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Hits 441 – 457 of 457

441
Simiie and metaphor, pt. 2
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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442
Vocab: directions
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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443
Follow up: vocab, sounds comparative and superlative
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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444
Vocab: family members
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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445
Vocab: time words
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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446
Follow up: book 3, pt. 1
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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447
Follow up: book 4
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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448
Story: picture task video one
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449
Follow up: vocab, words, sound order
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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450
Discussion: Lamjung geography and villiages
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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451
Conjunctions, pt. 1
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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452
Directions
Lauren Gawne. - 2009
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453
Swadesh list - 100 words
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454
Gesture Categorisation and Understanding Speaker Attention to Gesture
In: http://www.als.asn.au/proceedings/als2009/gawnekellyunger.pdf
Abstract: b.kelly unimelb.edu.au Abstract. The field of gesture classification has been an area of in-tense scholarship in recent decades. This article provides a brief overview of the area in seeking to understand how this theoretical framework relates to the way speakers attend to gestural information. 48 native English speakers participated in a web-based survey cen-tred on a short narrative. The gestures focused on in the film narra-tive were based around McNeill’s common gesture typology. Half of the participants watched the video with sound and the other half without to help ascertain whether the presence of speech affects how people attend to gestural information. Participants were asked to count the total number of gestures and list what they thought the five “best ” examples of a gesture were. While there was no significant difference between the number of gestures counted by each group, the categories of gesture which were attended to varied between the two groups. Those with sound were more likely to include iconic gestures while those without were more likely to attend to beat ges-tures. This indicates that the presence or absence of sound has no af-fect on how many gestures participants observe, but it does affect what gestural information they pay more attention to.
Keyword: BARBARA F. KELLY AND ANNIE UNGER – 2 –; gesture; interaction; movement classification LAUREN GAWNE; non-verbal
URL: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.628.9307
http://www.als.asn.au/proceedings/als2009/gawnekellyunger.pdf
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455
Collecting Bilingual Audio in Remote Indigenous Communities
In: http://aclweb.org/anthology/C/C14/C14-1096.pdf
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456
Toolbox data file
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457
Publications about Kagate
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