Academic literature on the topic 'Influence on Kannada'

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Journal articles on the topic "Influence on Kannada"

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BVM, Mahesh, and Manjula R. "Influence of Second Language (L2) Proficiency on the Measure of Spatiotemporal Index of Bilabial Utterances in Typical Kannada (L1) English (L2) Bilingual Speakers." JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN LINGUISTICS 6, no. 1 (May 29, 2014): 846–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.24297/jal.v6i1.5177.

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The Spatiotemporal Index (STI) of Lower lip (LL) across L1 (Kannada) and L2 (English) in High Proficient (HP)/Early and ˜Low Proficient (LP)/Late typical Kannada (L1)-English (L2) bilinguals was analyzed. A bilabial utterance pair matched for syllable structure and length, phonetic complexity, and overall duration across L1 and L2 were uttered 10 times in each language randomly using language switching paradigm by HP/Early (n = 7) and LP/Late (n = 7) bilinguals. The mean STI was significantly different across languages and L2 language proficiency, supporting the use of differential speech motor control strategies by participants to maintain phonetic distinctiveness across languages. The STI was more variable in HP/Early bilinguals across L1 and L2 than LP/Late bilinguals and HP/Early bilinguals showed higher variability in Kannada (L1), reflecting higher organizational flexibility and movement control along with successful suppression of the non target language (L2). The mean STI in LP/Late bilinguals did not differ significantly across languages suggesting reduced movement flexibility and inability to suppress the interfering effect of L1 on L2. The results are discussed in the perspective of the measure of STI reflecting an intra articulatory global movement variability that is sensitive in understanding the movement control differences in the speech production of bilinguals. The findings are also discussed in the backdrop of bilingual speech production models and possible influence of âcross Linguistic Interference on articulatory movement stability across L1 and L2.
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S., Deepa M., and Shyamala K. C. "Analysis of Verb Expressions in the Conversational Speech of Kannada-English Speaking Bilingual Persons with Mild." Studies in Linguistics and Literature 3, no. 2 (May 21, 2019): p182. http://dx.doi.org/10.22158/sll.v3n2p182.

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Dementia is characterized by the breakdown of intellectual and communicative functioning accompanied by personality change (DSM IV, American Psychiatric Association, 1994). Persons with dementia often experience difficulty in naming skills which can be attributed to semantic memory deficits. This can further influence various linguistic expressions such as lexical and morphological structures. The present study aimed to quantitatively and qualitatively analyze the presence of different types of verb inflections in bilingual (Kannada-English) persons with mild dementia. Considered for the study were 10 healthy elderly and 10 persons with mild dementia who were Kannada-English bilinguals. Spontaneous, conversational speech in all the participants was transcribed from which different types of verb inflexions in Kannada were extracted and analyzed. They included infinite verb, imperative verbs, negative imperatives, optative, and participle verbs. These were quantitatively and qualitatively analyzed for mean number of verbs and their nature including code mixing and switching identifying the significant differences between the two groups of participants. Results suggest that these measures offer a sensitive method for differentiating persons with mild dementia from healthy elderly. The study further helps in delineating prognostic indicator and planning rehabilitative measures which can be helpful tool for management.
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Girish, KS, M. Pushpavathi, and HV Satish. "Influence of native language on Nasalance values in Kannada and Malayalam speakers." Journal of Cleft Lip Palate and Craniofacial Anomalies 8, no. 2 (2021): 111. http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jclpca.jclpca_33_20.

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Nayak, Rajeshwari R. "Reconstruction and Presentation of Reality on Television: An Analytical Study of Kannada Channels." Artha - Journal of Social Sciences 16, no. 3 (July 1, 2017): 39–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.12724/ajss.42.3.

