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25 pages, 2082 KiB  
Article
XTTS-Based Data Augmentation for Profanity Keyword Recognition in Low-Resource Speech Scenarios
by Shin-Chi Lai, Yi-Chang Zhu, Szu-Ting Wang, Yen-Ching Chang, Ying-Hsiu Hung, Jhen-Kai Tang and Wen-Kai Tsai
Appl. Syst. Innov. 2025, 8(4), 108; https://doi.org/10.3390/asi8040108 - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 94
Abstract
As voice cloning technology rapidly advances, the risk of personal voices being misused by malicious actors for fraud or other illegal activities has significantly increased, making the collection of speech data increasingly challenging. To address this issue, this study proposes a data augmentation [...] Read more.
As voice cloning technology rapidly advances, the risk of personal voices being misused by malicious actors for fraud or other illegal activities has significantly increased, making the collection of speech data increasingly challenging. To address this issue, this study proposes a data augmentation method based on XText-to-Speech (XTTS) synthesis to tackle the challenges of small-sample, multi-class speech recognition, using profanity as a case study to achieve high-accuracy keyword recognition. Two models were therefore evaluated: a CNN model (Proposed-I) and a CNN-Transformer hybrid model (Proposed-II). Proposed-I leverages local feature extraction, improving accuracy on a real human speech (RHS) test set from 55.35% without augmentation to 80.36% with XTTS-enhanced data. Proposed-II integrates CNN’s local feature extraction with Transformer’s long-range dependency modeling, further boosting test set accuracy to 88.90% while reducing the parameter count by approximately 41%, significantly enhancing computational efficiency. Compared to a previously proposed incremental architecture, the Proposed-II model achieves an 8.49% higher accuracy while reducing parameters by about 98.81% and MACs by about 98.97%, demonstrating exceptional resource efficiency. By utilizing XTTS and public corpora to generate a novel keyword speech dataset, this study enhances sample diversity and reduces reliance on large-scale original speech data. Experimental analysis reveals that an optimal synthetic-to-real speech ratio of 1:5 significantly improves the overall system accuracy, effectively addressing data scarcity. Additionally, the Proposed-I and Proposed-II models achieve accuracies of 97.54% and 98.66%, respectively, in distinguishing real from synthetic speech, demonstrating their strong potential for speech security and anti-spoofing applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advancements in Deep Learning and Its Applications)
17 pages, 16370 KiB  
Article
Sacred Space and Faith Expression: Centering on the Daoist Stelae of the Northern Dynasties
by Yuan Zhang
Religions 2025, 16(6), 780; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16060780 - 16 Jun 2025
Viewed by 419
Abstract
This paper examines the Daoist stelae of the Northern Dynasties through the lens of Eliade’s religious theory, with particular focus on the transformation of profane objects into sacred ones and the transition of local believers from the profane to the sacred. Utilizing Eliade’s [...] Read more.
This paper examines the Daoist stelae of the Northern Dynasties through the lens of Eliade’s religious theory, with particular focus on the transformation of profane objects into sacred ones and the transition of local believers from the profane to the sacred. Utilizing Eliade’s notions of “symbol”, “myth”, and “sacred space”, this study investigates two critical dimensions of the Daoist stelae. First, it analyzes their visuality by closely examining the imagery and symbolic systems presented on the stelae—namely, the “mythical pattern” identified by Eliade—with particular attention to representations of the main deity, the Heavenly Palace, and the Xiwangmu Xianjing (Queen Mother of the West’s transcendent realm). Second, it addresses their materiality by reconstructing the invisible processes associated with the stelae, focusing on the formation of sacred space and the Daoist rituals enacted therein. Applying phenomenology of religion to Daoist stelae analysis helps compensate for the limitations of extant Daoist scriptures and official historical records. Full article
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17 pages, 273 KiB  
Article
Secularization, Profanation, and Knowledge of the Heart in Contemporary French Fiction
by Roy Peachey
Religions 2025, 16(5), 642; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16050642 - 19 May 2025
Viewed by 286
Abstract
Given the highly contested nature of the debate over secularization in modern literature, this paper examines the ways in which four contemporary French novelists address questions of human and divine absence in their fiction, focusing on Joël Egloff’s J’enquête, Gaspard-Marie Janvier’s Le [...] Read more.
