemporary evolution of turbat al-ḥusayn, the sacred soil of Karbala, as a central element in shaping Shīʿī identity and ritual practices. From the early Islamic centuries, turbat al-ḥusayn has served not only as a symbol of healing and blessing but also as a key component of Shīʿī collective memory. The paper examines the development of turbat rituals across three significant periods: pre-Safavid, post-Safavid, and post-revolutionary Iran. During the pre-Safavid period, including the medieval Islamic centuries, the sanctification of turbat evolved through the efforts of Shīʿī Imams such as al-Bāqir and al-Ṣādiq, who integrated it into the theological framework of wilāyah (guardianship) and Shīʿī ritual practices. This period also witnessed the gradual codification of its ritualistic and medicinal uses in foundational Shīʿī texts. During the Safavid era, turbat became institutionalized as a marker of Shīʿī identity, with its economic significance expanding through the production of prayer tablets and rosaries. Following the 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran, turbat was reinterpreted as a symbol of martyrdom and resistance, aligning with revolutionary ideologies and narratives that paralleled the sacrifices of Karbala with contemporary struggles. The COVID-19 pandemic introduced new dimensions to turbat’s role, with its promotion as a medicinal remedy by religious figures, despite lacking historical precedent in traditional Shīʿī teachings. These developments illustrate how turbat al-ḥusayn continues to be dynamically recontextualized in response to modern challenges. The study concludes that turbat al-ḥusayn transcends its ritualistic and spiritual origins, serving as a flexible and enduring symbol of Shīʿī identity. Its evolving interpretations underscore the interplay between tradition and modernity, highlighting its ongoing relevance in both devotional life and socio-political discourse. Full article
14 pages, 1205 KiB  
Article
Navigating Sensitive Conversations: Patient-Centered Communication and Politeness Markers in Chinese Online Medical Consultations
by Yidi Wang, Xiaoya Yang and Jiaying Liu
Healthcare 2024, 12(23), 2465; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12232465 - 6 Dec 2024
Viewed by 1072
Abstract
Background/Objectives: In China, discussing sexual and reproductive health remains taboo, often preventing patients from seeking care or advice on sensitive topics. Online medical consultations (OMCs) offer a unique platform for patients to discuss these concerns more openly. This study investigates how patient-centered [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: In China, discussing sexual and reproductive health remains taboo, often preventing patients from seeking care or advice on sensitive topics. Online medical consultations (OMCs) offer a unique platform for patients to discuss these concerns more openly. This study investigates how patient-centered communication (PCC) practices, including conversational themes and the use of politeness markers, influence patient satisfaction in Chinese OMCs, with a focus on sensitive gynecology and andrology topics. Methods: This study used a mixed-methods approach, including theme-oriented discourse analysis (TODA) and content analysis on 328 OMCs (179 in andrology, 149 in gynecology) collected from Dr. Chunyu, a popular Chinese online healthcare platform that provides medical consultations, from 19 to 22 March 2022. Logistic regressions were conducted to assess the influence of politeness markers on patient satisfaction, while TODA examined PCC practices in sensitive conversations. Results: TODA identified two key themes in PCC that enhanced patient satisfaction: normalizing sensitive health concerns and fostering collaborative decision-making. Politeness markers, specifically the use of polite words and expressions of best wishes, were positively associated with patient satisfaction. However, downtoners, emojis, and sentence-final particles showed no significant effect. There were no significant differences in the impact of politeness markers between gynecology and andrology consultations. Conclusions: This study highlights the importance of PCC and politeness markers in improving patient satisfaction in OMCs, especially when addressing sensitive sexual health topics. Full article
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16 pages, 366 KiB  
Article
Public Discourse on Criminal Responsibility and Its Impact on Political-Legal Decisions: Analysing the (Re-)Appropriation of the Language of Law in the Sarah Halimi Case
by Nadia Makouar
Languages 2024, 9(10), 313; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9100313 - 27 Sep 2024
Viewed by 1658
Abstract
This applied linguistics study on the lay discourse about legal language analyses online public reactions to a court decision in the Sarah Halimi case, a French Jewish woman killed by her neighbour in Paris in 2017. This study draws on discourse analysis with [...] Read more.
