Calibrating recipiency through pronominal reference / Supplementary video files
This dataset comprises the supplementary video files to the research article "Calibrating recipiency through pronominal reference". The open-access publication illustrates how grammatical contrasts within pronoun inventories (specifically, first person inclusive vs. first person exclusive and second person vs. third person) are recruited to attribute and manage participation roles when referring to co-participants in conversation. The study is based on a corpus of casual multi-party conversations in Jaru, an endangered Australian language (Pama-Nyungan, Ngumpin-Yapa).
The subtitled video clips have been downsized and converted to MP4 format. The complete Jaru corpus with the original high-quality recordings will be accessible under certain conditions through the Australian Institute for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS) Collection. In accordance with the ethics approval and participants' preferences, some name tags represent pseudonyms or subsection names. The videos are intended to be watched alongside the published article, where readers will find a Jeffersonian transcription and morphemic glosses for each of the excerpts.
Funding
International Macquarie University Research Excellence Scholarship (iMQRES)
History
Research Project URL
Research Project ID
81341763Q/A Log
- Peer review completed
- FAIR assessment completed
FAIR Self Assessment Summary
This text has been generated from a tool that has been adapted from the ARDC FAIR Assessment Tool Findable -------- Does the dataset have any identifiers assigned? Global Is the dataset identifier included in all metadata records/files describing the data? Yes How is the data described with metadata? Comprehensively, but in a text-based, non-standard format What type of repository or registry is the metadata record in? Data is in one place but discoverable through several registries Accessible ---------- How accessible is the data? Publicly accessible Is the data available online without requiring specialised protocols or tools once access has been approved? File download from online location Will the metadata record be available even if the data is no longer available? Yes Interoperable ------------- What (file) format(s) is the data available in? In a structured, open standard, machine-readable format What best describes the types of vocabularies/ontologies/tagging schemas used to define the data elements? No standards have been applied in the description of data elements How is the metadata linked to other data and metadata (to enhance context and clearly indicate relationships)? The metadata record includes URI links to related metadata, data and definitions Reusable -------- Which of the following best describes the license/usage rights attached to the data? Standard machine-readable license (e.g. Creative Commons) How much provenance information has been captured to facilitate data reuse? Fully recorded in a text formatFAIR Self Assessment Rating
- 4 Stars
Data Sensitivity
- General