Given the highly contested nature of the debate over secularization in modern literature, this paper examines the ways in which four contemporary French novelists address questions of human and divine absence in their fiction, focusing on Joël Egloff’s J’enquête, Gaspard-Marie Janvier’s Le dernier dimanche, Jérôme Ferrari’s Le sermon sur la chute de Rome, and Sylvie Germain’s Tobie des marais. It argues that some of the most pressing questions of our secular age—including questions of intersubjectivity and human and divine absence—are addressed in these competing narratives of secularization. It then examines Jean-Louis Chrétien’s notion of cardiognosie, or knowledge of the heart, and his argument that profanation, rather than secularization as such, is of central importance in the modern novel’s construction of meaning before concluding with a close reading of Jérôme Ferrari’s Le sermon sur la chute de Rome and a consideration of the heart in Sylvie Germain’s Tobie des marais as a first step toward establishing the means by which profanation has been faced and overcome in recent fictional texts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Catholic Theologies of Culture)
17 pages, 733 KiB  
Article
Swearing in Sport and Exercise: Development and Validation of a New Questionnaire
by Noam Manor and Gershon Tenenbaum
Psychol. Int. 2025, 7(2), 37; https://doi.org/10.3390/psycholint7020037 - 12 May 2025
Viewed by 984
Abstract
Swearing, a highly emotive form of expression, has recently attracted growing interest from researchers. Yet, swearing is still largely unexamined as a form of self-talk among professional athletes, coaches, and casual exercisers. This study aims to fill that gap by creating and validating [...] Read more.
Swearing, a highly emotive form of expression, has recently attracted growing interest from researchers. Yet, swearing is still largely unexamined as a form of self-talk among professional athletes, coaches, and casual exercisers. This study aims to fill that gap by creating and validating the Use of Swear Words in Sport and Exercise Questionnaire (USWSEQ), an innovative instrument intended to assess how often athletes, coaches, and recreational exercisers utilize common swear words. The questionnaire was administered to 513 participants and underwent exploratory (n = 333) and confirmatory (n = 180) factor analyses to evaluate its content structure, reliability, and validity. Results confirmed a robust two-factor model: (1) Self/Other Degradation, and (2) Situational Swearing. Notably, the study emphasizes the complexity involved in researching language, because swear words can be semantically ambiguous, pragmatically flexible, and deeply embedded in culture. These attributes present challenges for conventional psychometric methods and highlight the importance of function-based and context-aware frameworks. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Psychology of Peak Performance in Sport)
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20 pages, 1005 KiB  
Article
Reasons for Swearing as a Form of Self-Talk in Sport and Exercise: Development and Validation of a New Questionnaire
by Noam Manor and Gershon Tenenbaum
Behav. Sci. 2025, 15(5), 593; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15050593 - 28 Apr 2025
Viewed by 906
Abstract
Swearing is a powerful and emotionally charged form of language that has recently gained increased scholarly attention. While commonly used for emotional release, its role in sport and exercise ‘self-talk’ remains understudied. Prior evidence suggests that swearing may aid in pain management, emotion [...] Read more.
Swearing is a powerful and emotionally charged form of language that has recently gained increased scholarly attention. While commonly used for emotional release, its role in sport and exercise ‘self-talk’ remains understudied. Prior evidence suggests that swearing may aid in pain management, emotion regulation, and performance enhancement, yet research in athletic contexts has largely focused on conventional self-talk. To address this gap, the present study developed and validated the Reasons for Swearing in Sport and Exercise Questionnaire (RSSEQ), a novel tool assessing reasons motivating swearing among competitive athletes, coaches, and recreational exercisers. A total of 513 participants completed the RSSEQ. Exploratory (n = 333) and confirmatory (n = 180) factor analyses supported a three-factor structure: Stress and Emotional Catharsis, Mental Strength Enhancement, and Coping with Physical Discomfort and Pain. Males reported greater use of swearing for mental strength and pain-related coping, while no gender differences were observed for emotional catharsis. Athletes reported more swearing for emotional catharsis than did coaches, but no differences emerged in motivational or pain-related use. No significant differences were found between competitive and recreational athletes or between team and individual sport participants. These findings establish a foundation for future research on the psychological functions of swearing in sport and exercise, encouraging further exploration of its effectiveness and potential integration into mental training strategies, alongside more traditional self-talk approaches. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Behavioral and Psychosocial Dynamics of Sports and Exercise)
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19 pages, 2582 KiB  
Article
Anthropology of the Profane
by Arpita Roy
Religions 2025, 16(2), 227; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020227 - 13 Feb 2025
Viewed by 928
Abstract
Durkheimian anthropology has so insisted on the primacy of the sacred that one scarcely pauses to think on what role the profane may play in the study of religion. This paper examines the cultivation of dead bodies in the Tantric ritual of shav-sadhana [...] Read more.
