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October  2006
 
  

January 2003
   
September 2001
Book by Inventor of Connotative Intelligence Technology Introduces EPA to Musicians
  
Working Prototype of a Connotative Product Developed

Book on Canadian Innovation Spotlights Connotative Intelligence Technology

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October 2006

Book by Inventor of Connotative Intelligence Technology Introduces EPA to Musicians

A landmark book on musical and lyrical technique is providing musicians with a glimpse of the power of connotative meaning in song lyrics. Wayne Chase, author of How Music REALLY Works! (Roedy Black Publishing, 2006, 890 pages), includes a 95-page chapter, "How Lyrics REALLY Work," which provides an overview of the importance of semantic space and connotative meaning. The chapter provides readers with a method of building "seed lists" of high-EPA words for use in song lyrics.

Six chapters of this book are available for free at the book's website:

www.HowMusicReallyWorks.com

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January 2003

Working Prototype of a Connotative Product Developed

Connotative Intelligence Corporation now has its first working prototype of a product based on Connotative Intelligence Technology. The prototype was built using a database of first names and the Microsoft Access database application. The user can either select a name and look up its connotative profile, or choose an emotion (or combination of emotions) of interest and find names that match.

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September 2001

Book on Canadian Innovation Spotlights Connotative Intelligence Technology

A book on Canadian technology, by noted Globe & Mail science writer William Illsey Atkinson (Thomas Allen Publishers, 2001) includes a section on Connotative Intelligence Technology under the heading "Knowledge Machines."

The book, Prototype: How Canadian Innovation is Shaping the Future, spotlights a handful of particularly innovative technologies.

Author Bill Atkinson remarked that, "It really is a story that should be told, and soon. I found to my surprise that the size of a firm varied inversely with its innovativeness. I'm aiming for an audience of interested, literate Canadians who may own some tech stocks but aren't quite sure what the whole sector's about -- what it's done, and what it can do."

The section on Connotative Intelligence Technology is on pp. 110-116.

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