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SCOPUS_ID:85102116557
“The Innovation Imperative”: The Struggle Over Agroecology in the International Food Policy Arena
As the gravity of the global social and ecological crises become more apparent, there is a growing recognition of the need for social transformation. In this article, we use a combination of narrative case study and discourse analysis to better understand how transformative concepts, such as agroecology, are shaped as ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84997941671
“The Only Solution There Is To Fight”: Discourses of Masculinity Among South African Domestically Violent Men
This qualitative study investigates the discourses that men used when talking about their experiences of attending a Duluth–cognitive-behavioral-therapy (CBT) domestic violence program in Cape Town, South Africa. Data were collected from 12 men who were recruited from three programs. A discourse analysis of interviews ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Programming Languages in NLP", "Semantic Text Processing", "Multimodality" ]
[ 71, 55, 72, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85122472773
“The Pragmatics of Autofiction”
The aim of this chapter is to compare the pragmatics of autofiction in Ben Lerner’s 10:04 and Siri Hustvedt’s Memories of the Future, two authors who, in dissimilar but also very similar ways, use autofictional strategies to refer to their personal lives and background without playing the autobiographical game “by the ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85146974665
“The Slovenian Word For These People is ‘Degenerates’!”: Examining Negative Attitudes Toward Non-normative Sexual and Gender Identities in Slovenian Online Comments
Numerous reports have documented the discrimination, physical, and verbal attacks on LGBTQIA+ people throughout the world and the situation in Slovenia, a Central European country, is similar, albeit with its own national and historic specifics. Therefore, we see it as crucial to identify the prevailing negative discou...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85148219998
“The Truth Had Been Twisted and Contorted”: Toward a Pragmatics of F. M. Dostoevsky’s The Landlady
This article examines the poetics of Dostoevsky’s novella The Landlady (1847) from a pragmatic perspective, approaching it as a literary utterance that manifests a new depictive technique and defends the autonomy of the professional writer within the emerging Russian literary industry. The story’s eventive incoherence,...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85058212905
“The apology seemed (in)sincere”: Variability in perceptions of (im)politeness
It is widely acknowledged that perceptions of (im)politeness vary across different cultural groups. However, the emphasis on cross-cultural or cross-linguistic variation has resulted in individual variability in perceptions of (im)politeness being relatively neglected in (im)politeness research. In this paper, we move ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85105333084
“The coronavirus is a bioweapon”: classifying coronavirus stories on fact-checking sites
The 2020 coronavirus pandemic has heightened the need to flag coronavirus-related misinformation, and fact-checking groups have taken to verifying misinformation on the Internet. We explore stories reported by fact-checking groups PolitiFact, Poynter and Snopes from January to June 2020. We characterise these stories i...
[ "Information Extraction & Text Mining", "Information Retrieval", "Ethical NLP", "Text Clustering", "Reasoning", "Fact & Claim Verification", "Text Classification", "Responsible & Trustworthy NLP" ]
[ 3, 24, 17, 29, 8, 46, 36, 4 ]
https://aclanthology.org//W11-2017/
“The day after the day after tomorrow?” A machine learning approach to adaptive temporal expression generation: training and evaluation with real users
[ "Natural Language Interfaces", "Text Generation", "Dialogue Systems & Conversational Agents" ]
[ 11, 47, 38 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85126708304
“The day joy was over:” representation of pregnancy loss in the news
There has been a recent explosion of news coverage about pregnancy loss, fueled primarily by celebrities openly discussing their personal experiences on social media. At first glance, this coverage appears to be a feminist success for women. The miscarriage experience has historically been shrouded in secrecy and large...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing", "Representation Learning" ]
[ 71, 72, 12 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85091115252
“The expert and the patient”: a discourse analysis of the house of commons’ debates regarding the 2007 Mental Health Act
Background: The Mental Health Act 1983 was amended in 2007. This legislation appears to be predicated on the assumption that an entity of “mental disorder” exists and that people who are designated mentally disordered require medical treatment, administered by force if necessary. Aims: To explore the ways in which ment...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing", "Ethical NLP", "Responsible & Trustworthy NLP" ]
[ 71, 72, 17, 4 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85085450858
“The great Australian pastime”: Pragmatic and semantic perspectives on Taking the Piss
The claim that Australians place considerable value on not taking oneself too seriously lies at the heart of discourses on Anglo-Australian identity. While laughter and playful talk are ubiquitous across languages and cultures, Australians are claimed to pride themselves on being able to joke and laugh at themselves (a...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85134561290
“The great secrets of reading”: Margaret Meek Spencer, reading process and children’s mystery and detective fiction
Margaret Meek Spencer’s writings on literacy evoke reading and storymaking as processes of inquiring; of searching into mystery. This paper considers how Meek’s preoccupations with reading process; genre literacy; and text-image dialogism resonate deeply with the genre of young people’s mystery and detective fiction. D...
