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    The Impact of Watching Subtitled Video Clips in Immersive Virtual Reality on Vocabulary Acquisition in University Saudi EFL Learners
    (Saudi Digital Library, 2023-11-22) Alshehri, Mohammed; Jabbari, Nasser
    The present study aims to investigate the impact of viewing subtitled videos in High-immersion Virtual Reality compared to Low-immersion Virtual Reality on vocabulary acquisition among 31 Saudi Arabian university students at the University of Bisha in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Vocabulary acquisition was assessed via a pre-test and an immediate post-test after the intervention. The results obtained suggest that the experimental group outperformed the control group marginally. The discussion sheds light on some interesting observations related to the mechanisms by which the participants in the experimental group acquired new vocabulary. This study was guided by the theory of embodied cognition and attempted to highlight some effects that may be attributed to embodiment. The implications of embodied cognition in Virtual Reality Assisted Language Learning could be paramount to our current understanding of vocabulary acquisition.
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    To what extent has Zambia pursued hedging in its relations with the Western democracies and the People's Republic of China?
    (Saudi Digital Library, 2023-11-14) Alshehri, Mohammed; Alan
    The rise of the People’s Republic of China, the challenge this presents to the hegemonic Western democracies of Europe and North America, and the implications for small and medium powers in Asia, Africa, and elsewhere, is a topic of major international significance. In turn, hedging has been identified as a valuable concept, particularly in the context of Southeast and East Asia, that can help explain the strategies adopted by small and medium powers in the face of an increasingly uncertain and multipolar world. Logic suggests that, as China goes global, so will the strategies small/medium powers adopt in response. Africa—a continent of resource-rich, non-aligned developing states—seems well suited to hedging strategies. However, little research has thus far focused on hedging in Africa, with no studies focusing on hedging in Zambia in particular. This, therefore, is the rationale for the current research. Following a literature review which locates this study in its wider research context, in the process of developing an understanding of both hedging and Zambian foreign relations, an analysis is conducted of the extent to which Zambia has pursued hedging in its relations with the Western democracies and PRC. The evidence shows that, across the identified domains and despite changes in regime, from independence in 1964 to the present day, Zambia has pursued a risk-management/opportunity-maximisation non-alignment strategy, which consistently meets multiple indicators of hedging (including not taking sides and cultivating fallback options with diverse partners). This leads to the conclusion that Zambia has—and continues—to hedge in its relations with the West and China.
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