This applied linguistics study on the lay discourse about legal language analyses online public reactions to a court decision in the Sarah Halimi case, a French Jewish woman killed by her neighbour in Paris in 2017. This study draws on discourse analysis with a focus on semantics analysis and dialogism theory to delve into how legal discourse is disseminated in forums and undergoes semantic redefinition through users’ language practices of legal notion in their own discourses. Thus, the aim of this study is not to develop linguistics theories but to use linguistics to explore the relationship between (1) the public representation and perception of this murder case in three forums and (2) the politico-legal response to decisions about a lack of criminal responsibility. The latter remains a sensitive topic in several countries, and several criminal justice reforms are revised or implemented with close observation of public reaction. This analysis highlights the linguistic markers revealing emotional discourse and a polymorphous expression of a lack of confidence in the justice system and legal actors, emphasising issues in comprehending justice and the work of psychiatrists and highlighting a gap between expectations and the actual delivery of justice. This study also shows that the linguistic strategies of non-experts are similar to those of legal experts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Challenges in Forensic and Legal Linguistics)
22 pages, 4309 KiB  
Article
Description of the Northern Green Anaconda (Eunectes akayima sp. nov. Serpentes; Boidae): What Is in a Name?
by Jesús A. Rivas, Juliana S. Terra, Marijn Roosen, Patrick S. Champagne, Renata Leite-Pitman, Paola De La Quintana, Marco Mancuso, Luis F. Pacheco, Gordon M. Burghardt, Freek J. Vonk, Juán Elías García-Pérez, Bryan G. Fry and Sarah Corey-Rivas
Diversity 2024, 16(7), 418; https://doi.org/10.3390/d16070418 - 18 Jul 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 9139
Abstract
While elucidating the evolutionary trajectory of green anacondas, we previously documented the existence of two distinct species, Eunectes akayima sp. nov. and Eunectes murinus (Linnaeus, 1758), that separated approximately 10 million years ago. Our research integrates a novel molecular clock approach, focuses on tectonic plate [...] Read more.
While elucidating the evolutionary trajectory of green anacondas, we previously documented the existence of two distinct species, Eunectes akayima sp. nov. and Eunectes murinus (Linnaeus, 1758), that separated approximately 10 million years ago. Our research integrates a novel molecular clock approach, focuses on tectonic plate movements with fossil records as minimal chronological markers, and offers a refined understanding of speciation events in relation to major biogeographical occurrences in South America. Mitochondrial DNA analysis demonstrates a significant genetic divergence between the species, which is supported by a notable difference in sexual size dimorphism (SSD) intensity between the two species, along with other morphological differences. This paper also rectifies earlier oversights in the description of the new species and clarifies taxonomic ambiguities in compliance with the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (henceforth ICZN). In addition, we designate a neotype for E. murinus to stabilize the group. In an effort to honor Indigenous nations, E. akayima sp. nov. derives its name from the Carib language, advocating for the inclusion of traditional names in scientific discourse. Our paper not only contributes to the taxonomic stability of anacondas but also advocates for the usage of Indigenous names in zoological nomenclature by adopting a more inclusive and flexible approach to the ICZN and eliminating unintended exclusionary practices that we have inherited in science as in other disciplines. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue DNA Barcoding for Biodiversity Conservation and Restoration)
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14 pages, 371 KiB  
Article
Made in Languaging; Ecolinguistic Expertise
by Stephen J. Cowley
Languages 2024, 9(7), 252; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9070252 - 17 Jul 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1353
Abstract
Made in languaging aims to help ecolinguists with recrafting ideation and human practices. Inspired by Alexander and Stibbe, I turn to how ecolinguistic expertise can favour life-sustaining relations. In approaching normative goals, I start with how knowledge is made, self-sustains and is disseminated. [...] Read more.