[ "Visual Data in NLP", "Multimodality" ]
[ 20, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85071157490
“The internet is not pleased”: twitter and the 2017 Equifax data breach
The 2017 Equifax data breach left 144.5 million users digitally vulnerable to identity theft and future hacks. The organization’s failure to provide ongoing communication and information regarding the attack, motivated users to form crisis communities within the Twitter platform. This study examines the discourses pres...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85050444065
“The language metaphor”: An epistemological approach to the digital divide
This chapter explores how digitality as a language operates in relation to power, and if the notion of a “divide” is still meaningful. A parallel will be drawn between digitality and English as hegemonic global languages in the respective domains (technological and linguistic). The conceptualisation of Information Comm...
[ "Linguistics & Cognitive NLP", "Linguistic Theories" ]
[ 48, 57 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85066847902
“The lesser of two evils” versus “medicines not smarties”: Constructing antipsychotics in dementia
Background and Objectives: Because antipsychotics are associated with an increased risk of morbidity and mortality, they should only be prescribed in dementia in limited circumstances. But antipsychotics are prescribed to a large proportion of residents in formal care settings despite guidance and warnings to the contr...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84962909748
“The most passionate cover I’ve seen”: emotional information in fan-created U2 music videos
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore how both producers and consumers of user-created music videos on YouTube communicate emotional information. Design/methodology/approach – In total, 150 filmic documents containing fan-generated versions of U2’s “Song for Someone” were purposively collected. The author u...
[ "Visual Data in NLP", "Semantic Text Processing", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Information Retrieval", "Multimodality" ]
[ 20, 72, 70, 71, 24, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84930353448
“The people who are out of ‘right’ English”: Japanese university students' social evaluations of English language diversity and the internationalisation of Japanese higher education
Previous research indicates that evaluations of speech forms reflect stereotypes of, and attitudes towards, the perceived group(s) of speakers of the language/variety under consideration. This study, employing both implicit and explicit attitude measures, investigates 158 Japanese university students' perceptions of fo...
[ "Multimodality", "Ethical NLP", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Responsible & Trustworthy NLP" ]
[ 74, 17, 70, 4 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85106018017
“The secret knock”: a critical discourse analysis of how recruiters exercise power and privilege in admissions
This inquiry investigates how college recruiters’ understandings of diversity are represented and discussed in their work. Interwoven within this study is an examination of power through the lens of Discourse Theory and Critical Discourse Analysis. Findings reveal how recruiters exercise power to produce either transfo...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85016127952
“There Is Nothing Like a Family”: Discourses on Families of Choice in Poland
In this article we showed how the notion of heteronormative citizenship embedded in the Polish Constitution was (re)produced in the public sphere, and how heteronormativity as an ideal was slowly undermined by the emergence of new narratives on LGBT families. We did so by first conducting a critical reading of the Poli...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85102277797
“They Have Overstayed Their Welcome”: the Discursive Construction of Collective Identities in Kenya’s Quest to Close the Dadaab Refugee Camp
Dadaab refugee camp, located in the northern part of Kenya, is currently the world’s largest refugee camp in both size and population. Having been in existence for more than 25 years since the outbreak of civil war in Somalia and the subsequent disintegration and demise of the Somali state, since its inception, the cam...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85102082456
“They Made us into a Race. We Made Ourselves into a People”: A Corpus Study of Contemporary Black American Group Identity in the Non-Fictional Writings of Ta-Nehisi Coates
This article examines representations of contemporary Black American identity in the non-fictional writings of Ta-Nehisi Coates. The dataset is a self-compiled specialized corpus of Coates’s non-fictional writings from 1996 until 2018 (350 texts; 468,899 words). The study utilizes an interdisciplinary approach combinin...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85104976158
“They are not muslims. They are monsters”: the accidental takfirism of British political elites
It has become increasingly common for British political elites to engage in takfir, the process by which individuals are declared not to be Muslims despite their self-proclaimed Islamic faith.  This apparently accidental takfirism denies that members of Salafi-Jihadist groups are themselves Muslims in contrast to more ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85050126210
“They don't see us otherwise”: A discourse analysis of marginalized students critiquing the local news
At the end of the fall semester, a fight broke out at a high school in the southeastern United States, a fight large enough to be covered by the local news. In this article, we analyze two data sources related to this event: one local news report and a discussion of that news report that occurred in an Intensive Readin...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85079497482
“They don’t speak Arabic”: Producing and Reproducing Language Ideologies Toward Moroccan Arabic
Drawing on theories of language ideologies and discourse analysis, this article explores the sociolinguistic side of an Arabic study abroad program that took place in Morocco. The article examines the ways in which participants’ attitudes toward Moroccan Arabic draw from prevalent language ideologies that organize the ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing", "Linguistics & Cognitive NLP", "Linguistic Theories" ]
[ 71, 72, 48, 57 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85020231330
“They just said inappropriate contact.” What do service users hear when staff talk about sex and relationships?
