Search for dissertations about: "memorization"
Found 5 swedish dissertations containing the word memorization.
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1. Two experimental studies in foreign language learning/teaching
Abstract : The case for experimental research on the efficiency of methods of foreign language teaching is pleaded. In the first study, the effects of different practice materials on beginners' word-decoding ability in Russian was examined. The Russian words were divided into three categories: 1. The KTO-type. READ MORE
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2. Learning by doing : radiographers' knowledge and learning strategies in the digitized healthcare environment
Abstract : The aim of this thesis was to inform the field of radiography of changes related to the digital image production process, by understanding how radiographers perform tasks and apply knowledge as well as learning strategies in work practice. The method of this study adopts a qualitative ethnographic approach, using participant observation of and semi-structured interviews with radiographers at six Swedish hospitals. READ MORE
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3. Learning to learn in e-Learning : constructive practices for development
Abstract : This thesis concerns technology use in distance educations and learning practices related to this use. The research was carried out over the period 2005 to 2009 in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka and has been reported in 6 published papers. READ MORE
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4. Attacking and Defending the Privacy of Clinical Language Models
Abstract : The state-of-the-art methods in natural language processing (NLP) increasingly rely on large pre-trained transformer models. The strength of the models stems from their large number of parameters and the enormous amounts of data used to train them. The datasets are of a scale that makes it difficult, if not impossible, to audit them manually. READ MORE
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5. Manufacturing Multilingualisms of Marginality in Mozambique : Exploring the Orders of Visibility of Local African Languages
Abstract : Colonial era language policies and practices in Mozambique sought to render native African languages (and their speakers) invisible in public space. This ‘order of (in)visibility’ was later adopted by many African states, including Mozambique, by choosing the ex-colonial language as the one and only official language and prohibiting or ignoring the use of African languages in the interest of so-called national unity. READ MORE