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Television has altered the way news is constructed and delivered. Due to competition and TRP, television news channels are experimenting with different techniques to attract attention and reach audiences. Reconstruction with the help of graphics and animation along with docudramas has become quite common in various kinds of television programs. From hard to soft news story-telling television channels have adopted different patterns of visual construction to make an emotional appeal to the audience. Media theories have established the power of visual media in the common man’s life. The present study focuses on the trend related to visual reconstruction of reality in storytelling among Kannada channels. This qualitative study specifically evaluates the various techniques of visual construction, reasons for visual construction, program patterns which use these practices significantly and investigates the influence of visual construction in storytelling. The content of Kannada television programs is evaluated in order to gather primary data. The programs that use visual construction regularly and news items which depend on visual construction have been selected for analysis.
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KASTENBAUM, JESSICA G., LISA M. BEDORE, ELIZABETH D. PEÑA, LI SHENG, ILKNUR MAVIS, RAJANI SEBASTIAN-VAYTADDEN, GRAMA RANGAMANI, SOFIA VALLILA-ROHTER, and SWATHI KIRAN. "The influence of proficiency and language combination on bilingual lexical access." Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 22, no. 2 (May 7, 2018): 300–330. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1366728918000366.

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The present study examines the influence of language proficiency and language combination on bilingual lexical access using category fluency in 109 healthy speakers. Participants completed a category fluency task in each of their languages in three main categories (animals, clothing, and food), each with two subcategories, as well as a language use questionnaire assessing their proficiency. Five language combinations were examined (Hindi–English, Kannada–English, Mandarin–English, Spanish–English, and Turkish–English). Multivariate analyses of variance revealed that the average number of correct items named in the category fluency task across the three main categories varied across the different groups only in English and not the other language. Further, results showed that language exposure composite (extracted from the questionnaire using a principal component analysis) significantly affected the average number of items named across the three main categories. Overall, these results demonstrate the effects of particular language combinations on bilingual lexical access and provide important insights into the role of proficiency on access.
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Cherian, Shilpa, Shankarappa Sridhara, Konapura Nagaraja Manoj, Pradeep Gopakkali, Nandini Ramesh, Abdullah A. Alrajhi, Ahmed Z. Dewidar, and Mohamed A. Mattar. "Impact of El Niño Southern Oscillation on Rainfall and Rice Production: A Micro-Level Analysis." Agronomy 11, no. 6 (May 21, 2021): 1021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/agronomy11061021.

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Monsoon fluctuation due to El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) has a reflective influence on rice production, which is the major food grain crop in India. The impact of ENSO on the spatial variability of summer monsoon rainfall was analyzed from 1950 to 2018 and that on Kharif rice production for the period of 1998–2016. It was clear from the analysis that ENSO had varied influences on rainfall and rice production over different rice-growing districts of Karnataka. During El Niño (strong, moderate, and weak) years, southwest (S-W) monsoon rainfall was below normal in all the districts of Karnataka, wherein the highest negative deviation from normal was recorded in the Mysore district (−21.43%). In contrast, the rice production was higher in 15 districts out of 25, and the deviation from normal ranged from −39.73% in Bidar to 42.11% in Gulbarga district. During the La Niña (strong, moderate, and weak) years, S-W monsoon rainfall was above normal in 12 districts in which Bidar and Bengaluru urban districts have shown the highest positive deviation (19.93 and 19.82%, respectively). However, except for Udupi, Dakshina Kannada, Bidar, Davanagere, and Hassan districts, all the other major rice-growing districts have shown a positive deviation in rice production with the highest deviation of 62.39% in Tumkur district. Additionally, correlation coefficient values indicated the influence of southwest monsoon rainfall on Kharif rice production during El Niño years with a major contribution from September month rainfall. This kind of ENSO impact analysis on spatial rice production could be useful for formulating the farm-level site-specific management, planning, and policy decisions during ENSO periods in advance.
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Hanumaiah, Vedavathi, and Harini Manjunath. "Study of knowledge, attitude and practice of self medication among health care workers at MC Gann Teaching District hospital of Shivamogga, India." International Journal of Basic & Clinical Pharmacology 7, no. 6 (May 22, 2018): 1174. http://dx.doi.org/10.18203/2319-2003.ijbcp20182102.