Background: Research into how people with intellectual disabilities (ID) pursue intimate relationships in care settings presents some contradictory findings; despite increasingly liberal staff views, service users experience significant restrictions. This study attempts to explore this gap within a secure hospital, exa...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85126099499
“They say it’s because I’m migrainous..” Contested identities of students with invisible disabilities in medical consultations
The objective of this article is to explore the identity construction by students with invisible disabilities as disclosed in medical consultations at a university health center. In particular, I work on the assumption that analysing the discursive processes through which students with invisible disabilities construct,...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85135529139
“They wouldn't get away with it at McDonalds”: Decriminalization, work, and disciplinary power in New Zealand brothels
New Zealand decriminalized sex work in 2004 with the passage of the Prostitution Reform Act (2003), which sets an explicit intention to prevent exploitation of sex workers and improve their welfare. This has demonstrably improved conditions for sex workers and provides a necessary context for addressing exploitation. H...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85148092954
“They’re Making It More Democratic”: The Normative Construction of Participatory Journalism
Based on the framework of discursive institutionalism, this study analyzes metajournalistic discourse about participatory journalism from 2002 through 2021. The focus is on how institutional actors sought to normatively position participatory journalism against the backdrop of technological, economic, and social change...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85065718091
“This country might be rather swamped by people with a different culture”?: Immigration in britain and the prefiguration of the discourse of thatcherism in the late 1970s
Following her election as leader of the Conservative Party in 1975, Margaret Thatcher became the UK’s first woman Prime Minister between 1979 and 1990. The fundamental influence of her governments on both British politics and British life as a whole resulted in the term ‘Thatcherism’ being coined to illustrate not only...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
https://aclanthology.org//2020.evalnlgeval-1.2/
“This is a Problem, Don’t You Agree?” Framing and Bias in Human Evaluation for Natural Language Generation
Despite recent efforts reviewing current human evaluation practices for natural language generation (NLG) research, the lack of reported question wording and potential for framing effects or cognitive biases influencing results has been widely overlooked. In this opinion paper, we detail three possible framing effects ...
[ "Text Generation" ]
[ 47 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85090927511
“This is a Titanic song”: the effect of familiarity on children’s learning affective meaning in music
Usage-based theories of language acquisition are thought to rely on domain-general learning mechanisms, such as mastering familiar routines by rote before generalizing to novel unfamiliar instances. If so, then the role of familiarity should extend to non-linguistic domains, like music. The purpose of the present study...
[ "Linguistics & Cognitive NLP", "Linguistic Theories", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Sentiment Analysis", "Emotion Analysis", "Multimodality" ]
[ 48, 57, 70, 78, 61, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84969940542
“This is for life”: A discursive analysis of the dilemmas of constructing diagnostic identities
This paper takes a discourse analytic approach to the construction of identities formed through reception of a psychiatric diagnosis (I will refer to these as “diagnostic identities” throughout) as dilemmatic, and the subsequent negotiations of identities in light of that dilemma. More specifically, it is the diagnosis...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85104008192
“This research is funded by...”: Named entity recognition of financial information in research papers
Customised Named Entity Recognition is an interesting, yet challenging task. The focus of our paper is the extraction of the named entities that provide financial information about research projects and programs. We introduce AckNER, a tool which extracts financial information from the “Acknowledgments” or “Funding” se...
[ "Named Entity Recognition", "Information Extraction & Text Mining" ]
[ 34, 3 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85101112889
“Those Are Your Words, not Mine!” Defence Strategies for Denying Speaker Commitment
In response to an accusation of having said something inappropriate, the accused may exploit the difference between the explicit contents of their utterance and its implicatures. Widely discussed in the pragmatics literature are those cases in which arguers accept accountability only for the explicit contents of what t...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85085290143
“Those are Your Words, Not Mine!” Defence Strategies for Denying Speaker Commitment
In response to an accusation of having said something inappropriate, the accused may exploit the difference between the explicit contents of their utterance and its implicatures. Widely discussed in the pragmatics literature are those cases in which arguers accept accountability only for the explicit contents of what t...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85148599966
“Three years” by A. P. Chekhov: a story as a novel
Considering the creative evolution of Chekhov, an undoubted consequence of his almost a year-long journey in Siberia, the genre structure of the story “Three Years” is regarded as the result of the intention to “write a novel from Moscow life”. Although retaining the definition of the story, in fact, “Three Years” appe...
[ "Visual Data in NLP", "Multimodality" ]
[ 20, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85132659578
“Timely Mean” (時中) as a Translation Strategy for the Chinese Canon
The Chinese canonical texts are a collection of traditional Chinese discursive wisdom. The essence of the translated Chinese canon is the presentation of the core worldview and values of the Chinese classical culture through another language. This study draws on the theory of “language-worldview” and attempts to find o...
[ "Machine Translation", "Linguistic Theories", "Text Generation", "Linguistics & Cognitive NLP", "Multilinguality" ]
[ 51, 57, 47, 48, 0 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85110441251
“To Question Ever Deeper Who We Were and Who We Are as a People and as a Nation”: A Discourse Analysis of Public Meaning-Making about the Tuam Babies in Letters to the Editors of The Irish Times
The Republic of Ireland had the highest rates of institutionalisation per capita outside of the Soviet Union in the twentieth century through institutional structures including Mother and Baby Homes, Magdalene laundries, and residential schools. A Mother and Baby Homes Commission of Investigation report indicates that ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85065088407
“To be healthy to me is to be free”: how discourses of freedom are used to construct healthiness among young South African adults
Purpose: Healthiness is constructed, in Western culture, as a moral ideal or supervalue. This paper will interrogate the assumption that health and the pursuit of healthiness is always and unquestionably positive, by exploring how discourses of health and freedom interact to reinforce the current inequalities and detra...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85121622675
“To trust a LIAR”: Does Machine Learning Really Classify Fine-grained, Fake News Statements?
