The contents of this repo were compiled in support of the presentation at the Symposium on Data Science and Statistics. All materials are released under a Creative Commons attribution license (CC-BY), which allows all uses, including commercial. If you have any question, please feel free to contact me: information on how to do that is at the end of these notes.
Below are references and links to various studies and materials discussed.
Laudun, John. 2019. The Clown Legend Cascade of 2016. In Folklore and Social Media. Ed. Trevor Blank. SUNY Press.
Laudun, John. 2016. The Amazing Crawfish Boat: How a Handful of Cajun and German Farmers and Fabricators Revolutionized a Landscape. University Press of Mississippi.
Okay, self-citation aside, here are links for narrative as a particular kind of discourse and neural coupling, starting with the complete video featuring Stefan Sagmeister.
Sagmeister, Stefan. 2014. You are not a storyteller. FITC. Vimeo.
Herman, David. 2009. Basic Elements of Narrative. Wiley-Blackwell.
Liu, Y, EA Piazza, E Simony, PA Shewokis, B Onaral, U Hasson, and H Ayaz. 2017. Measuring Speaker-Listener Neural Coupling With Functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy. Sci Rep 7 43293.
Silbert, LJ, CJ Honey, E Simony, D Poeppel, and U Hasson. 2014. Coupled Neural Systems Underlie the Production and Comprehension of Naturalistic Narrative Speech. Proc Natl Acad Sci 111(43): E4687–96.
Stephens, GJ, LJ Silbert, and U Hasson. 2010. Speaker-Listener Neural Coupling Underlies Successful Communication. Proc Natl Acad Sci 107(32): 14425–30.
And, yes, if you want to know more about the treasure legend I discussed, you can find it here:
Laudun, John. 2018. Tallying Treasure Tales: A Reconsideration of the Structure and Nature of Local Legends. Contemporary Legend 3(7): 1-27.
Short, M. (2007). Thought Presentation Twenty-five Years On. Style, 41(2), 227-243. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5325/style.41.2.227
Stubbs, M. (2005). Conrad in the computer: examples of quantitative stylistic methods. Language and Literature, 14(1), 5–24. https://doi.org/10.1177/0963947005048873
Toolan, Michael. 2008. Narrative Progression in the Short Story: First Steps in a Corpus Stylistic Approach. Narrative 16(2): 105–20.
John Laudun
Department of English
University of Louisiana at Lafayette
Lafayette, LA 70504-4691
[email protected]
http://johnlaudun.org/
http://github.com/johnlaudun
@johnlaudun
"Are We Not Doing Phrasing Anymore?": Embedding Data Science in the Humanities by John Laudun is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Based on a work at https://github.com/johnlaudun/SDSS2019. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://johnlaudun.org/about/.