Durkheimian anthropology has so insisted on the primacy of the sacred that one scarcely pauses to think on what role the profane may play in the study of religion. This paper examines the cultivation of dead bodies in the Tantric ritual of shav-sadhana to draw out the element of the “profanation of holy objects” operative within religion. Based on ethnographic research among Tantric specialists in rural Bengal, this paper examines how impurity liquidates the distance between the sacred and the profane which opens a window on the role of mundanity in religious rites and beliefs. I begin by portraying the ritual act undertaken by Tantric practitioners in which corpses ensuing from sudden, untimely deaths are mobilized for spiritual advancement. The ritual and its mode of efficacy are evocative for using impure matter to turn the flow of human ideals away from transcendence to ordinary, human ones. This paper concludes with a snapshot of Kaliyuga, the last age of Hindu cosmogony and the most corrupt, to thematize how the profane forms a lure as much as a barrier to religion. Full article
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11 pages, 174 KiB  
Article
Paths of the Ethical Dimensions in the Act of Freedom in Paul Ricoeur: Sacredness and Profanity of Symbol, Language, and Action
by Anna Jani
Religions 2025, 16(2), 129; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16020129 - 24 Jan 2025
Viewed by 758
Abstract
In my paper, I will outline how Ricoeur’s early phenomenological interpretation of the symbol provides the starting point for the later phenomenological hermeneutics of freedom, and how the transition can be defined, which led him from the early phenomenology of the symbol to [...] Read more.
In my paper, I will outline how Ricoeur’s early phenomenological interpretation of the symbol provides the starting point for the later phenomenological hermeneutics of freedom, and how the transition can be defined, which led him from the early phenomenology of the symbol to the biblical hermeneutics and Christian ethics of freedom. Full article
14 pages, 392 KiB  
Article
Applying Recommender Systems to Predict Personalized Film Age Ratings for Parents
by Harris Papadakis, Paraskevi Fragopoulou and Costas Panagiotakis
Algorithms 2024, 17(12), 578; https://doi.org/10.3390/a17120578 - 14 Dec 2024
Viewed by 1319
Abstract
A motion picture content rating system categorizes a film based on its appropriateness for various audiences, considering factors such as portrayals of sex, violence, substance abuse, profanity, and other elements typically considered unsuitable for children or adolescents. This rating is usually coupled with [...] Read more.
A motion picture content rating system categorizes a film based on its appropriateness for various audiences, considering factors such as portrayals of sex, violence, substance abuse, profanity, and other elements typically considered unsuitable for children or adolescents. This rating is usually coupled with a minimum desired age that the film is suitable for. In this work, we apply recommender systems to predict personalized film age ratings for parents. According to the proposed methodology, we reduce the personalized film age prediction problem to the classic item recommendation problem by applying a recommender system for each age film category. The recommender systems generate recommendations for each film age category. Finally, these recommendations are combined to provide the final age recommendation for the parent (user). The proposed methodology was applied to state-of-the-art recommender systems. In addition, we used them as baselines for comparing the direct application of a recommender system to the age prediction problem. This was achieved by treating each film as an item and assigning the given age as its rating. The experimental results highlight the efficiency of the proposed system when applied to a well-known real-world dataset. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Algorithms in Data Classification (2nd Edition))
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13 pages, 1825 KiB  
Article
Conceptual Design of an Urban Pocket Park Located in the Site of the Occurrence of a Nineteenth-Century Chapel Using Representatives of Local Xerothermic Vegetation
by Weronika Kopeć, Ewa Hanus-Fajerska and Leszek Bylina
Environments 2024, 11(11), 252; https://doi.org/10.3390/environments11110252 - 13 Nov 2024
Viewed by 1323
Abstract
The 19th century neo-Gothic chapel located in the Stradom district of Czestochowa, Southern Poland and built at the intersection of the main streets is a recognizable landmark of great historical value. Unfortunately, the current condition of the surroundings depreciates the charm of such [...] Read more.
