Academic literature on the topic 'Liens sémantiques thématiques'
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Journal articles on the topic "Liens sémantiques thématiques":
Pirone, Ilaria, and Dominique Ottavi. "« La force des normes » : entretien avec Pierre Macherey." psychologie clinique, no. 50 (2020): 7–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/psyc/202050007.
Massuchin, Michele Goulart, Thaísa Bueno, Regilson Furtado Borges, and Suzete Gaia de Sousa. "Títulos jornalísticos para redes sociais." Sur le journalisme, About journalism, Sobre jornalismo 10, no. 1 (June 12, 2021): 112. http://dx.doi.org/10.25200/slj.v10.n1.2021.441.
Massuchin, Michele Goulart, Thaísa Bueno, Regilson Furtado Borges, and Suzete Gaia de Sousa. "Títulos jornalísticos para redes sociais." Sur le journalisme, About journalism, Sobre jornalismo 10, no. 1 (June 15, 2021): 112–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.25200/slj.v10.n1.2021.458.
Eyenga Onana, Pierre Suzanne. "Démythisation dialectique et reconstruction sémantique de la dyade maître-disciple dans L’Enfant-pluie de Francis Bebey." Quêtes littéraires, no. 9 (December 30, 2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.31743/ql.5018.
Rougeon, Marina. "Photographie." Anthropen, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.17184/eac.anthropen.053.
Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Liens sémantiques thématiques":
Haddad, Lilas. "Impact of multiple affordances on object perception in natural scenes." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université de Lille (2022-....), 2023. https://pepite-depot.univ-lille.fr/ToutIDP/EDSHS/2023/2023ULILH060.pdf.
Object perception and action perception are closely interrelated. Perceiving visual objects also leads to the perception of various grasping components evoked by the objects, known as micro-affordances. We have numerous pieces of evidence that a single object may evoke micro-affordances such as a right- or left-hand grasp depending on object handle orientation or a power or precision grip depending on object size. However, natural scenes are usually composed of several objects evoking multiple affordances that may impact object perceptual processing. Moreover, objects presented in a common scene are usually semantically related, as they are part of the same context. The semantic relations between objects may then modulate how one perceives objects and their affordances. In this view, thematic relations between objects (e.g., key-lock) are particularly interesting as they share cognitive and neural substrates with use gesture knowledge. The aim of this thesis is to investigate the consequences of the evocation of multiple affordances on the perception and selection of a given object in naturalistic scenes. We investigated how the similarity of affordances would impact object selection and how thematic relations between objects would modulate object perceptual processing. In a first online behavioral study using a stimulus and response compatibility paradigm, we highlighted a processing cost when pairs of unrelated objects had similar right- or left-hand grasp affordances, with the similarity of affordances slowing down target selection. Furthermore, the cost entailed by similar handle affordances was restricted to action relevant situations, when responding with the dominant hand and when the response was compatible with the affordance of the target. In a second behavioral experiment using the stimulus and response compatibility paradigm in a 3D environment, we were able to extend these first findings to other types of micro-affordances (grasp size affordances). Again, we demonstrated a perceptual processing cost when pairs of objects had similar grasp size affordances. Furthermore, we highlighted a suppression of the cost entailed by similar affordances on target selection when objects were thematically related. In a third neurophysiological study using electroencephalography, we evaluated the correlates of the cost entailed by similar affordances on µ rhythm desynchronization, which is assumed to reflect the activity of the motor neural network during perception. Results revealed that during target selection, μ desynchronization was reduced when affordances were similar in comparison to dissimilar. This effect disappeared when objects were thematically related. Overall, behavioral and neurophysiological evidence support the model of affordance inhibition proposed by Vainio and Ellis (2020) and Caligiore et al. (2013). According to the inhibition hypothesis, the observer needs to inhibit distractor objects to select the target object. When the different objects in the scene have similar affordances, inhibition of the distractor object and its affordances leads to the automatic inhibition of the target affordance, which slows down target processing. The present work provides behavioral and neural evidence in favor of the inhibition model of affordance and object selection in more naturalistic scenes involving familiar meaningful objects. In addition, it first demonstrates the role of semantic relations in the regulation of affordance inhibition in naturalistic scenes