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1
Students’ feedback experiences and expectations pre- and post-university entry
In: SN Soc Sci (2022)
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2
Measuring up: using quantitative methods in assessing health and wellbeing effects of language reclamation
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3
Are You What You Read? Predicting Implicit Attitudes to Immigration Based on Linguistic Distributional Cues From Newspaper Readership:A Pre-registered Study
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4
Are You What You Read? Predicting Implicit Attitudes to Immigration Based on Linguistic Distributional Cues From Newspaper Readership; A Pre-registered Study
McEnery, Tony; Lynott, Dermot; O’Brien, Kerry. - : Frontiers Media, 2019
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5
Exploring the relationship between intonation and the lexicon: Evidence for lexicalised storage of intonation
In: Speech Communication 66 (2015), 65-81
IDS Bibliografie zur Gesprächsforschung
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6
First steps on the Ngunawal language revitalization journey
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7
First steps on the Ngunawal language revitalization journey
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8
Modelling Implicit Attitudes with Large Corpora: a comparison of linguistic co-occurrence models
In: Lynott, Dermot; O'Brien, Kerry; Connell, Louise; Shryane, Nick; Kansal, Himanshu; & Walsh, Michael. (2014). Modelling Implicit Attitudes with Large Corpora: a comparison of linguistic co-occurrence models. Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Society, 36(36). Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/8qk4d8rx (2014)
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9
The Murinypata language of North-West Australia
Walsh, Michael. - 2013
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10
The Murinypata language of North-West Australia
Walsh, Michael. - 2013
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11
An Agent-based Framework for Speech Investigation
Walsh, Michael; O'Hare, G. M. P. (Greg M. P.); Carson-Berndsen, Julie. - : ISCA, 2013
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12
A Multi-Agent Computational Linguistic Approach to Speech Recognition
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13
Language Identifying Codes: Remaining Issues, Future Prospects
Abstract: The work of organisations such as PARADISEC is crucially dependent on accurate and reliable identification of the languages which are represented in resources. For efficient discovery of resources to be possible, an identifying system which is accurate and stable in itself is necessary, as is wide agreement to use the system across the relevant communities (archivists and researchers from various disciplines). ISO 639‐3 is such a system and acceptance of it is now widespread; this should not, however, be taken as meaning that no problems remain and in this paper we draw attention to some of the remaining issues and the potential role of Australian researchers in working towards their solution. ISO 639‐3 reflects the reality of language differentiation more or less accurately depending on the region in question. A process for requesting revisions to the codes exists and is being used quite extensively by scholars working on Australian languages. The experience thus being accumulated will be of value in future work on language identification. This process also draws attention to another area where improvement can be made: currently, the different parts of ISO 639 (639‐1, 639‐ 2 etc.) have different registration authorities. Bringing all parts of the standard together under a single registration authority would have benefits for ongoing revisions and for transparency and is therefore an important goal. Another important goal is to ensure that linguists are able to provide input to three parts of ISO 639 currently being developed: • ISO 639‐5 a proposed set of codes for identifying groupings above the level of the single language, • ISO 639‐6 a proposed set of codes for identifying linguistic entities below the level of the single language, • ISO 639‐4 will provide an account of the principles on which the various codings rest. Australia is represented in ISO by Standards Australia, and this body has observer status in relation to ISO Technical Committee 37 which is responsible for the 639 group of standards. A group of interested scholars in Australia constitute an informal reference group for these issues (ARGILaRe: http://users.monash.edu.au/~smusgrav/ARGILaRe/) and this group is establishing ways to provide expert input. These include the establishment of a mirror committee for TC37 under the ambit of Standards Australia, ongoing involvement with international projects and endeavours, and the potential formation of a Working Group within the Research Data Alliance framework. The goal of improving access to language resources should be one which unites various research communities and therefore we are optimistic that such endeavours can and will produce valuable results.
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2123/9839
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14
The Murinyapata language of North-West Australia
Walsh, Michael James [Verfasser]. - Muenchen : LINCOM Europa, 2012
DNB Subject Category Language
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15
The Muɹinyapata Language of North-West Australia
Walsh, Michael J.. - München : Lincom Europa, 2012
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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16
Stop, revive, survive: lessons from the Hebrew revival applicable to the reclamation, maintenance and empowerment of Aboriginal languages and cultures
In: Australian journal of linguistics. - Basingstoke, Hampshire : Taylor & Francis 31 (2011) 1, 111-127
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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17
A computational model of unsupervised speech segmentation for correspondence learning
In: Research on language and computation. - London : King's College 8 (2011) 2-3, 133-168
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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18
The Murinyapata language of North-West Australia
Walsh, Michael James. - München : Lincom, 2011. Muenchen : LINCOM Europa, 2011
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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19
Analyzing university spoken interaction: a corpus linguistics/conversation analysis approach
Morton, Tom; Walsh, Michael; O'Keeffe, Anne. - : John Benjamins Publishing, 2011
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20
Archiving languages and song in Wadeye: Future access to song knowledge
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