51 to 60 of 295 Results
Dec 3, 2023 - HE Tai-Sen
Chen, Josie I.; Han, Yue; He, Tai-Sen, 2023, "Does Future Time Reference Framing Increase Temporal Discounting? Evidence from English Monolinguals", https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/MENVT3, DR-NTU (Data), V3, UNF:6:mC03s4/ZgjOOACtaRsZFLg== [fileUNF]
Despite growing support for the linguistic-savings hypothesis (LSH), direct causal evidence remains limited. Recent research has investigated whether future time reference framing affects intertemporal decision-making, particularly in languages with weak future-time-reference (w-... |
Nov 24, 2023 - Mental State Events in the Talk Together Study
Tay, Weilin; Wee, Rachel MY; Styles, Suzy J, 2022, "Mental State Events in the Talk Together Study: T1", https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/NYTEUD, DR-NTU (Data), V2, UNF:6:jbLLYt36W1jPFwTGnPCIeA== [fileUNF]
This dataset contains all Mental State Events identified by two coders in the speech of parents narrating the wordless storybook 'What a Scary Storm!' during the Talk together study to their toddlers and preschool aged children, in Singapore. The coded data are derived from the f... |
Nov 8, 2023Red Dot Parent/Child Talk
Dataverse collecting resources and materials relevant to investigations of topic-comment structures in parent/child conversations. |
Oct 18, 2023 - Perception of English Phonemes in South East Asian English varieties
Paca, Angelie M. G; Styles, Suzy J, 2024, "Pre-registration for Influence of Language Dominance on Filipino’s Categorical Perception of English Phonemes", https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/PXDSGA, DR-NTU (Data), V1
This paper, seeks to investigate the phenomenon of categorical perception among Filipinos from both the Philippines and Singapore who speak English and a native language of the Philippines. The aim is to examine whether one’s dominant language being a language of the Philippines,... |
Oct 18, 2023Suzy J. STYLES
This repository collects together studies on the perception of English phonemes in South East Asian English varieties. |
Sep 27, 2023 - Red Dot Parent/Child Talk - Discourse Markers
Ho, E. E. J; Styles, Suzy J, 2023, "Preregistration for the roles of education, age of child and perceptions towards the importance of personal expression through language in the production of Singlish discourse markers from parents to children", https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/HJXSNF, DR-NTU (Data), V1
Discourse markers (or discourse particles) are small words that perform pragmatic functions in an utterance (Wee, 2004). For example, it could denote a speaker’s attitude (e.g. “leh” for impatience in Singlish), to express emotion (“sia” for relief in Singlish), or to express cer... |
Sep 27, 2023Suzy J. STYLES
This Dataverse will collect datasets and resources investigating the use of special 'red-dot' words and structures in parent-child talk in Singapore |
Aug 11, 2023 - MERLIon CCS Challenges
Chua, Victoria Yi Han; Garcia Perera, Leibny Paola; Khudanpur, Sanjeev; Khong, Andy W. H.; Dauwels, Justin; Woon, Fei Ting; Styles, Suzy J, 2023, "Development and Evaluation data for Multilingual Everyday Recordings - Language Identification on Code-Switched Child-Directed Speech (MERLIon CCS) Challenge", https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/ANXS8Z, DR-NTU (Data), V1, UNF:6:QFBERdU0YulYhMohwDaNWg== [fileUNF]
The inaugural Multilingual Everyday Recordings - Language Identification on Code-Switched Child-Directed Speech (MERLIon CCS) Challenge focuses on developing robust language identification and language diarization systems that are reliable for non-standard, accented, spontaneous... |
Aug 11, 2023 - MERLIon CCS Challenges
Chua, Victoria Yi Han; Styles, Suzy J, 2023, "MERLIon CCS Challenge Development and Evaluation Datasets Open Preview (Documentation)", https://doi.org/10.21979/N9/4RHC3D, DR-NTU (Data), V1, UNF:6:gMeqVZk9eCvbqN6QXFyuWg== [fileUNF]
The inaugural Multilingual Everyday Recordings - Language Identification on Code-Switched Child-Directed Speech (MERLIon CCS) Challenge focuses on developing robust language identification and language diarization systems that are reliable for non-standard, accented, spontaneous... |
