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Data for: modeling of local scour around circular structures using the open source CFD toolbox REEF3D
This data set contains the key output files for the results shown in the related publication. Specifically, the dataset should allow the reproduction of the REEF3D::CFD simulations. Certain result deviations may occur due to different software versions
Normvariasjon i norsk 2003, 2013, 2023
Datasettet inneholder forekomster av forskjellige språklige trekk hvor det er variasjon i normen i bokmål (10 trekk) og nynorsk (13 trekk). Dataene kommer fra Nasjonalbibliotekets samling og vi har søkt i alle utgitte aviser, bøker og tidsskrifter fra årene 2003, 2013 og 2023. Rapporten til Språkrådet (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17406402) redegjør for metoden i mer detalj og gir tabeller og figurer som viser hovedtrendene i datasettet
Raw data files from the project
DATASET MIGRATED FROM FIGSHARE: Raw data recorded with the ZED 2 stereo camera, divided into two folders for training (Good) and validation (Validate), with different castings used in each folder.An NVIDIA GPU is required to extract the image frames using the ZED SDK.</p
Tutorial data for the DMCpy software
This dataset contains .hdf files, which are raw data from the DMC instrument (https://www.psi.ch/en/sinq/dmc) at the SINQ, Paul Scherrer Institute, Switzerland. The instrument is a constant-wavelength powder and single-crystal neutron diffractometer optimized to study magnetism in condensed matter systems using cold neutrons. The data files are for the tutorials for the DMCpy instrument, which can be found at https://dmcpy.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.htm
Supporting Data for: Enhancing code-switching research through comparable corpora: Introducing the El Paso Bilingual Corpus
Dataset description:
This dataset contains two data files that the related publication is based on. In particular, the data file Dataset_Diminutives contains in total 1886 diminutive constructions extracted from the Bangor Miami Corpus and the El Paso Bilingual Corpus. These constructions are coded for intralinguistic variables relating to the linguistic properties of both the base and the diminutive marker. The data file Metadata_Conversations_El_Paso_Bilingual_Corpus contains metadata about the conversations in the El Paso Bilingual Corpus.Article Abstract:
Research on language contact outcomes, such as code-switching, continues to face theoretical and methodological challenges, particularly due to the difficulty of comparing findings across studies that use divergent data collection methods (Parafita Couto et al., 2021; Toribio, 2017). Accordingly, scholars have emphasized the need for publicly available and comparable bilingual corpora (Deuchar, 2020; Gullberg et al., 2009; Munarriz & Parafita Couto, 2014). This paper introduces the El Paso Bilingual Corpus, a new Spanish-English bilingual corpus recorded in El Paso (TX) in 2022, designed to be methodologically comparable to the Bangor Miami Corpus (Deuchar et al., 2014). The paper is structured in three main sections. First, we review existing Spanish-English corpora and examine the theoretical challenges posed by studies using non-comparable methodologies (Parafita Couto et al., 2021; Toribio, 2017), thereby underscoring the gap addressed by the El Paso Bilingual Corpus. Second, we outline the corpus creation process, discussing participant recruitment, data collection, and transcription, and provide an overview of these data, including participants’ sociolinguistic profiles. Third, to demonstrate the practical value of methodologically aligned corpora, we report a comparative case study on diminutive expressions in the El Paso and Bangor Miami corpora, illustrating how shared collection protocols can elucidate the role of community-specific social factors on bilinguals’ morphosyntactic choices.</p
Replication Data for: Dispersal and gene flow among potential spawners: source-sink structure among populations of anadromous brown trout exposed to multi-faceted anthropogenic impacts.
Dispersal has consequences for individual fitness but can also influence local dynamics, stability, and adaptation in interconnected populations. Anadromous salmonid fishes are famed for their precise homing and adaptations to local aquatic environments, whilst navigating between multiple connected habitats. However, recent studies have instead demonstrated considerable straying among connected systems, forming metapopulation dynamics among sub-populations or demes. Salmonids constitute valuable economic and ecological resources, yet many populations are declining due to multifaceted anthropogenic-induced disturbances. This context of reduced populations inhabiting altered environments may impact both population viability and dispersal.
To explore if metapopulation processes are present among impacted neighbouring populations of anadromous brown trout (Salmo trutta), a four-year study of individual dispersal behaviour (biotelemetry, N = 84) and genetic analysis (N = 142) was conducted in four populations, connected by an extensive (> 200 km), semi-enclosed fjord system, Sognefjorden, Norway. To estimate the demographic status of each study population life-table matrices were built, from which a potential source-sink structure among demes could be identified
Supporting Data for: Non-target and suspect screening of volatile organic compounds from Scots pine and Norway spruce building materials
This study aimed to identify unknown and undocumented volatile organic compounds (VOC) in the emission profile of common wood building materials for indoor use. 4 samples of cross-laminated timber, 12 samples of untreated spruce panel and 4 samples of untreated pine panel were subjected to chamber emission tests following the method description in European standard NS-EN 16516:2017+A1:2021. Triplicate air samples of 2 L (for quantification with minimum breakthrough) and air samples of 10 L (for comprehensive non-target and suspect screening) were collected from the chamber air after 3 days and analyzed using thermal desorption coupled with comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography with time-of-flight mass spectrometry detection. The supporting data in this dataset contains raw data, scripts used in the screening, resulting non-target and suspect lists, (semi-)quantified VOC emission concentrations and quality assurance of analytical method
Background Data for Use-wear and Residue Analyses of Ground Slate Tools
Results from use-wear and residue analyses of 194 Stone Age slate tools from northern Norway. The file slate_tools_2018-19 covers all of the 194 tools, while the file slate_tools_2019 provides details of the tools analysed that year. The data provide information on the observations made on each toll. They include interpretations of gestures used (e.g. cutting, slicing, scraping) with the tools, as well as the material they were used on (e.g.marine mammals, ungulates, small fur animals and fish, fresh or dry meat, fresh or dry hide)
Replication Data for: Covering Blue Voices: African American English and Authenticity in Blues Covers
Repository Description
This repository contains data for a quantitative analysis of blues lyrics performed by artists across time and socio-cultural groups. This analysis is a part of my PhD project on the use of African American English features as indexical expressions of authenticity in blues music. The particular study for which data is shared here examines the use of African American English (AAE) features in blues music, for which a corpus of 270 studio-performed blues songs was compiled from YouTube, consisting of six songs each by 45 artists. These artists were evenly distributed across three social groups (African American; non-African American, US-based; and non-African American, non-US-based) and three time periods (the 1960s, 1980s, and 2010s). Each artist contributed three original songs and three covers (i.e., previously recorded by other performers). Songs were selected to fit broad blues criteria, including structural, melodic, and lyrical patterns, encompassing traditional blues and contemporary blues-rock. All 270 songs were imported into MAXQDA for transcription and annotation of five phonological and three lexico-grammatical AAE features, selected based on established sociolinguistic literature. Each token where a feature could potentially occur was coded in binary fashion (realized or not), with uncertain cases left uncoded. The annotated data were exported from MAXQDA into a structured tabular format for statistical and machine learning analysis in Python. Only the raw, intermediate and processed datasets are included in this repository. The Python code used to (pre)process and analyze the data are hosted on this GitHub repository.
Article Abstract
Many musicologists and researchers of popular music have recently stressed the omnipresence of covers in today’s music industry. In the sociolinguistics of music, however, studio-recorded covers and their potential differences from ‘original’ compositions have certainly been acknowledged in passing, but very few sociolinguists concerned with the study of song seem to have systematically explored how language use may differ in such re-imagined musical outputs. This article reports on a study which examines the language use of 45 blues artists from three distinct time periods (viz., 1960s, 1980s, and 2010s) and three specific social groups (viz., African American; non-African American, US-based; and non-African American, non-US based) distributed over 270 studio-recorded original and cover performances. Through gradient boosting decision tree classification, it aims to analyze the artists’ use of eight phonological and lexico-grammatical features that are traditionally associated with African American English (viz., /aɪ/ monophthongization, post-consonantal word-final /t/ deletion, post-consonantal word-final /d/ deletion, alveolar nasal /n/ in ultimas, post-vocalic word-final /r/ deletion, copula deletion, third-person singular <s> deletion, and not-contraction). Our analysis finds song type (i.e., the distinction between covers and originals) to have no meaningful impact on artists’ use of the examined features of African American English. Instead, our analysis reveals how performers seem to rely on these features to a great extent and do so markedly consistently, regardless of factors such as time period, socio-cultural background, or song type. This paper hence builds on our previous work on the language use of blues performers by further teasing out the complex indexical and iconic relationships between features of African American English, authenticity, and the blues genre in its various manifestations of time, place, and performance types
Supplementary Methods for: "Ethanol Ablation of Metastatic Lymph Nodes in Patients with Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma - Predictors of Clinical Outcome"
This file contains the method description for the BRAF-immunohistological staining (IHC) technique, the histopathological assessment procedures, and the biochemical analysis methods in the article “Ethanol Ablation of Metastatic Lymph Nodes in Patients with Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma - Predictors of Clinical Outcome”. The methods described were used to collect and analyze the data underlying the study. The file also includes relevant references to prior work supporting the chosen methodology