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1
The sound structure of modern Irish
Hickey, Raymond. - Berlin [u.a.] : De Gruyter Mouton, 2014
Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft
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2
New English-Irish Dictionary
In: Dictionaries. Journal of the Dictionary Society of North America 35 (2014), 318-333
IDS OBELEX meta
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3
Bringing our languages home: Language revitalization for families. Ed. by Leanne Hinton. Berkeley, CA: Heyday Books, 2013. Pp.XX, 264 [Rezension]
In: Language. - Washington, DC : Linguistic Society of America 90 (2014) 2, 540-543
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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4
Legal lexicography : a comparative perspective
Grass, Thierry; Laer, Conrad J. P. van; Stephens, Māmari. - Farnham [u.a.] : Ashgate, 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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5
The sound structure of modern Irish
Hickey, Raymond. - Berlin [u.a.] : De Gruyter Mouton, 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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6
The Syntax of the EPP in Irish
In: Honors Theses (2014)
BASE
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7
Mouth actions in sign languages : an empirical study of Irish sign language
Mohr, Susanne. - Boston [u.a.] : De Gruyter, 2014
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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8
ДИСТРИБУЦИЯ ПАЛАТАЛИЗОВАННЫХ СОНОРНЫХ В ВЫУЧЕННОМ ИРЛАНДСКОМ
СНЕСАРЕВА МАРИНА ЮРЬЕВНА. - : Общество с ограниченной ответственностью Издательство Грамота, 2014
BASE
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9
Creating tasks in a less-commonly taught language for an open educational resource. Why the CEFR is important for Irish
In: Ó Ciardúbháin, Colm and Nic Giolla Mhichíl, Mairéad (2014) Creating tasks in a less-commonly taught language for an open educational resource. Why the CEFR is important for Irish. In: EUROCALL 2014: CALL Design: Principles and Practice, 20- 23-Aug 2014, Groningen, Netherlands. (2014)
BASE
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10
Cross-lingual transfer parsing for low-resourced languages: an Irish case study
In: Lynn, Teresa, Foster, Jennifer orcid:0000-0002-7789-4853 , Dras, Mark orcid:0000-0001-9908-7182 and Tounsi, Lamia (2014) Cross-lingual transfer parsing for low-resourced languages: an Irish case study. In: First Celtic Language Technology Workshop, 23 Aug 2014, Dublin, Ireland. (2014)
BASE
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11
Aspects of language shift and the decline in Irish in County Cavan in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
In: Mac Murchaidh, Ciarán orcid:0000-0002-4688-7300 (2014) Aspects of language shift and the decline in Irish in County Cavan in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In: Cherry, Jonathan and Scott, Brendan, (eds.) Cavan History and Society. Geography Publications, Dublin, Ireland, pp. 381-400. ISBN 9780906602690 (2014)
BASE
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12
A user-oriented study of metadata in focal.ie
de Barra-Cusack, Fionnuala. - : Dublin City University. School of Applied Language and Intercultural Studies, 2014
In: de Barra-Cusack, Fionnuala (2014) A user-oriented study of metadata in focal.ie. PhD thesis, Dublin City University. (2014)
BASE
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13
'The Great Famine in Ireland: a Linguistic and Cultural Disruption
In: La Grande Famine en Irlande 1845-1850 ; https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01147770 ; Yann Bévant. La Grande Famine en Irlande 1845-1850, PUR, 2014 (2014)
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14
The ambivalent relation between nationalism and national language: the cases of the Republic of Ireland and Wales
In: ISSN: 2275-2560 ; EISSN: 2275-2560 ; Miroirs : Revue des civilisations anglophone, ibérique et ibéro-américaine ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01325671 ; Miroirs : Revue des civilisations anglophone, ibérique et ibéro-américaine, Université Toulouse 1 Capitole, Département des Langues et Civilisations, 2014, Autonomie, Souveraineté, Indépendance? Autonomy, Sovereignty, Independence? Autonomia, Soberania, Independencia?, pp.31-65 ; http://www.revuemiroirs.fr (2014)
BASE
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15
Early Irish Glossaries
Russell, Paul. - : Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Celtic at the University of Cambridge, 2014
BASE
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16
OmegaWiki
Meijssen, Gerard. - : Universität Bamberg, World Language Documentation Centre, 2014
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17
The Role of Emotional and Facial Expression in Synthesised Sign Language Avatars
In: Other Resources (2014)
Abstract: This thesis explores the role that underlying emotional facial expressions might have in regards to understandability in sign language avatars. Focusing specifically on Irish Sign Language (ISL), we examine the Deaf community’s requirement for a visual-gestural language as well as some linguistic attributes of ISL which we consider fundamental to this research. Unlike spoken language, visual-gestural languages such as ISL have no standard written representation. Given this, we compare current methods of written representation for signed languages as we consider: which, if any, is the most suitable transcription method for the medical receptionist dialogue corpus. A growing body of work is emerging from the field of sign language avatar synthesis. These works are now at a point where they can benefit greatly from introducing methods currently used in the field of humanoid animation and, more specifically, the application of morphs to represent facial expression. The hypothesis underpinning this research is: augmenting an existing avatar (eSIGN) with various combinations of the 7 widely accepted universal emotions identified by Ekman (1999) to deliver underlying facial expressions, will make that avatar more human-like. This research accepts as true that this is a factor in improving usability and understandability for ISL users. Using human evaluation methods (Huenerfauth, et al., 2008) the research compares an augmented set of avatar utterances against a baseline set with regards to 2 key areas: comprehension and naturalness of facial configuration. We outline our approach to the evaluation including our choice of ISL participants, interview environment, and evaluation methodology. Remarkably, the results of this manual evaluation show that there was very little difference between the comprehension scores of the baseline avatars and those augmented withEFEs. However, after comparing the comprehension results for the synthetic human avatar “Anna” against the caricature type avatar “Luna”, the synthetic human avatar Anna was the clear winner. The qualitative feedback allowed us an insight into why comprehension scores were not higher in each avatar and we feel that this feedback will be invaluable to the research community in the future development of sign language avatars. Other questions asked in the evaluation focused on sign language avatar technology in a more general manner. Significantly, participant feedback in regard to these questions indicates a rise in the level of literacy amongst Deaf adults as a result of mobile technology.
Keyword: Anthropological Linguistics and Sociolinguistics; Applied Linguistics; Avatar; Computational Linguistics; Computer Sciences; Emotion; Evaluation; Facial Expressions; HamNoSys; Irish Sign Language; ISL; JASigning; Language Description and Documentation; Sign Language Notation; Sign Language Synthesis; Signing Avatar
URL: https://arrow.tudublin.ie/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1001&context=itbinfooth
https://arrow.tudublin.ie/itbinfooth/4
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18
Calgary Working Papers in Linguistics, Volume 28, Fall 2014 ...
Unkn Unknown. - : University of Calgary, 2014
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19
The distribution of Irish locatives (seo, sin, siúd): DP, AP, or other? ...
Windsor, Joseph W. - : University of Calgary, 2014
BASE
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20
An Introduction to Celtic Language Technology ; CLTW14 (Celtic Languages Technology Workshop)
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