Fake news refers to deceptive online content and is a problem which causes social harm [1]. Early detection of fake news is therefore a critical but challenging problem. In this paper we attempt to determine if state-of-the-art models, trained on the LIAR dataset [2] can be leveraged to reliably classify short claims a...
[ "Language Models", "Semantic Text Processing", "Information Retrieval", "Information Extraction & Text Mining", "Ethical NLP", "Reasoning", "Fact & Claim Verification", "Text Classification", "Responsible & Trustworthy NLP" ]
[ 52, 72, 24, 3, 17, 8, 46, 36, 4 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85091428135
“Today, the long Arab winter has begun to thaw”: A corpus-assisted discourse study of conceptual metaphors in political speeches about the Arab revolutions
The so-called 'Arab Spring' represents one of the most significant socio-political crises in the Middle East and North Africa in recent years and its ramifications continue to affect not only local but global policy. This chapter investigates how the Arab revolutions have been conceptualised metaphorically in internati...
[ "Cognitive Modeling", "Linguistic Theories", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Linguistics & Cognitive NLP", "Multimodality" ]
[ 2, 57, 70, 48, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84993808261
“Token Codeswitching” and language alternation in narrative discourse: A Functional-Pragmatic approach
This study is concerned with two phenomena of language alternation in biographic narrations in Yiddish and Low German, based on spoken language data recorded between 1988 and 1995. In both phenomena language alternation serves as an additional communicative tool which can be applied by bilingual speakers to enlarge the...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing", "Multilinguality" ]
[ 71, 72, 0 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85047270928
“Too many Americans are trapped in fear, violence and poverty”: A psychology-informed sentiment analysis of campaign speeches from the 2016 US presidential election
Most automatic sentiment analyses of texts tend to only employ a simple positive-negative polarity to classify emotions. In this paper, I illustrate a more fine-grained automatic sentiment analysis [Jockers, Matthew. 2016. Introduction to the Syuzhet package. https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/syuzhet/vignettes/sy...
[ "Multimodality", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Sentiment Analysis" ]
[ 74, 70, 78 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85149941672
“Transforming” Personality Scale Development: Illustrating the Potential of State-of-the-Art Natural Language Processing
Natural language processing (NLP) techniques are becoming increasingly popular in industrial and organizational psychology. One promising area for NLP-based applications is scale development; yet, while many possibilities exist, so far these applications have been restricted—mainly focusing on automated item generation...
[ "Language Models", "Semantic Text Processing", "Text Classification", "Information Retrieval", "Information Extraction & Text Mining" ]
[ 52, 72, 36, 24, 3 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84937429640
“Transitory hieroglyphiques”: Deaf people and signed communication in early modern theories of language
[ "Linguistics & Cognitive NLP", "Linguistic Theories" ]
[ 48, 57 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85092690899
“Troca de Galhardetes”. For the study of verbal violence in polemical discourses concerning the orthographic agreement in Portugal
The main goal of this study is to show the use of aggressiveness and verbal violence in polemical discourses, from a corpus composed by opinion texts concerning the Orthographic Agreement of 1990, taking in account the perspective of Discourse Analysis, Pragmatics, Rhetoric, Argumentation and Interactional Linguistics....
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85093870201
“Understatement” and sarcasm: Lexicalization of a rhetorical device
Understatement is a rhetorical device, based on making a statement weaker than it could be made in a given situation (i. e. underrating, less confident, presented as unimportant). In modern Russian, especially in colloquial speech, an extremely popular rhetorical figure is a combination of understatement and sarcasm; r...
[ "Stylistic Analysis", "Multimodality", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Sentiment Analysis" ]
[ 67, 74, 70, 78 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85071616141
“Us” vs “them” in political discourse: The instrumental function of the “evil other” in American presidential rhetoric
The article investigates the textualization of the categories “Us” and “Them” in American presidential rhetoric in two interrelated ways: as an inventory of lexicogrammatical resources specific to this genre and their contextualized use as a tool for legitimizing political decisions. For this purpose, several speeches ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Multimodality" ]
[ 71, 72, 70, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85089258285
“Vaccines for pregnant women…?! Absurd” – Mapping maternal vaccination discourse and stance on social media over six months
Objective: To understand the predominant topics of discussion, stance and associated language used on social media platforms relating to maternal vaccines in 15 countries over a six-month period. Background: In 2019, the World Health Organisation prioritised vaccine hesitancy as a top ten global health threat and recog...