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Background: Healthcare workers gain adequate knowledge related to medications used in treating illness from their work experiences which influences self medication practices.Methods: The present study was conducted in N=150 healthcare workers, divided into 2 groups with group I (nursing staff) and group II (paramedical staff) with 75 participants in each group. Data related to self medication was obtained from a pretested validated semi structured questionnaire either in Kannada or English. The responses were compared between each group with chi square test. P value ≤0.05 was considered significant. All statistical analysis was conducted with SPSS 16.Results: The mean age (mean±SD) of the participants in group I and group II is 31.79±8.309 and 34.15 (±8.168) respectively with p =0.081. The prevalence of self medication was 100% in both the groups. Both the groups knowledge related to the definition of self medication was similar (group I 63 (84.0%) and group II 62 (82.7%) p = 0.900). Group I believes that self medication is entirely safe compared to group II which was statistically significant (group I 66 (88.7%) and group II 46 (61.3%) p=0.029). Most common drugs used for self medication was NSAIDS (non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) in both the groups being 75 (100%). Antibiotics was used by 26 (2.66%) in group I and 14 (18.66%) in group II.Conclusions: Self medication practice is highly prevalent in the healthcare workers, who also influence the other populations to practice self medication. Practicing responsible self medication is more appreciable.
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Messner, Wolfgang. "Market research in India: does the choice of language cause questionnaire contamination?" Journal of Indian Business Research 9, no. 2 (June 19, 2017): 149–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jibr-09-2016-0100.

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PurposeWhile English is the most commonly used language for market research, surveys and customer feedback in India, it does not reach the subcontinent’s entire population. Therefore, many questionnaires are bilingual, offering the respondent a choice between English and an indigenous Indian language. This, however, presupposes that answers to items are not influenced by people’s language proficiencies and response styles in different languages. This paper aims to examine whether market researchers in India should be careful about nonrandom measurement error caused by language response bias. Design/methodology/approachEnglish and Kannada questionnaires are administered in a test-retest scenario to 160 respondents in the Indian Tier-II city of Mysore. The data evaluation is organized by dispositional (language proficiency in English and Kannada) and situational influences (language of the questionnaire in English or Kannada); a series of tests to elucidate language response bias is conducted. FindingsWhile the significance of the two-tailed English-Kannada paired-sample tests is borderline, a more detailed look reveals surprising differences for the dispositional as well as situational linguistic influences. Moreover, the response style peculiarities in the Indian multilingual environment are not always consistent with differences in other international bilingual environments. Originality/valueHigh-quality data are central to all empirical research, but situational and dispositional language response bias seems to contaminate questionnaires in the Indian multi-lingual environment. This study highlights the effect and provides Indian market researchers with some first strategies for managing the challenge.
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Jayalalitha, Dr. "Tamil and Kannada Prosody - A Comparative Study." Shanlax International Journal of Tamil Research 4, no. 4 (April 1, 2020): 19–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.34293/tamil.v4i4.2349.

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The old and ancient Tamil and Kannada literature is fully of poetic nature. Research oriented and related studies about prosody or meter is very less and rare. Amsha gana (asai) in Tamil is very wide and comprehensive and it has remained and kept its uniqueness by not getting influenced by other languages. So Kannada Scholers has opined that to understand the basic nature of Dravidian Prosody its necessary to learn about Tamil Prosody which is very essential. The present research article is about the study between Kannada and Tamil Prosodian literature and comparative study of Kannada and Tamil Amsha gana (Asai) Maathre (Ner and Nirai) has been dealt in this article with this comparative attempt of equivalent, diversity and difference between Kannada and Tamil prosody has been made in this study. These type of research studies helps to reconstruct the origin nature of (Proto Dravidian) Dravidian Prosody by and large.
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Soni, Giriraj Prasad. "A Study to evaluate the Effectiveness of Planned Teaching Program regarding Prevention of Renal Calculi in Terms of Knowledge and Dietary Pattern of Primary School Teachers of Moodabidri, Dakshina Kannada District." Journal of Mahatma Gandhi University of Medical Sciences and Technology 1, no. 2 (2016): 55–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.5005/jp-journals-10057-0013.

