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Data includes demographic variables, as well as an imbedded experiment to see whether Trump can influence Canadians’ support for immigrants and if priming Canadian national identity using normative associations about immigration and multiculturalism reinforces or weakens support for immigrants. Data also includes variables to see if Canadians view Trump as trendsetter, and their current attitudes on desired levels of immigration. Full codebook is located in the appendix of Nuss (2020) "Is Donald Trump a Trendsetter for Canadians? The Effect of Trump and National Identity on Support for Immigration." Source of data was Anglophone Canadians from market research panels and content type is survey data. Software used was STATA.
Author: Nuss, Steven, Author: Pickup, Mark
Date created: 2019-11-12
The data for this project is a subset of comments from the SFU Opinion and Comments Corpus (SOCC). This subset, the Constructive Comments Corpus (C3) consists of 12, 000 comments annotated by crowdworkers for constructiveness and its characteristics. Citation: Kolhatkar, V., N. Thain, J. Sorensen, L. Dixon and M. Taboada (2020) C3: The Constructive Comments Corpus. Jigsaw and Simon Fraser University. [Data] License: Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)
For more information about this work, please see: Kolhatkar, V., N. Thain, J. Sorensen, L. Dixon and M. Taboada (to appear) Classifying Constructive Comments. Journal article under review. http://www.sfu.ca/discourse-lab/.
Other related materials: Kolhatkar, V., H. Wu, L. Cavasso, E. Francis, K. Shukla and M. Taboada The SFU Opinion and Comments Corpus: A corpus for the analysis of online news comments. Corpus Pragmatics. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41701-019-00065-w
To access this data, please contact mtaboada@sfu.ca.
For more information about this work, please see: Kolhatkar, V., N. Thain, J. Sorensen, L. Dixon and M. Taboada (to appear) Classifying Constructive Comments. Journal article under review. http://www.sfu.ca/discourse-lab/.
Other related materials: Kolhatkar, V., H. Wu, L. Cavasso, E. Francis, K. Shukla and M. Taboada The SFU Opinion and Comments Corpus: A corpus for the analysis of online news comments. Corpus Pragmatics. https://doi.org/10.1007/s41701-019-00065-w
To access this data, please contact mtaboada@sfu.ca.
Author: Kolhatkar, Varada, Author: Thain, Nithum, Author: Sorensen, Jeffrey, Author: Dixon, Lucas, Author: Taboada, Maite
Date created: 2020-04-01
The SFU Opinion and Comments Corpus (SOCC) is a corpus for the analysis of online news comments. Our corpus contains comments and the articles from which the comments originated. The articles are all opinion articles, not hard news articles. The corpus is larger than any other currently available comments corpora, and has been collected with attention to preserving reply structures and other metadata. In addition to the raw corpus, we also present annotations for four different phenomena: constructiveness, toxicity, negation and its scope, and appraisal. The data is divided into two main parts: raw data and annotated data. The raw data contains three CSVs: gnm_artcles.csv, gnm_comments.csv, and gnm_comment_threads.csv. The annotated data contains annotations for constructiveness, negation, and appraisal. The details of our different corpora and how to use them are on the following GitHub page. https://github.com/sfu-discourse-lab/SOCC/blob/master/README.md. To access this data, please contact mtaboada@sfu.ca.
Author: Kolhatkar, Varada, Author: Wu, Hanhan, Author: Cavasso, Luca, Author: Francis, Emilie, Author: Shukla, Kavan, Author: Taboada, Maite, Author: Saleem, Mehvish
Date created: 2018-01-18
Excel file of sex, autism spectrum traits, schizotypy, and spirituality measures. Content type is questionnaire data.
Author: Crespi, Bernard, Author: Dinsdale, Natalie, Author: Read, Silven, Author: Hurd, Peter
Date created:
The purpose of this archive is to allow the field data that I and my students collected in Southeast Asia to be made available to future researchers. From 1994 until 2001, I and two graduate students conducted ethnoarchaeological field research among a number of traditional tribal groups in Southeast Asia. Our goal was to investigate traditional feasting in these societies and to relate feasting behavior to practical benefits that hosts expected to derive from holding expensive feasts. Results of this research have been published in a number of journal articles, book chapters, and theses. However, there is additional detail in the field notes that I would like to make available to future researchers since this represents unique research in the world and socioeconomic conditions in Southeast Asian traditional societies are rapidly changing due to world economic, political, and religious impacts. The field notes are hand written. This data base is augmented by extensive photographic documentation which is available at the SFU Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.