[ "Semantic Text Processing", "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Ethical NLP", "Sentiment Analysis", "Reasoning", "Fact & Claim Verification", "Responsible & Trustworthy NLP" ]
[ 72, 71, 17, 78, 8, 46, 4 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85129738165
“WHAT DOES THE FUTURE OF WORK LOOK LIKE?” -HASHTAGS AS CENTRAL PIVOTS OF LINGUISTIC SOCIAL MEDIA ANALYSES
What are the linguistic characteristics of media discourse about the future of work and what are people’s attitudes towards the digitalization of work? To answer these questions, this article focuses on social media discourses. The article starts with an analysis of #zukunftderarbeit hashtag and proceeds to an analysis...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84948702346
“We Are in the Room to Serve Our Clients”: We and Professional Identity Socialization in E-Mail Supervision of Counselors-in-Training
This study uses computer-mediated discourse analysis to investigate use of the first-person plural pronoun “we” in e-mail supervision of 23 graduate-level counselors-in-training who are completing internships. Extending prior research on pronouns and relationship and identity construction, expert–novice discourse, prof...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85135022465
“We Both Learned from Gustav, Edmund’s Prophet in Ruthenia”. Alexander Reformatsky and Roman Jakobson on Living Language and Inner Speech<sup>*</sup>
The article reflects on the philosophical origins of semiotic and structuralist ideas that developed in linguistics in the 1960s. and have not lost their significance for the development of modern humanitarian knowledge. Appeal to them is not just of historical and scientific significance. They bring us back to the sub...
[ "Syntactic Text Processing", "Phonology", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Multimodality" ]
[ 15, 6, 70, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85141369250
“We F—ing Got Osuna”: Examining the Maintenance of Patriarchy and Journalistic Routines in A Major League Baseball Clubhouse
Elite professional athletes in the NBA, NHL, NFL and MLB have all been accused of domestic violence. This occurs in a cultural arena already predicated on patriarchy and capitalism and rife with toxic masculinity, which combine to create traumatic, gendered realities for women sports journalists and violent and exploit...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85101799819
“We Know the Same Languages and Then We Can Mix Them”: A Child’s Perspectives on Everyday Translanguaging in the Family
Our study presents a young multilingual child, here called Laura, and her perspectives on and experiences of everyday language practices using Hungarian, Finnish, and Swedish, in light of her family’s language policy. Laura was interviewed and observed over the course of one full day in the home with her family, in ord...
[ "Multilinguality" ]
[ 0 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85150471432
“We Should All Be Welcome:” A Discourse Analysis of Religious Coping for Black Parents Raising Autistic Children
Disability for Black families raising autistic children is often inseparable from religious identity and experience. Black parents raising autistic children may rely on their religion to create meaning and seek guidance, but they may also experience unmet support needs from their religious congregations. In this study ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85114346809
“We Will Appreciate Each Other More After This”: Teachers' Construction of Collective and Personal Identities During Lockdown
In March 2020, schools in England were closed to all but vulnerable children and the children of key workers, as part of a national effort to curb the spread of the Covid-19 virus. Many teachers were required to work from home as remote learning was implemented. Teaching is primarily a relational profession, and previo...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85076389223
“We are at war against a powerful, implacable enemy”: Sebastián Piñera’s discourses and the popular uprising in Chile
Drawing from critical political discourse analysis, this article aimed to investigate the 46 official speeches by president Sebastián Piñera delivered one month before and after widespread social protests that started on October 18, 2019 in Chile. Using computer-assisted complementary methods, we contrasted and interpr...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Multimodality" ]
[ 71, 72, 70, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85072901025
“We are looking forward to another great year!”: How principals’ language-in-use reflect school quality ratings in Chicago Public Schools
Chicago Public Schools (CPS) has been a laboratory for privatization and school choice through a neoliberal market model put in place in the 1990s. Every year, the District rates schools based on the School Quality Rating Policy (SQRP), and those results are made public through the CPS data portal and other media outle...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85073505992
“We are prepared to play our part…”: A case study of the use of first-person references in e-releases from two oil companies
This study looks into the meta-pragmatics of e-releases by providing corpus-based data on variations in the use of first-person references in e-releases from two oil companies: BP and Repsol. Previous research on corporate press releases had approached this particular feature (Jacobs, 1999a, 1999b), but no further atte...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85107495190
“We are what we hear”: Metaphors in contemporary Spanish and english commercial hits
The subliminal messages transmitted by means of metaphors in songs could influence the development of critical thinking among our youngsters which will reflect on their personality later in life. The aim of this article is to analyse the discourse of the most popular commercial songs in English and Spanish of song-writ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85052148947
“We don’t have to talk about how I feel”: Emotionality as a tool of resistance in political discourse among Israeli students – a gendered socio-linguistic perspective
This article demonstrates how the gendered patriarchal mechanisms that exclude women from the political sphere are being produced, re-produced, and challenged in interpersonal political conversations by concentrating on the discursive mechanisms that construct the way young Israeli women and men talk about politics. Th...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85103543485
“We don’t throw stones, we throw flowers”: race discourse and race evasiveness in the Norwegian university classroom
How do university students and instructors engage in discussions about race and racism in a country where speaking about race is perceived as racist? In Norway, as in much of Europe, the concept of “race” is silenced, discarded as a wrong-headed remnant of Nazism, despite continued documentation of racial discriminatio...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85101316234
“We hope you share your thoughts with us:” the illusion of engagement in museum blogging
The advent of museum blogs has contributed to making the process through which these institutions create, handle, and exchange knowledge more transparent. However, museums do not adequately capitalize on the two-way dialogic potential promised by social media but continue to employ blogs in more-or-less the same way th...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Natural Language Interfaces", "Semantic Text Processing", "Dialogue Systems & Conversational Agents" ]
[ 71, 11, 72, 38 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85049663893
“We know for a fact”: Dyslexia interventionists and the power of authoritative discourse
Although researchers have studied dyslexia for over a century, there is still much debate about how dyslexia differs from other reading difficulties and how to support students labeled dyslexic. Nevertheless, dyslexia policy and practice are steeped in authoritative discourse that speaks of a definitive definition, uni...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Programming Languages in NLP", "Semantic Text Processing", "Multimodality" ]
[ 71, 55, 72, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85131808461
“We owe this noble duty to our children”: A corpus-assisted critical discourse analysis of Ghanaian parliamentary discourses around children
Drawing on frame theory, corpus-linguistic methods and parliamentary Hansards data, the paper examines the discursive framing of children in Ghanaian parliamentary discourse. The analysis shows that children are framed within the context of child rights and protection, child labour, child marriage and child trafficking...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85123923154
“We will Reduce Taxes” Identifying Election Pledges with Language Models
In an election campaign, political parties pledge to implement various projects-should they be elected. But do they follow through? To track election pledges from parties' election manifestos, we need to distinguish between pledges and general statements. In this paper, we use election manifestos of Swedish and Indian ...
[ "Language Models", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 52, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85117963629
“We're Good at Tennis, Soccer… and Organ Donation”: The Spanish organ procurement organization as a producer of national identity discourses (2017–2020)
Spain is the global leader in organ donation and transplantation since 1992, an achievement that has become a source of national pride, in a country where national symbols are heavily contested. In this article I demonstrate that Spain's organ procurement organization is an active producer of national identity discours...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85099598542
“We're looking good”: Social exchange and regulation temporality in collaborative design
Collaborative tasks do not always promote equal learning. Varying levels of social interactions and regulation at the individual and group levels can influence knowledge construction efforts and learning success. To understand which collaboration patterns may be more conducive to learning, this study examined the relat...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85147683697
“We’re led by stupid people”: Exploring Trump’s use of denigrating and deprecating speech to promote hatred and violence
In response to a call for criminologists to consider the impact of former President Donald Trump’s presumed criminality, we analyze verbal-textual hostility (VTH) in Trump’s campaign speeches. Politicians have particular power and reach with their speech and their use of VTH is an important part of the trifecta of viol...
[ "Multimodality", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Linguistics & Cognitive NLP", "Linguistic Theories" ]
[ 74, 70, 48, 57 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85136247301
“We’ve Always Been Kind of Kicked to the Curb”: A Mixed-Methods Assessment of Discrimination Experiences among College Students
Background: Experiences of discrimination are prevalent among minority populations, although often empirical evidence does not provide depth into the source and types of discrimination, such as racial/ethnic, gender-based, age, etc. The goal of this study was to assess the unique patterns, types, and sources of discrim...
[ "Ethical NLP", "Responsible & Trustworthy NLP" ]
[ 17, 4 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85092895877
“We”: conceptual semantics, linguistic typology and social cognition
This paper explores “we-words” in the languages of the world, using the NSM method of semantic analysis. A simply phrased, cross-translatable explication for English ‘we’ [1pl] is proposed, suitable also for other languages with a single we-word. At the same time, it is argued that English ‘we’ co-lexicalises a second ...
[ "Typology", "Syntactic Text Processing", "Multilinguality" ]
[ 45, 15, 0 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85070436683
“What Do You Need a Course Like That for?” Conceptualizing Diverse Ruralities in Rural Teacher Education
This article examined preservice teachers discourse models of diversity in a rural context. We explored the perceptions of diversity among preservice teachers at a rural university as they were asked to problematize simplistic notions of rurality in a semester-long diversity course titled “Teaching Culturally Diverse L...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85067291345
“What does your agent look like?” A drawing study to understand users' perceived persona of conversational agent
Conversational agents (CAs) become more popular and useful at home. Creating the persona is an important part of designing the conversational user interface (CUI). Since the CUI is a voice-mediated interface, users naturally form an image of the CA's persona through the voice. Because that image affects users' interact...
[ "Visual Data in NLP", "Speech & Audio in NLP", "Natural Language Interfaces", "Dialogue Systems & Conversational Agents", "Multimodality" ]
[ 20, 70, 11, 38, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85118899937
“What have you done for me lately?” Re-thinking local representation
Scholars have studied the influence that constituents exert on elected representatives’ action in national parliaments at length. Still, academic pundits have usually confined local representation to distributive policies and casework, and limited local legislators’ focus to a territorial perspective. In this study, I ...
[ "Semantic Text Processing", "Representation Learning" ]
[ 72, 12 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85089958664
“What the fuck is this for a language, this cannot be Deutsch?” language ideologies, policies, and semiotic practices of a kitchen crew in a hotel restaurant
In line with the post-Fishmanian turn that contributes to new understandings of social-semiotic practices in different contexts this study is concerned with the language management of ‘backstage performers’ of a three-star hotel kitchen crew in an Austrian alpine village that economically thrives on tourism, where empl...
