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301 Research products, page 1 of 31

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  • Research data
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Johora; Gun; Ruhaya; Claudia; Karmila;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands

    Pregnant women and children of the closer family getting dressed in yellow before the ceremony called "cuci perut" begins. In this ceremony the belly of a women who will be giving birth for the first time is washed ritually; much indonesian spoken with children.

  • Research data
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Sotaro Kita; Mihoko Fujii;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands
  • Research data . 2020
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Galen, C.W. Van; Hermsen, T.B.; Heuvel, H. Van Den;
    Publisher: DANS EASY
    Country: Netherlands

    This data collection comprises a set of test files developed in the CoDoSiS project of the CLARIAH program. The project ‘Combining Data on slavery in Surinam’ (CoDoSiS) aimed to develop a strategy to convert existing datasets on Surinam slavery into Linked Data by using the CLARIAH wp4-tool Cows and to combine them into one database network with relevant connections using the CLARIN-tool TICCL. This collection contains the test files that were used in the project. The test files are subsets of the complete datasets of the complete registers focussed around the year 1846 and were used to test the two issues defined above in the CoDoSiS project. Included in the collection are: - Slavenregisters_Picturae_plantages_1846 (TICCL and LOD) - Slavenregisters_Everaert_1846 (TICCL and LOD) - Monsterrol_Catharina_Sophia_1846 (TICCL and LOD) - Slavenregisters_Picturae_eigenaren_1846 (TICCL) - Wijkregisters_Paramaribo_1846 (TICCL) - Surinaamsche_almanak_plantages_1846 (LOD) - Surinaamsche_almanak_personen_1846 (TICCL)

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Kurt Kreppner; Child1 Gips; Child2 Gips; Father Gips; Mother Gips;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands
  • Open Access Dutch; Flemish
    Authors: 
    Kools, J.F.;
    Publisher: L.H.
    Country: Netherlands

    Rede Wageningen

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Bruijning, M.; Berge, A. Ten; Jongejans, E.;
    Country: Netherlands

    Data on individual survival, growth and reproduction of Daphnia magna individuals, as collected during a laboratory experiment. The aim of this study was to quantify effects of temperature, genetic background and population density on the dynamics of Daphnia magna populations. In this experiment, 40 populations of Daphnia magna, starting with 20 individuals, were followed during 80 days. Twice a week, three individuals were arbitrarily picked from each population, and isolated for three or four days in transparent tubes that were placed inside each aquarium. Results of this study have been published in ‘Population-level responses to temperature, density and clonal differences in Daphnia magna as revealed by Integral Projection Modeling’ (Bruijning et al., Functional Ecology 2018, forthcoming).

  • Research data
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Volker Heeschen;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands

    References throughout the corpus refer to the original recordings archived under this node. Those named "Tb" are digitized reel-to-reel tapes, all remaining digitizations originate from actual cassette tapes. In some cases the included pdf-scans of the cassette-covers contain additional metadata.

  • Research data
    Open Access
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands
  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Kunneman, F.A.; Mulken, M.J.P. Van; Bosch, A.P.J. Van Den;
    Publisher: DANS EASY
    Country: Netherlands

    This dataset features the training models, emotion classifications and emotion patterns before and after events, related to the paper: F. Kunneman, M. van Mulken and A. Van den Bosch, Anticipointment detection in event tweets (under review) Abstract of the study: We developed a system to detect positive expectation, disappointment, and satisfaction in tweets that refer to events automatically discovered in the Twitter stream. The emotional content shared on Twitter when referring to public events can provide insights into the presumed and experienced quality of the event. We expected to find a connection between positive expectation and disappointment, a succession that is sometimes referred to as anticipointment. The application of computational approaches makes it possible to detect the presence and strength of this hypothetical relation for a large number of events. We extracted events from a longitudinal data set of Dutch Twitter posts, and modeled classifiers to recognize emotion in the tweets related to those events by means of hashtag-labeled training data. After classifying all tweets before and after the events in our data set, we summarized the collective emotions by calculating the percentage of tweets classified with an emotion as well as ranking tweets based on the classifier confidence score for an emotion and selecting the 90th percentile. Only a weak correlation of around 0.2 was found between positive expectation and disappointment, while a higher correlation of 0.6 was found between positive expectation and satisfaction. The most anticipointing events were events with a clear loss, such as a canceled event or when the favored sports team had lost. We conclude that senders of Twitter posts might be more inclined to share satisfaction than disappointment after a much anticipated event. Subject period: January 1st 2011 until October 31st 2015

  • Research data
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Christa; Nevumba;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands

    Nevumba talks about her life, about the relationship of the Akie with the Maasai asked by the researcher. Nevumba uses Kisankare words.

Advanced search in
Research products
arrow_drop_down
Searching FieldsTerms
Any field
arrow_drop_down
includes
arrow_drop_down
Include:
301 Research products, page 1 of 31
  • Research data
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Johora; Gun; Ruhaya; Claudia; Karmila;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands

    Pregnant women and children of the closer family getting dressed in yellow before the ceremony called "cuci perut" begins. In this ceremony the belly of a women who will be giving birth for the first time is washed ritually; much indonesian spoken with children.

  • Research data
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Sotaro Kita; Mihoko Fujii;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands
  • Research data . 2020
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Galen, C.W. Van; Hermsen, T.B.; Heuvel, H. Van Den;
    Publisher: DANS EASY
    Country: Netherlands

    This data collection comprises a set of test files developed in the CoDoSiS project of the CLARIAH program. The project ‘Combining Data on slavery in Surinam’ (CoDoSiS) aimed to develop a strategy to convert existing datasets on Surinam slavery into Linked Data by using the CLARIAH wp4-tool Cows and to combine them into one database network with relevant connections using the CLARIN-tool TICCL. This collection contains the test files that were used in the project. The test files are subsets of the complete datasets of the complete registers focussed around the year 1846 and were used to test the two issues defined above in the CoDoSiS project. Included in the collection are: - Slavenregisters_Picturae_plantages_1846 (TICCL and LOD) - Slavenregisters_Everaert_1846 (TICCL and LOD) - Monsterrol_Catharina_Sophia_1846 (TICCL and LOD) - Slavenregisters_Picturae_eigenaren_1846 (TICCL) - Wijkregisters_Paramaribo_1846 (TICCL) - Surinaamsche_almanak_plantages_1846 (LOD) - Surinaamsche_almanak_personen_1846 (TICCL)

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Kurt Kreppner; Child1 Gips; Child2 Gips; Father Gips; Mother Gips;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands
  • Open Access Dutch; Flemish
    Authors: 
    Kools, J.F.;
    Publisher: L.H.
    Country: Netherlands

    Rede Wageningen

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Bruijning, M.; Berge, A. Ten; Jongejans, E.;
    Country: Netherlands

    Data on individual survival, growth and reproduction of Daphnia magna individuals, as collected during a laboratory experiment. The aim of this study was to quantify effects of temperature, genetic background and population density on the dynamics of Daphnia magna populations. In this experiment, 40 populations of Daphnia magna, starting with 20 individuals, were followed during 80 days. Twice a week, three individuals were arbitrarily picked from each population, and isolated for three or four days in transparent tubes that were placed inside each aquarium. Results of this study have been published in ‘Population-level responses to temperature, density and clonal differences in Daphnia magna as revealed by Integral Projection Modeling’ (Bruijning et al., Functional Ecology 2018, forthcoming).

  • Research data
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Volker Heeschen;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands

    References throughout the corpus refer to the original recordings archived under this node. Those named "Tb" are digitized reel-to-reel tapes, all remaining digitizations originate from actual cassette tapes. In some cases the included pdf-scans of the cassette-covers contain additional metadata.

  • Research data
    Open Access
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands
  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Kunneman, F.A.; Mulken, M.J.P. Van; Bosch, A.P.J. Van Den;
    Publisher: DANS EASY
    Country: Netherlands

    This dataset features the training models, emotion classifications and emotion patterns before and after events, related to the paper: F. Kunneman, M. van Mulken and A. Van den Bosch, Anticipointment detection in event tweets (under review) Abstract of the study: We developed a system to detect positive expectation, disappointment, and satisfaction in tweets that refer to events automatically discovered in the Twitter stream. The emotional content shared on Twitter when referring to public events can provide insights into the presumed and experienced quality of the event. We expected to find a connection between positive expectation and disappointment, a succession that is sometimes referred to as anticipointment. The application of computational approaches makes it possible to detect the presence and strength of this hypothetical relation for a large number of events. We extracted events from a longitudinal data set of Dutch Twitter posts, and modeled classifiers to recognize emotion in the tweets related to those events by means of hashtag-labeled training data. After classifying all tweets before and after the events in our data set, we summarized the collective emotions by calculating the percentage of tweets classified with an emotion as well as ranking tweets based on the classifier confidence score for an emotion and selecting the 90th percentile. Only a weak correlation of around 0.2 was found between positive expectation and disappointment, while a higher correlation of 0.6 was found between positive expectation and satisfaction. The most anticipointing events were events with a clear loss, such as a canceled event or when the favored sports team had lost. We conclude that senders of Twitter posts might be more inclined to share satisfaction than disappointment after a much anticipated event. Subject period: January 1st 2011 until October 31st 2015

  • Research data
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Christa; Nevumba;
    Publisher: The Language Archive, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
    Country: Netherlands

    Nevumba talks about her life, about the relationship of the Akie with the Maasai asked by the researcher. Nevumba uses Kisankare words.

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