The 19th century neo-Gothic chapel located in the Stradom district of Czestochowa, Southern Poland and built at the intersection of the main streets is a recognizable landmark of great historical value. Unfortunately, the current condition of the surroundings depreciates the charm of such a chapel, and thus does not encourage people to admire it. Therefore, in order to expose such a valuable object, we planned to create a conceptual design of a pocket park around this cultural monument. When choosing the location of any park, it is recommended to know the needs of the local residents, so we conducted a survey regarding their wishes. When designing the area, we intended to use species representing the vegetation characteristic of the Krakow–Czestochowa Upland located in Southern Poland. At the same time, we used a material typical of the area, namely limestone. Design principles around the chapel were taken into account, separating the sacred and profane zones with the intention of giving this site a unique character and creating the first urban pocket park of this kind. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Carbon Sequestration Potential of Urban Parks)
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28 pages, 6895 KiB  
Article
Alquist 5.0: Dialogue Trees Meet Generative Models, a Novel Approach for Enhancing SocialBot Conversations
by Ondrej Kobza, David Herel, Jan Cuhel, Tommaso Gargiani, Petr Marek and Jan Sedivy
Future Internet 2024, 16(9), 344; https://doi.org/10.3390/fi16090344 - 21 Sep 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1248
Abstract
This article introduces Alquist 5.0, our SocialBot that was designed for the Alexa Prize SocialBot Grand Challenge 5. Building upon previous iterations, we present the integration of our novel neural response generator (NRG) Barista within a hybrid architecture that combines traditional predefined dialogues [...] Read more.
This article introduces Alquist 5.0, our SocialBot that was designed for the Alexa Prize SocialBot Grand Challenge 5. Building upon previous iterations, we present the integration of our novel neural response generator (NRG) Barista within a hybrid architecture that combines traditional predefined dialogues with advanced neural response generation. We provide a comprehensive analysis of the current state-of-the-art NRGs and large language models (LLMs), leveraging these insights to enhance Barista’s capabilities. A key focus of our development was in ensuring the safety of our chatbot and implementing robust measures to prevent profanity and inappropriate content. Additionally, we incorporated a new search engine to improve information retrieval and response accuracy. Expanding the capabilities of our system, we designed Alquist 5.0 to accommodate multimodal devices, utilizing APL templates enriched with custom features to deliver an outstanding conversational experience complemented by an excellent user interface. This paper offers detailed insights into the development of Alquist 5.0, which effectively addresses evolving user demands while preserving its empathetic and knowledgeable conversational prowess across a wide range of topics. Full article
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16 pages, 576 KiB  
Article
The Paradoxical Power of Vulnerability—What It Reveals about Abuse and Cover-Up
by Marianne Servaas and Wim Vandewiele
Religions 2024, 15(8), 958; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15080958 - 7 Aug 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1562
Abstract
Researching the question of how the Roman Catholic Church (RCC), and by extension other institutional systems, respond or do not respond to the lived reality of abuse and its cover-up cannot be done without seeking to understand the underlying issue: What is the [...] Read more.
Researching the question of how the Roman Catholic Church (RCC), and by extension other institutional systems, respond or do not respond to the lived reality of abuse and its cover-up cannot be done without seeking to understand the underlying issue: What is the RCC responding (or not responding) to? One elucidating and perhaps surprising answer lies in the little and often misunderstood word vulnerability. Vulnerability, most probably counter-intuitively, has in fact the power to enhance violence or to reverse its destructive influence. This thought forms the basis for an exploration into what Professor Dr. Hildegund Keul has named the vulnerability and expenditure paradox. The logic in both of them seems understandable and straightforward. Yet, when genuinely understood, they are unsettling. They reveal an uncomfortable dilemma, a reality check and, ultimately, a choice as the paradox raises the rather earthly question: do we attempt to cheat death and therefore lose life, or do we opt for “creation through loss”? The first might, though linked to violence, lead to a feeling of security and invulnerability. The second exemplifies the passion of authentic suffering, humility and identity dependence. From a Christian perspective, it is the incarnation of love. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Vulnerability in Theology, the Humanities and Social Sciences)
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19 pages, 152311 KiB  
Article
An Assessment of the Impact of Design Elements on the Liturgical Space of Church Buildings: Using Churches in the North of Iraq as a Case Study
by Naram Murqus Issa and Kadhim Fathel Khalil
Buildings 2024, 14(6), 1692; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings14061692 - 6 Jun 2024
Viewed by 1034
Abstract
Liturgical space represents the embodiment of Christian theology in church buildings, encompassing both physical and metaphysical aspects. This space carries holiness and sacredness through a set of architectural elements that create sacred and profane zones within the church architecture. For centuries, design elements [...] Read more.