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ABSTRACT Introduction A renal calculus is a painful condition. Renal calculi occur in up to 15% population. The incidence of calculi is 100 to 400 out of 1,00,000 people from a renal calculi every year. Dietary practice of the individuals has a direct influence over the stone formation. Change in dietary habits and lifestyle are suggested to contribute markedly to the rise in the prevalence and incidence of urolithiasis. Materials and methods An evaluative approach with one group pretest design was adopted in order to evaluate effectiveness of planned teaching program on prevention of renal calculi and dietary practice among primary school teachers in Moodbidri. The conceptual framework adopted for the study was based on modified Rosen stocks health belief model. Convenient sampling was used to select the sample for the study. Data collected from the sample were analyzed by descriptive and inferential statistics. The final sample size was 70. Results Majority of samples belonged to age group 20 to 30 years (54.28%), female (62.85%), D. Ed. students (64.28%), married (60%), hindu background (62.85%), teaching experience below 10 years (65.71%), source of health-related information by books (48.57%) and mixed diet (61.42%). There was significant difference between pretest and post- test knowledge scores (t69 = 36.46, p < 0.05 significant) There was no significant association between pretest knowledge and selected demographic variables age (x2 = 1.33, p > 0.05), sex (x2 = 0.568, p > 0.05), religion (x2 = 0.843, p > 0.05), diet (x2 = 0.003, p > 0.05). There was a significant difference between pretest and posttest dietary practice scores (t69 = 32.27, p < 0.05, significant). Conclusion The findings of the study show that the planned teaching program was effective in all the areas in improving the knowledge and dietary practice of primary school teachers and, thus, reduced complication. It also helped them to take self responsibility for their own health. How to cite this article Soni GP. A Study to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Planned Teaching Program Regarding Prevention of Renal Calculi in Terms of Knowledge and Dietary Pattern of Primary School Teachers of Moodabidri, Dakshina Kannada District. J Mahatma Gandhi Univ Med Sci Tech 2016;1(2):55-57.
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Books on the topic "Influence on Kannada"

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Hanumantappa, Ādavāni. Telugu mīda Kannaḍa bhāṣā prabhāvaṃ =: The influence of Kannada language on Telugu. Anantapuraṃ: Kārtikēya Pablikēṣans, 1989.

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Kannaḍavāṅmayavikāse Saṃskr̥tasya prabhāvaḥ. Shimoga, Karnataka: Malnad Research Academy (R.), 1999.

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Bhaṭṭa, Śrīrāma. Kannaḍa mārga kāvyada mēle Kāḷidāsana prabhāva. Beṅgaḷūru: Kannaḍa Sāhitya Pariṣattu, 1995.

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Kāṃbaḷe, Anasūya Ka. Ādhunika Kannaḍa sāhityada mēle Aṃbēḍkar prabhāva: Kāvyavannu anulakṣisi. Beṅgaḷūru: Karnāṭaka Sarkāra, Kannaḍa Pustaka Prādhikāra, 2011.

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Śrīkr̥ṣṇabhaṭ, Pi. Kannaḍa vyākaraṇa parampareya mēle Saṃskr̥tada prabhāva. Kāsaragōḍu: Vidyā Prakāśana, 1989.

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Krishnamoorthy, K. Sr̥janaśīlate mattu pāṇḍitya. Beṅgaḷūru: Bi. Eṃ. Śrī. Smāraka Pratiṣṭhāna, 1989.

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Khāḍe, Prakāśa Ga. Navōdaya kāvyada mēle jānapadada prabhāva. Bāgalakōṭe: Anikēta Prakāśana, 2007.

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Tippērudrasvāmi, Ec. Vacana caḷuvaḷi. Gulbargā: Śrī Śaraṇabasavēśvara Granthaviśvavidyānilaya, 1987.

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Manōrañjanreḍḍi, Nīlāpu. Jaṇṭabhāṣala oṇṭilipi: Ṭaipu, mudraṇaraṅgālalō mahōjjvala nūtana śakārambha śaṅkhārāvaṃ. Tenāli: Nīlāpu Manōrañjanreḍḍi, 1987.

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Devendrappa, Jaji. Prasthapana. Bengaluru: Sneha Printars, 2008.

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Book chapters on the topic "Influence on Kannada"

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Shenoy, Sunaina, and Richard K. Wagner. "Language and Literacy Practices that Influence Bilingual and Bi-Literate Acquisition in L1 Kannada and L2 English in Bangalore, India." In Literacy Studies, 373–88. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05977-4_19.

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