[ "Linguistics & Cognitive NLP", "Linguistic Theories" ]
[ 48, 57 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85066463394
“What would you recommend doctor?”—Discourse analysis of a moment of dissonance when sharing decisions in clinical consultations
Background: Proven benefits of Shared Decision Making (SDM) include improved patient knowledge, involvement and confidence in making decisions. Although widely advocated in policy, SDM is still not widely implemented in practice. A common patient-reported barrier is feeling that “doctor knows best”; thus, patients ofte...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84994607907
“Whatever Works”: The Marketplace Mission of Singapore’s City Harvest Church
Despite predictions that organized religion would decline with modernization and economic development, some forms of Christianity are thriving, particularly evangelically-oriented churches in the Southern hemisphere. However, their doctrine and strategies are not without controversy. Megachurches, Protestant churches w...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85014891730
“When 'bad' is 'good'”: Identifying personal communication and sentiment in drug-related tweets
Background: To harness the full potential of social media for epidemiological surveillance of drug abuse trends, the field needs a greater level of automation in processing and analyzing social media content. Objectives: The objective of the study is to describe the development of supervised machine-learning techniques...
[ "Information Extraction & Text Mining", "Information Retrieval", "Text Classification", "Sentiment Analysis" ]
[ 3, 24, 36, 78 ]
https://aclanthology.org//W19-1309/
“When Numbers Matter!”: Detecting Sarcasm in Numerical Portions of Text
Research in sarcasm detection spans almost a decade. However a particular form of sarcasm remains unexplored: sarcasm expressed through numbers, which we estimate, forms about 11% of the sarcastic tweets in our dataset. The sentence ‘Love waking up at 3 am’ is sarcastic because of the number. In this paper, we focus on...
[ "Text Classification", "Sentiment Analysis", "Stylistic Analysis", "Information Retrieval", "Information Extraction & Text Mining" ]
[ 36, 78, 67, 24, 3 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85137415075
“When asked what I do, I say: ‘I write’”: a systematic text analysis of Peter Drucker’s writings
Purpose: A lot has been discussed about Peter Drucker, and there exists significant written content admiring or criticizing his work as a management writer. This paper aims to offer a holistic analysis of Peter Drucker’s written contributions to better understand his views of society, government and organizations of al...
[ "Sentiment Analysis" ]
[ 78 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85125056003
“Where am I?” A Critical Discourse Analysis of Religious Representation in Indonesia
The Indonesian Ministry of Education has re-examined the Indonesian curriculum to address the present challenges, including how to promote tolerance in students who live in a multicultural country. Textbooks and characters presented in Indonesian elementary textbooks, Buku Siswa, are part of continuous revision. Howeve...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing", "Representation Learning" ]
[ 71, 72, 12 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85041924526
“Who’s the face?”: communication and white identity in a Texas business community
This article examines the relationship between whiteness and communication through analysing how white business community members acknowledge their own, usually invisible, white identity. Discourse analysis of interactions in a Texas organization shows how white members construct white identity as intersecting with Tex...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84920641475
“Why in This Bilingual Classroom … Hablamos Más Español?” Language Choice by Bilingual Science Students
This qualitative sociolinguistic research study examines Latino/a students’ use of language in a science classroom and laboratory. This study was conducted in a school in the southwestern United States that serves an economically depressed, predominantly Latino population. The object of study was a 5th-grade bilingual ...
[ "Responsible & Trustworthy NLP", "Ethical NLP", "Multilinguality" ]
[ 4, 17, 0 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85127404639
“Wikily” Supervised Neural Translation Tailored to Cross-Lingual Tasks
We present a simple but effective approach for leveraging Wikipedia for neural machine translation as well as cross-lingual tasks of image captioning and dependency parsing without using any direct supervision from external parallel data or supervised models in the target language. We show that first sentences and titl...
[ "Multilinguality", "Visual Data in NLP", "Machine Translation", "Captioning", "Syntactic Text Processing", "Syntactic Parsing", "Text Generation", "Cross-Lingual Transfer", "Multimodality" ]
[ 0, 20, 51, 39, 15, 28, 47, 19, 74 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85074252012
“Witch” and “Shaman”: Discourse Analysis of the Use of Indigenizing Terms in Italy
From the very birth of the term, Strega (“Witch”) has been used with a negative connotation to describe women with powers aimed at harming people. Strega has its etymological origin in the Latin Strix, the owl believed to feed on human blood. Pop culture, books and media alike, also portrayed the witch as an evil chara...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85090810364
“Women in men’s fields”: Gender discourses in secondary vocational schools
In secondary vocational technical education (VET) there is a strong gender segmentation between different fields of study linked to different status and salaries. In particular, women are a minority in trade schools in which the structures and cultures reinforce the masculine image of the professions. Based on 19 inter...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85132583849
“Would your level of disgust change?” Accounting for variant reactions to fatal violence against women on social media
The murders of Sarah Everard and Sabina Nessa, occurring in similar contexts in London over the course of 2021, prompted renewed public discourse around violence against women and the nature of stranger-perpetrated murder of women in British society. It also provided the opportunity to analyze our responses to such cri...