Made in languaging aims to help ecolinguists with recrafting ideation and human practices. Inspired by Alexander and Stibbe, I turn to how ecolinguistic expertise can favour life-sustaining relations. In approaching normative goals, I start with how knowledge is made, self-sustains and is disseminated. Ecolinguistic analysis of languages, discourse and narratives can thus be enriched by tracing how practices inform languaging. In turning to epistemic agency, I emphasise the following: (1) building corpora popularia, organised bodies, in order to enhance life-sustaining relations; (2) illuminating life from the inside; and (3) developing bioecological awareness. I contend that, while all living beings use coordinative activities to bring forth what appears to us, humans also use wording types and practices. As we use the already known, languaging enables subjecthood, a person’s little worlds, and a group’s common realities. Hence, what appears as (and to) experience is made in languaging. When linked to normative concerns, the resulting middle worlds also offer means of putting knowledge to work. As in social epistemology, one might regard ‘wealth and well-being’ as a marker of public good. Yet, critical work shows, appeal to these values is anthropomorphic. In order to encompass nonhumans and the biogenic, one can reject market orientatation by tracing languaging, and knowing, back to living. In showing benefits of so doing, I contrast two evolving wording types. The case of growthism, I suggest, attests to praxis and contrasts starkly with the ideational value of life-sustaining relations. Yet, in both cases, languaging meshes practices, happenings and the effects of action. The move shows how one can challenge the hypostatisation of ideology by pursuing how epistemic agency can contribute to the future of evolution. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Current Trends in Ecolinguistics)
25 pages, 1244 KiB  
Article
When Positioning Mediates Social Judgements: Life-Stage, Gender, and Yeah-No in Australian English
by Stacey Sherwood, Robert Mailhammer and Mark Antoniou
Languages 2024, 9(6), 221; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9060221 - 18 Jun 2024
Viewed by 1444
Abstract
This study explores the correlation between social categories and linguistic variables, focusing on the perception of the discourse marker yeah-no in Australian English. Research suggests that these correlations reflect individuals’ recruitment of variables for the purpose of communicating social meaning. However, not all [...] Read more.
This study explores the correlation between social categories and linguistic variables, focusing on the perception of the discourse marker yeah-no in Australian English. Research suggests that these correlations reflect individuals’ recruitment of variables for the purpose of communicating social meaning. However, not all social categories which correlate with a variable in production are recognizable as social meaning. This study investigated how individuals’ positioning to a variable mediates their awareness to its social meaning by examining perceptions of gender and life-stage in yeah-no users and non-users. We found that individuals judged sentences including yeah-no as more likely to be said by a student, and this effect was stronger for individuals who did not self-report as yeah-no users. Furthermore, while there was no significant effect of gender, participants who did not self-report as yeah-no users were more likely to judge yeah-no sentences as said by a male speaker rather than a female speaker. The findings imply that the perception of social meaning is influenced by an individual’s positioning towards a variable. More broadly, the results provide support for using self-report techniques in the investigation of social meaning. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Australian English)
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16 pages, 451 KiB  
Article
Navigating Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm Management through Fukuoka Consensus vs. European Evidence-Based Guidelines on Pancreatic Cystic Neoplasms—A Study on Two European Centers
by Vladimir Djordjevic, Djordje Knezevic, Blaz Trotovsek, Ales Tomazic, Miha Petric, Benjamin Hadzialjevic, Nikica Grubor and Mihajlo Djokic
Cancers 2024, 16(11), 2156; https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16112156 - 6 Jun 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3465
Abstract
This study addresses the critical need for the accurate diagnosis and management of intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs), which are pancreatic cystic neoplasm types holding a substantial potential for malignancy. It evaluates the diagnostic effectiveness of the Fukuoka consensus guidelines and the European [...] Read more.
This study addresses the critical need for the accurate diagnosis and management of intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms (IPMNs), which are pancreatic cystic neoplasm types holding a substantial potential for malignancy. It evaluates the diagnostic effectiveness of the Fukuoka consensus guidelines and the European evidence-based guidelines in detecting high-grade dysplasia/invasive carcinoma in IPMNs, utilizing a retrospective analysis of 113 patients from two European medical centers. The methods include a comparative analysis of clinical, radiological, and endoscopic ultrasonography data, alongside an assessment of guideline-driven diagnostic performance. The results demonstrate that both guidelines offer similar accuracy in identifying severe disease stages in IPMNs, with certain clinical markers—such as jaundice, solid mass presence, and an increase in CA 19-9 levels—being pivotal in predicting the need for surgical intervention. This study concludes that while both guidelines provide valuable frameworks for IPMN management, there is an inherent need for further research to refine these protocols and improve patient-specific treatment strategies. This research contributes to the ongoing discourse on optimizing diagnostic and treatment paradigms for pancreatic cystic neoplasms, aiming to enhance clinical outcomes and patient care in this challenging medical field. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cancer Causes, Screening and Diagnosis)
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