The specific areas involved in this research were located in Northwest Thailand in the Provinces of Chiang Rai (near the Burmese border) and Chiang Mai. The major villages where work was undertaken were the Akha villages of Mae Salep and Sam Song in Chiang Rai. In addition, exploratory work was carried out in Laos and Vietnam, especially among the Ta Oi and Rhadé ethnic groups in the Central Highlands. More intensive research was carried out in the Torajan Highlands in Sulawesi, especially at the Torajan village of Kanan. Further intensive work was carried out in West Sumba in Indonesia.
The field data collected by myself and my students constitutes a unique body of data which may have great utility for future researchers. This research project focused on traditional tribal villages in Southeast Asia. To begin with, the ethnographic studies of such groups in this region are relatively limited. In addition, there are very few studies of traditional feasting and none that try to understand the practical benefits of hosting feasts. Finally, this study conducted a systematic survey of households within each study village to obtain information on each family's participation in feasting and to record their observable material items. To access this data, please contact data-services@sfu.ca.
The specific areas involved in this research were located in Northwest Thailand in the Provinces of Chiang Rai (near the Burmese border) and Chiang Mai. The major villages where work was undertaken were the Akha villages of Mae Salep and Sam Song in Chiang Rai. In addition, exploratory work was carried out in Laos and Vietnam, especially among the Ta Oi and Rhadé ethnic groups in the Central Highlands. More intensive research was carried out in the Torajan Highlands in Sulawesi, especially at the Torajan village of Kanan. Further intensive work was carried out in West Sumba in Indonesia.
The field data collected by myself and my students constitutes a unique body of data which may have great utility for future researchers. This research project focused on traditional tribal villages in Southeast Asia. To begin with, the ethnographic studies of such groups in this region are relatively limited. In addition, there are very few studies of traditional feasting and none that try to understand the practical benefits of hosting feasts. Finally, this study conducted a systematic survey of households within each study village to obtain information on each family's participation in feasting and to record their observable material items. To access this data, please contact data-services@sfu.ca.
Author: Hayden, Brian, Author: Adams, Ron, Author: Clarke, Mike
Date created: 2019-11-13
Site reports analyzed in thesis titled "Microfauna at Tse'K'wa: Paleoenvironmental Reconstruction in the Peace River Region, Northeast British Columbia" by R. Pendleton 2017. Includes 1974-2014 data. Source of data is PAARL and content type is site reports. Software used was Excel.
Author: Pendleton, Roxanne Alisha, Author: Preston, Randall
Date created: 2017-12-05
The data used for Roxanne Pendleton's 2017 Master's thesis. Includes small mammals and birds from the lower levels of the Tse'K'wa archaeological site. Software used was Excel.
Author: Pendleton, Roxanne Alisha, Author: Driver, Jonathan, Author: Preston, Randall
Date created: 2017-12-22
This zip file contains one (1) Excel (xlsx) file and one vpmx file.
Author: Solís, Rodrigo
Date created: 2022-05-12
Excel file containing the statistical analyses and calculations pertinent to some results demonstrated in the thesis.
Author: Ben Zeglam, Hamza
Date created: 2021-12-16
Excel file containing the statistical analyses and calculations pertinent to some results demonstrated in the thesis.
Author: Ben Zeglam, Hamza
Date created: 2021-12-16
Excel file containing the statistical analyses and calculations pertinent to some results demonstrated in the thesis.
Author: Ben Zeglam, Hamza
Date created: 2021-12-16
An Excel spreadsheet listing all artifacts recovered through the vacuum truck excavation. This is a supplemental data file to the thesis "Vacuum truck excavation as a new and effective technique in urban archaeology; an in-depth assessment and comparison against traditional methodology".
Author: Settle, Kathleen
Date created: 2019