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7 Research products, page 1 of 1

  • Canada
  • Other research products
  • 2012-2021
  • Open Access
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  • Other research product . Lecture . 2012
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Cartwright, Nancy;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada
  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Di Valentino, Lisa;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada

    Due to significant changes in the Canadian copyright system, universities are seeking new ways to address the use of copyrighted works within their institutions. While the law provides quite a bit of leeway for use of copyrighted materials for educational and research purposes, the response by Canadian universities and related associations has not been to fully embrace their legal rights – rather, they have taken an approach that places emphasis on risk avoidance rather than maximizing use of materials, unlike their American counterparts. In the U.S., where educational fair use is arguably less flexible in application than fair dealing, there is a higher level of copyright advocacy among professional associations, and several sets of best practices have been created to guide the application of copyright to educational use of materials. Canada is lagging behind the U.S. in this respect, placing Canadian universities at a relative disadvantage. The goal of this study is to lay the foundation for the development of policies and guidelines in the use of copyrighted works, and the provision of copyright literacy education in universities. The research will be undertaken from a critical perspective, with the goal of promoting fair dealing and other exceptions as user rights within the institution, and a reduction in risk aversion. The methodology employed is both qualitative and quantitative and includes legal analysis, content analysis of policies and guidelines, and collection of survey data.

  • Other research product . Lecture . 2012
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Cartwright, Nancy;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada
  • Other research product . Lecture . Other ORP type . 2017
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Pascal Martinolli;
    Country: Canada

    Cette présentation a servi de support à un atelier sur l'évaluation des sources secondaires et tertiaires dans un cours de méthodologie de premier cycle en archéologie. Les sources sont évaluées seulement selon l'angle de l'autorité (type de document, révision par les pairs, bibliométrie, auteur, éditeur, rétraction,...). Un billet expliquant les objectifs et le fonctionnement de cet atelier a été posté sur le blogue Tribune Compétences informationnelles. https://tribuneci.wordpress.com/2018/05/30/collaborer-avec-le-professeur-pour-levaluation-des-sources-les-criteres-dautorite ANT2260 : Méthodes et concepts en archéologie

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Berryman, Sylvia;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada
  • Other research product . Lecture . 2012
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Quené, H.; Schuerman, W.L.;
    Country: Netherlands

    Smiling during talking yields speech with higher formants, and hence larger formant dispersion. Previous studies have shown that motor resonance during perception of words related to smiling can activate muscles responsible for the smiling action. If word perception causes smiling activation for such smile-related words, then this motor resonance may occur also during production, resulting in larger formant dispersion in these smile-related words. This paper reports on formant measurements from tokens of the Corpus of Spoken Dutch. Formant values of smile-related word tokens were compared to semantically different but phonetically similar word tokens. Results suggest that formant dispersion is indeed larger in smile-related words than in control words, although the predicted difference was observed only for female speakers. These findings suggest that motor resonance originating from a word's meaning may affect the articulatory and acoustic realization of affective spoken words. Female speakers tend to produce the word "smile" with a smile.

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Stahl, Matt;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada
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Include:
The following results are related to Canada. Are you interested to view more results? Visit OpenAIRE - Explore.
7 Research products, page 1 of 1
  • Other research product . Lecture . 2012
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Cartwright, Nancy;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada
  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Di Valentino, Lisa;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada

    Due to significant changes in the Canadian copyright system, universities are seeking new ways to address the use of copyrighted works within their institutions. While the law provides quite a bit of leeway for use of copyrighted materials for educational and research purposes, the response by Canadian universities and related associations has not been to fully embrace their legal rights – rather, they have taken an approach that places emphasis on risk avoidance rather than maximizing use of materials, unlike their American counterparts. In the U.S., where educational fair use is arguably less flexible in application than fair dealing, there is a higher level of copyright advocacy among professional associations, and several sets of best practices have been created to guide the application of copyright to educational use of materials. Canada is lagging behind the U.S. in this respect, placing Canadian universities at a relative disadvantage. The goal of this study is to lay the foundation for the development of policies and guidelines in the use of copyrighted works, and the provision of copyright literacy education in universities. The research will be undertaken from a critical perspective, with the goal of promoting fair dealing and other exceptions as user rights within the institution, and a reduction in risk aversion. The methodology employed is both qualitative and quantitative and includes legal analysis, content analysis of policies and guidelines, and collection of survey data.

  • Other research product . Lecture . 2012
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Cartwright, Nancy;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada
  • Other research product . Lecture . Other ORP type . 2017
    Open Access
    Authors: 
    Pascal Martinolli;
    Country: Canada

    Cette présentation a servi de support à un atelier sur l'évaluation des sources secondaires et tertiaires dans un cours de méthodologie de premier cycle en archéologie. Les sources sont évaluées seulement selon l'angle de l'autorité (type de document, révision par les pairs, bibliométrie, auteur, éditeur, rétraction,...). Un billet expliquant les objectifs et le fonctionnement de cet atelier a été posté sur le blogue Tribune Compétences informationnelles. https://tribuneci.wordpress.com/2018/05/30/collaborer-avec-le-professeur-pour-levaluation-des-sources-les-criteres-dautorite ANT2260 : Méthodes et concepts en archéologie

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Berryman, Sylvia;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada
  • Other research product . Lecture . 2012
    Open Access English
    Authors: 
    Quené, H.; Schuerman, W.L.;
    Country: Netherlands

    Smiling during talking yields speech with higher formants, and hence larger formant dispersion. Previous studies have shown that motor resonance during perception of words related to smiling can activate muscles responsible for the smiling action. If word perception causes smiling activation for such smile-related words, then this motor resonance may occur also during production, resulting in larger formant dispersion in these smile-related words. This paper reports on formant measurements from tokens of the Corpus of Spoken Dutch. Formant values of smile-related word tokens were compared to semantically different but phonetically similar word tokens. Results suggest that formant dispersion is indeed larger in smile-related words than in control words, although the predicted difference was observed only for female speakers. These findings suggest that motor resonance originating from a word's meaning may affect the articulatory and acoustic realization of affective spoken words. Female speakers tend to produce the word "smile" with a smile.

  • Open Access
    Authors: 
    Stahl, Matt;
    Publisher: Scholarship@Western
    Country: Canada