Liturgical space represents the embodiment of Christian theology in church buildings, encompassing both physical and metaphysical aspects. This space carries holiness and sacredness through a set of architectural elements that create sacred and profane zones within the church architecture. For centuries, design elements have shaped the form of Eastern churches in Iraq. This research aimed to answer the following question: what does a participant see at first glance in the liturgical space of a church building? This paper revisits the impact of design elements on the liturgical space of Eastern churches. The research methodology involved analyzing qualitative data using visual attention software (VAS) 3M, version 2024, to examine eye-tracking data and identify what visitors first noticed when entering these church interiors in Mosul, Iraq. The results highlight the variations and dominance of specific design elements in their impact on Eastern churches. The conclusions emphasize the importance of scientifically based restoration for the perception of design elements in these churches. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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17 pages, 338 KiB  
Article
Technology and Sacrifice
by Massimo Leone
Religions 2024, 15(6), 692; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15060692 - 31 May 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2603
Abstract
This paper investigates the complex relationship between technology, religion, and sacrifice, positing this last term as a pivotal concept for understanding the evolution and impact of technological advancements. Through a detailed examination of various cultural and religious frameworks, it explores how artificial intelligence [...] Read more.
This paper investigates the complex relationship between technology, religion, and sacrifice, positing this last term as a pivotal concept for understanding the evolution and impact of technological advancements. Through a detailed examination of various cultural and religious frameworks, it explores how artificial intelligence and other modern technologies both challenge and redefine traditional notions of the sacred and the profane. By analyzing historical and contemporary practices, the study highlights the paradoxical role of sacrifice in the digital age, serving as both a metaphor for the loss inherent in technological progress and a foundational principle that shapes the ethical landscapes of innovation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Rethinking Digital Religion, AI and Culture)
15 pages, 293 KiB  
Article
Sounds, Emotions, and the Body in Pentecostal Romani Communities in Slovakia
by Jana Belišová
Religions 2024, 15(5), 532; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050532 - 25 Apr 2024
Viewed by 1650
Abstract
In the past, the Romani in Slovakia identified with the prevailing religion, mainly with the Roman Catholic Church. However, the missionary activities of various Christian denominations after 1990 resulted in the conversion of the Romani to Pentecostal Christian communities. This launched a long, [...] Read more.
In the past, the Romani in Slovakia identified with the prevailing religion, mainly with the Roman Catholic Church. However, the missionary activities of various Christian denominations after 1990 resulted in the conversion of the Romani to Pentecostal Christian communities. This launched a long, creative process of the formation of Pentecostal Romani music. Romani believers consider music and the ability to play and sing to be a gift from God and view these as a form of prayer that should serve for the praise of God. That is why many have given up their worldly music making and now play only praise songs. They gradually modified the hymns they borrowed and replaced them with their own creations. The soundscape of religion does not lie only in religious singing and music, as the emotional sermons and prayers, glossolalia and sounds during the healing and blessing rituals can also be considered religious sounds. During the worship services, this mixture of various sounds leads to the gradual spiritual and emotional unification of the community. The music and the rituals create feelings of intense sensory and emotional character that reflect in bodily expressions. Movements, dance, and the positions of the hands can help glorify God and experience the worship service more intensely. However, under certain circumstances, they might become sources of temptation and sin. This is related to the concepts of “purity” and “impurity”. The premises, whether sacral or profane, interior or exterior ones, also play a significant role in creating the sound. In writing this paper, I have also drawn on my own research on Romani Christian songs, which I carried out in (2012–2013 in Eastern Slovakia). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Soundscapes of Religion)
18 pages, 345 KiB  
Article
Radical Democracy’s Religion: Hobbes on Language, Domination, and Self-Creation
by Charles H. T. Lesch
Religions 2023, 14(11), 1405; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14111405 - 10 Nov 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1895
Abstract
In recent decades, prominent political theorists have responded to perceived flaws in liberalism by proposing more “radical” forms of democracy. What might a radically democratic state look like? I argue that we can find one answer, counterintuitively, by looking back to the thought [...] Read more.
In recent decades, prominent political theorists have responded to perceived flaws in liberalism by proposing more “radical” forms of democracy. What might a radically democratic state look like? I argue that we can find one answer, counterintuitively, by looking back to the thought of Thomas Hobbes. Hobbes’ secularized theory of language introduces into political life a new way of conceiving human agency, one in which the commonwealth fills not only the negative role of stemming conflict, but the positive task of actualizing self-determination. By collapsing the distance between the true source of man’s politics and the nature of governance, Hobbes inaugurates a tradition of radical democratic thought that seeks to close the oppressive rupture of word and deed, maker and made. Yet rather than diminishing religious experience, Hobbes reconstitutes it in a new, profane, and political form. He invites us to acquire a capacity long reserved for God alone: the power to create human nature itself. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion and Contemporary Political Theory and Practice)
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