[ "Sentiment Analysis" ]
[ 78 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85075163531
“You ARE Immigrant…but Not Like Us”: A discourse analysis of immigrant students’ positioning of undocumented immigrants in a CLD classroom
As immigration becomes an ever-more divisive topic in the US, immigrants – particularly undocumented youth – experience unique pressures in classroom settings associated with their statuses. With approximately one million undocumented children in America, it is important for educators and researchers to understand how ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85098502034
“You Can’t Ignore a Number This Big”: Gender, Risk, and Responsibility in Online Advocacy for Women’s Brain Health
Alzheimer’s disease affects more women than men and has therefore been highlighted as a women’s issue. However, there is much debate regarding the nature of this gap, with some studies pointing to sex/gender differences in longevity to explain the disparity. Against this background of empirical uncertainty, we ask how ...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing", "Responsible & Trustworthy NLP" ]
[ 71, 72, 4 ]
SCOPUS_ID:84929510857
“You Get the Baby You Need”: Negotiating the Use of Assisted Reproductive Technology for Social Sex Selection in Online Discussion Forums
As a result of developments in assisted reproductive technology (ART), it is now possible to choose the sex of a baby. However, the procedures are currently not allowed for this purpose in Australia. This article explores how the positions for and against the use of ART for social sex selection are constructed by paren...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85099340479
“You Know, the World is Pretty Unfair”–Meaning Perspectives in Teaching Social Studies to Migrant Language Learners
This contribution explores how subject positions and perspectives are negotiated in the discursive practices of teaching social studies. The study involved a teacher and a group of second-language learners in Grade 6, the data being gathered by observations, voice recordings, and collection of teaching materials throug...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85107746901
“You Probably Won’t Notice Any Symptoms”: Blood Pressure in Pregnancy—Discourses of Contested Expertise in an Era of Self-Care and Responsibilization
Pregnancy is not a disease or illness, but requires clinical surveillance as life-threatening complications can develop. Preeclampsia, one such potentially serious complication, puts both mother and baby at risk. Self-monitoring blood pressure in the general population is well established, and its potential in pregnanc...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85028994505
“You Think That Says a Lot, but Really it Says Nothing”: An Argumentative and Linguistic Account of an Idiomatic Expression Functioning as a Presentational Device
This paper discusses idiomatic expressions like ‘that says it all’, ‘that says a lot’ etc. when used in presenting an argument. These expressions are instantiations of the grammatical pattern that says Q, in which Q is an indefinite quantifying expression. By making use of the pragma-dialectical theory of argumentation...
[ "Linguistics & Cognitive NLP", "Linguistic Theories" ]
[ 48, 57 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85104693157
“You are grounded!”: Latent name artifacts in pre-trained language models
Pre-trained language models (LMs) may perpetuate biases originating in their training corpus to downstream models. We focus on artifacts associated with the representation of given names (e.g., Donald), which, depending on the corpus, may be associated with specific entities, as indicated by next token prediction (e.g....
[ "Language Models", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 52, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85061915893
“You are your only limit”: Appropriations and valorizations of affect in university branding
This article considers the role of affect in university branding in a context of neoliberal higher education, by way of examining the semiotic landscape of the Singapore Management University concourse. Contemporary branding often involves stimulating stakeholder/audience investments of meaning and affect into the bran...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Emotion Analysis", "Semantic Text Processing", "Sentiment Analysis" ]
[ 71, 61, 72, 78 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85067343855
“You keep telling us different things, what do we believe?” Meta-communication and meta-representation in police interviews
Quotation and reflective interpretation of previous statements are common features in police interviews. Of particular importance is the uncovering of apparent contradictions between earlier and current responses in interviews of suspects. Conflicting statements can be used by officers as triggers to elicit new respons...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing", "Representation Learning" ]
[ 71, 72, 12 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85041127481
“Your writing, not my writing”: Discourse analysis of student talk about writing
Student voice is a difficult concept to capture in research. This study attempts to provide a vehicle for understanding student perceptions about writing and writing instruction through a case study supported by discourse analysis of student talk. The high school students in this study participated in interviews and fo...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85070317018
“You’re a Juksing”: Examining Cantonese–English Code-Switching as an Index of Identity
Code-switching, the spontaneous switching from one language to another, shows unique structural and functional patterns in different bilingual communities. Though historically viewed as negative, it has been documented as an acceptable way of speaking in certain contexts, namely multilingual communities. We investigate...
[ "Code-Switching", "Multilinguality" ]
[ 7, 0 ]
SCOPUS_ID:85150489585
“You’re trying to put yourself in boxes, which doesn’t work”: Exploring non-binary youth’s gender identity development using feminist relational discourse analysis
There are growing numbers of non-binary youth in the U.K. with increasing representation, whilst simultaneously forms of gender diversity are being heavily regulated. Non-binary youth face unique challenges regarding their gender development due to age-based expectations for single and stable identities, and the gender...
[ "Discourse & Pragmatics", "Semantic Text Processing" ]
[ 71, 72 ]
https://aclanthology.org//2022.woah-1.5/
“Zo Grof !”: A Comprehensive Corpus for Offensive and Abusive Language in Dutch
This paper presents a comprehensive corpus for the study of socially unacceptable language in Dutch. The corpus extends and revise an existing resource with more data and introduces a new annotation dimension for offensive language, making it a unique resource in the Dutch language panorama. Each language phenomenon (a...
[ "Text Classification", "Ethical NLP", "Responsible & Trustworthy NLP", "Information Retrieval", "Information Extraction & Text Mining" ]
[ 36, 17, 4, 24, 3 ]