@article{kendall_wolfram_2009, title={Local and External Language Standards in African American English}, volume={37}, ISSN={["1552-5457"]}, DOI={10.1177/0075424209339281}, abstractNote={This investigation attempts to determine the social distribution and contextual shifting of African American English (AAE) within rural Southern African American communities. The study compares selective diagnostic AAE variables and features of speech rate and pause in the speech of three recognized sociopolitical leaders in public presentations and sociolinguistic interviews. The results show that there are not significant shifts in the use of AAE from the sociolinguistic interview to the public presentation settings and that leaders do not necessarily align their speech with their age and sex cohorts in terms of vernacular AAE usage. The authors conclude that the relative autonomy of the community, its endocentric versus exocentric orientation, the primary public service constituency of the leader, the different social affiliations and divisions within the community, the speaker’s personal background and history, and the socialized demands and expectations for public presentation are all factors in understanding the leaders’ use of local vernacular and mainstream standard variants.}, number={4}, journal={JOURNAL OF ENGLISH LINGUISTICS}, author={Kendall, Tyler and Wolfram, Walt}, year={2009}, month={Dec}, pages={305–330} } @article{bailey_kendall_church_wilbur_2004, title={Estimating survival and breeding probability for pond-breeding amphibians: A modified robust design}, volume={85}, ISSN={["1939-9170"]}, DOI={10.1890/03-0539}, abstractNote={Many studies of pond-breeding amphibians involve sampling individuals during migration to and from breeding habitats. Interpreting population processes and dynamics from these studies is difficult because (1) only a proportion of the population is observable each season, while an unknown proportion remains unobservable (e.g., non-breeding adults) and (2) not all observable animals are captured. Imperfect capture probability can be easily accommodated in capture–recapture models, but temporary transitions between observable and unobservable states, often referred to as temporary emigration, is known to cause problems in both open- and closed-population models. We develop a multistate mark–recapture (MSMR) model, using an open-robust design that permits one entry and one exit from the study area per season. Our method extends previous temporary emigration models (MSMR with an unobservable state) in two ways. First, we relax the assumption of demographic closure (no mortality) between consecutive (secondary)...}, number={9}, journal={ECOLOGY}, author={Bailey, LL and Kendall, WL and Church, DR and Wilbur, HM}, year={2004}, month={Sep}, pages={2456–2466} } @inproceedings{davis_kendall_meeks_2002, title={The message is the message: designing information technology for inclusiveness and accessibility}, number={2002 Jun 6-8}, booktitle={International Symposium on Technology and Society, 2002. (ISTAS'02)}, publisher={New York, NY ; Piscataway, NJ: IEEE}, author={Davis, J. and Kendall, T. and Meeks, H.}, year={2002}, pages={283–289} }