Lauren Gawne
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Lauren Gawnecommunications Degrees
Communications
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#7225
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Linguistics
#1146
World Rank
#1453
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Communications
Lauren Gawne's Degrees
- PhD Linguistics University of Melbourne
- Masters Linguistics University of Melbourne
- Bachelors Linguistics University of Melbourne
Why Is Lauren Gawne Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Lauren Gawne is a linguistics researcher and academic communicator, most known for her work on gestural languages and in the linguistics of emoji. Early life and education Lauren Gawne was educated at the University of Melbourne, studying a BA in linguistics and art history and subsequently a linguistics PhD under the supervision of Barbara Kelly and Rachel Nordlinger which she received in 2013.
Lauren Gawne's Published Works
Published Works
- Reproducible research in linguistics: A position statement on data citation and attribution in our field (2017) (78)
- Getting the story straight: Language fieldwork using a narrative problem-solving task (2012) (77)
- Sociolinguistic Fieldwork (2013) (73)
- When Does Maluma/Takete Fail? Two Key Failures and a Meta-Analysis Suggest That Phonology and Phonotactics Matter (2017) (71)
- Emoji as digital gestures (2019) (43)
- Collecting Bilingual Audio in Remote Indigenous Communities (2014) (30)
- Lamjung Yolmo copulas in use: evidentiality, reported speech and questions (2013) (22)
- I can haz language play: The construction of language and identity in LOLspeak (2012) (21)
- Putting practice into words: The state of data and methods transparency in grammatical descriptions (2017) (19)
- Showing the story : Enactment as performance in Auslan narratives (2014) (19)
- Evidential Systems of Tibetan Languages (2017) (19)
- Emoji Grammar as Beat Gestures (2018) (18)
- The contribution of Tibetan languages to the study of evidentiality (2017) (16)
- 4 A typological sketch of evidential/epistemic categories in the Tibetic languages (2017) (14)
- International relations and the Himalaya: connecting ecologies, cultures and geopolitics (2020) (13)
- The reported speech evidential particle in Lamjung Yolmo (2015) (9)
- EVIDENTIALITY IN LAMJUNG YOLMO (2014) (9)
- A sketch grammar of Lamjung Yolmo (2016) (9)
- Language documentation and division: Bridging the digital divide (2015) (7)
- Questions and answers in Lamjung Yolmo (2016) (7)
- Contexts of use of a rotated palms gesture among Syuba (Kagate) speakers in Nepal (2018) (7)
- Lamjung Yolmo: a dialect of Yolmo, also known as Helambu Sherpa (2010) (6)
- 9 Evidentiality in Purik Tibetan (2017) (5)
- 11 An overview of some epistemic categories in Dzongkha (2017) (5)
- 8 Inference and deferred evidence in Tibetan (2017) (5)
- Putting practice into words: Fieldwork methodology in grammatical descriptions (2015) (4)
- Vowels in Wunambal, a Language of the North West Kimberley Region* (2015) (4)
- Gesture categorisation and understanding speaker attention to gesture (2010) (4)
- Lamjung Yolmo - Nepali - English Dictionary (2014) (4)
- Reflections on reproducible research (2018) (4)
- Data citation in linguistics publications (2019) (4)
- Reported speech in earthquake narratives from six Tibeto-Burman languages (2020) (3)
- 13 The evidential system of Zhollam Tibetan (2017) (3)
- Tone and intonation: A case study in two Tibetic languages (2015) (3)
- Collecting bilingual audio in remote indigenous villages (2014) (3)
- Revisiting Significant Action and Gesture Categorization (2014) (3)
- Mapmaking for Language Documentation and Description (2016) (3)
- Report on the relationship between Yolmo and Kagate (2014) (3)
- 3 Egophoric evidentiality in Bodish languages (2017) (2)
- Making the ESL classroom visible: Indigenous Australian children’s early education (2016) (2)
- The past and future of hand emoji (2021) (2)
- A survey of current reproducibility practices in linguistics publications (2017) (2)
- 14 Evidentials in Pingwu Baima (2017) (2)
- Reported speech in Lamjung Yolmo (2011) (2)
- Selected papers from the 44th conference of the Australian Linguistic Society, 2013. (2014) (2)
- Cross-sensory perception for tone (2017) (2)
- Looks like a duck, quacks like a hand: Tools for eliciting evidential and epistemic distinctions, with examples from Lamjung Yolmo (Tibetic, Nepal) (2020) (2)
