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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
Abstract: In this paper we present a research project driven by a community of Aboriginal people, the Ngunawal, in south eastern Australia who have joined the growing movement in our country to ‘wake up’ our sleeping languages. It is a unique partnering between a peak research agency for Indigenous studies in Australia and a community group formed specifically for the purposes of language revival – the Ngayuriija Ngunawal Language Group. The ancestral territory of the Ngunawal includes the city of Canberra, Australia’s national capital. The focus on a programme of community outreach in our own region led us to seek to support the Ngunawal community to explore ways in which their language can be revitalized. It has also grown from our work on developing a national Framework document for teaching Australian languages in schools. This happened through the Australian Government initiative to develop a standard Australian Curriculum. Teaching languages in schools has been a driving force for communities keen to see their children have access to studying their own languages in our schools. Indeed this is a key motivating factor for many of the Ngunawal. Unfortunately the documentation for this language is relatively meagre, much of it early manuscript sources and no more than a few minutes of audio-recording. This means that there will be a need to fill gaps not just in vocabulary but also in morphosyntax. Because each Australian Language has owners this will involve negotiations with neighbouring language communities. We will describe the process of this language revitalization initiative from the perspective of the researchers as well as that of the Ngunawal community. It has been a slow process in part because of the limited documentation of the language but more importantly because of the need to form a partnership based on trust and commitment. As this partnership has developed the Ngunawal community has gradually revealed additional documentation which has been compiled within the community largely independent of the academy. We will display some of the products of this partnership and reflect on the impact of Ngunawal language revitalization not just on the Ngunawal community but also on the wider Australian community.
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10125/25315
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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
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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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