• Title/Summary/Keyword: regular primes

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HEXAVALENT NORMAL EDGE-TRANSITIVE CAYLEY GRAPHS OF ORDER A PRODUCT OF THREE PRIMES

  • GHORBANI, MODJTABA;SONGHORI, MAHIN
    • Journal of applied mathematics & informatics
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    • v.35 no.1_2
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    • pp.83-93
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    • 2017
  • The Cayley graph ${\Gamma}=Cay(G,S)$ is called normal edge-transitive if $N_A(R(G))$ acts transitively on the set of edges of ${\Gamma}$, where $A=Aut({\Gamma})$ and R(G) is the regular subgroup of A. In this paper, we determine all hexavalent normal edge-transitive Cayley graphs on groups of order pqr, where p > q > r > 2 are prime numbers.

APPLICATIONS OF CLASS NUMBERS AND BERNOULLI NUMBERS TO HARMONIC TYPE SUMS

  • Goral, Haydar;Sertbas, Doga Can
    • Bulletin of the Korean Mathematical Society
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    • v.58 no.6
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    • pp.1463-1481
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    • 2021
  • Divisibility properties of harmonic numbers by a prime number p have been a recurrent topic. However, finding the exact p-adic orders of them is not easy. Using class numbers of number fields and Bernoulli numbers, we compute the exact p-adic orders of harmonic type sums. Moreover, we obtain an asymptotic formula for generalized harmonic numbers whose p-adic orders are exactly one.

The Lexical Access of Regular and Irregular Korean Verbs in the Mental Lexicon (한국어 규칙 동사와 불규칙 동사의 심성 어휘집 접근 과정)

  • Park, Hee-Jin;Koo, Min-Mo;Nam, Ki-Chun
    • Korean Journal of Cognitive Science
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.1-23
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    • 2012
  • This study investigated the lexical access processing of inflected Korean verbs in the mental lexicon. In Korean, verbs can be classified into two main types of inflections, which are regular and irregular inflections, which can be further divided into three types of regular inflections and two types of irregular inflections. A masked priming lexical decision task was used and the priming effects were compared. Experiments were carried out using the five different types of verbal inflections in Korean: (1) No change-regularity (regular verbs with no orthographical or phonological changes), (2) Phonological change-regularity (regular verbs with phonological changes to the stem only), (3) Orthographical change-regularity (regular verbs that only undergo orthographical changes), (4) Stem change-irregularity (the stem is omitted or alternated with the other phoneme of the stem in irregular verbs), (5) Ending change-irregularity (irregular verbs with changes in the endings by phoneme substitution). The first three types are regarded as regular verbal inflections whereas the latter two types are regarded as irregular verbal inflections. The infinitive forms of the verb were presented as target words and three different conditions were presented as prime words. The three conditions included regular verbal inflection, irregular verbal inflection, and a control condition in which morphologically and semantically unrelated primes were presented. In addition, different stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) were manipulated (43ms, 72ms, 230ms) to examine the time frame of the morphological decomposition process in word recognition. The results revealed that there were significant priming effects in all three SOAs across conditions. Hence, there was no significant differences in priming effects between regular and irregular verbal inflection conditions. This may suggest that Korean verb processing does not adopt different processing routes for regular and irregular inflections, which can also be an indication of earlier morphological information processing for Korean verbs.

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