- A Guide to the Syuba (Kagate) Language Documentation Corpus (2018) (2)
- Similar languages, different dictionaries: A discussion of the Lamjung Yolmo and Kagate dictionary projects (2013) (2)
- 6 On the origin of the Lhasa Tibetan evidentials song and byung (2017) (1)
- “The bus doesn’t stop for us”: Multilingualism, attitudes and identity in songs of a Tibetic community of Nepal (2020) (1)
- I can haz speech play: The construction of language and identity in LOLspeak (2011) (1)
- Data transparency and citation in the journal Gesture (2020) (1)
- My name is Maya Lama/Syuba/Hyolmo: Negotiating identity in Hyolmo diaspora communities (2016) (1)
- ‘Away’ gestures associated with negative expressions in narrative discourse in Syuba (Kagate, Nepal) speakers (2021) (1)
- Data citation and metadata standards in linguistics (2018) (1)
- A likelihood ratio-based forensic text comparison in predatory chatlog messages (2014) (1)
- Talking about community (2013) (1)
- Data Citation in Linguistic Typology: Working Towards a Data Citation Standard in Linguistics (2017) (1)
- Bilingual education in Australian Aboriginal communities: The forty years of the Yirrkala step model (2015) (1)
- Data Transparency and Citation in Gesture (2018) (1)
- A grammatical overview of Yolmo (Tibeto-Burman) (2019) (0)
- Lauren Gawne DECRA application DE19 (2018) (0)
- Relative clauses in Australian English: A cross-varietal diachronic study (2014) (0)
- Syuba 'away' gesture tokens (2018) (0)
- A case study of tone and intonation in two Tibetic language varieties (2015) (0)
- Green OA Author Postprints (2020) (0)
- “My name is Maya Lama/Hyolmo/Syuba”: Negotiating identity in Hyolmo diaspora communities (2016) (0)
- Data Transparency and Citation in the Journal Gesture (preprint) (2020) (0)
- Data Citation in Linguistics: Looking forward to new standards (2018) (0)
- 2 Evidentiality of the Tibetan verb snang (2017) (0)
- Jawsome ! – linguistic evidence for dual route models of language (2014) (0)
- Reported Evidentiality in Tibeto-Burman Languages (2021) (0)
- LG1-09091401-A.trs (2009) (0)
- SUY1-160507-02b.mxf (2016) (0)
- 04 - Data citation: State of the art in linguistics (2015) (0)
- 12 Observations on factors affecting the distributional properties of evidential markers in Amdo Tibetan (2017) (0)
- Native speaker perceptions of gesture (2007) (0)
- Gesture Categorisation and Understanding Speaker Gesture Categorisation and Understanding Speaker Gesture Categorisation and Understanding Speaker Gesture Categorisation and Understanding Speaker Attention to Gesture Attention to Gesture Attention to Gesture Attention to Gesture (2010) (0)
- Writing data citation guidelines for linguistics: Lessons learned (2019) (0)
- REVISTING TONES IN MELAMCHI YOLMO (2019) (0)
- Review: Integrating gestures: The interdisciplinary nature of gesture (2012) (0)
- 7 Lhasa Tibetan predicates (2017) (0)
- Australian Indigenous children’s early education in remote communities: how visible is ESL? (2016) (0)
- Loanwords between the Arandic languages and their western neighbours: principles of identification and phonological adaptation DSpace/Manakin Repository Item Loanwords between the Arandic languages and their western neighbours: principles of identification and phonological (2014) (0)
- The ‘general fact’ copula in Yolmo and the influence of Tamang (2022) (0)
- What we know people know about gesture (2011) (0)
- LG1-PICS-9023.JPG (2016) (0)
- Ten years of Linguistics in the Pub (2021) (0)
- Linguistics Data Interest Group (LDIG) (2017) (0)
- Prevalence rates for phonemes in world languages (2017) (0)
- Language Fieldwork Using a Narrative Problem-Solving Task (2012) (0)
- 2 Evidentiality in Lamjung Yolmo (2014) (0)
- Meta-Analysis of past bouba/kiki effects for canonical stimuli (2017) (0)
- Syuba ’ : Negotiating identity in Hyolmo diaspora communities (2016) (0)
- Raised Little Finger Emoji Proposal for Unicode 14.0 (2019) (0)
- Report on the 7th international conference of the North East Indian Linguistics Society Don Bosco institute, Guwahati, India 31 January - 4 February, 2012 (2012) (0)
- On restrictions on the use of non-restrictive infinitival relative clauses in English (2014) (0)
- Linguistics education and its application in the workplace: An analysis of interviews with linguistics graduates (2023) (0)
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What Schools Are Affiliated With Lauren Gawne?
Lauren Gawne is affiliated with the following schools: