Definitions and Abbreviations for Speech Events and Speaker Attributes

Where will you find these abbreviations?

When using the MICASE Online search, you will see many abbreviations. The chart below explains what each of these codes stands for. You will find these abbreviations primarily in two places:

1. When you conduct a search, the search results will appear in a table. The far left column is the “Transcript ID”. The three letter code tells you which type of speech event the utterance came from. See the tables below for the definition of each code.


2. If you click on the transcript ID, there will be a blue link at the top of the page that says ‘Download entire transcript in XML. When you view the speech event in XML, you will encounter ‘codes’ at the beginning of every new utterance, that give you more information about who the speaker is. You can see below, that the “Person ID” is followed by a series of codes. See our table below for definitions of those codes.


Speech Event Attributes

Speech Event Types

Classroom Events

NOTE: All classroom speech events are defined externally by the university regardless of the actual speech event characteristics, except in cases where prepared student presentations constitute the majority of the speech, in which case the event type is Student Presentations.

Category Code Definition/Comments
SMALL LECTURES LES Lecture class; class size = 40 or fewer students
LARGE LECTURES LEL Lecture class; class size = more than 40 students
DISCUSSION SECTIONS DIS Additional section of a lecture class designed for maximum student participation; may also be called recitation
LAB SECTIONS LAB Lab sections of science and engineering classes; may include problem solving sessions
SEMINARS SEM Any class defined as a seminar (primarily graduate level)
STUDENT PRESENTATIONS STP Class other than a seminar in which one or more students speak in front of the class or lead discussion

Non-class Events

Category Code Definition/Comments
ADVISING SESSIONS ADV Interactions between students and academic advisors
COLLOQUIA COL Departmental or University-wide lectures, panel discussions, workshops, brown bag lunch talks, etc.
DISSERTATION DEFENSES DEF Ph.D. theses defenses
INTERVIEWS INT Interviews for research purposes
MEETINGS MTG Faculty, staff, student government, research group meetings, not including study group meetings
OFFICE HOURS OFC Held by faculty or graduate student instructors in connection with a specific class or project
SERVICE ENCOUNTERS SVC Library, computer center, financial aid office services
STUDY GROUPS SGR Informal student-led study groups, one time or on-going
TOURS TOU Campus, library, or museum tours
TUTORIALS TUT One-on-one discussions between a student and an instructor or peer tutor

Academic Division

One of four divisions defined according to the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies classification of departments.

Category Code Definition/Comments
BIOLOGICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES BS Includes Biology, Biochemistry, Dentistry, Genetics, Immunology, Natural Resources, Neuroscience, Nursing, Pathology, Pharmacy, Physiology, Public Health
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING PS Includes Astronomy, Chemistry, Computer Science, Engineering (all), Geology, Mathematics, Physics, Statistics, Technical Communication
SOCIAL SCIENCES AND EDUCATION SS Includes Anthropology, Business Administration, Communication, Economics, Education, History, Public Policy, Political Science, Psychology, Social Work, Sociology, Urban and Regional Planning
HUMANITIES AND ARTS HA Includes Area Studies (all), Architecture, Classics, Comparative Literature, English, Fine Arts (all), Foreign Languages, History of Art, Information and Library Science, Linguistics, Philosophy, Women’s Studies

Academic Discipline

Corresponds to individual university departments when applicable; otherwise assigned as miscellaneous

Participant Level

Corresponds to the level of the majority of students for classes, or participants for other events.

Category Code Definition/Comments
JUNIOR UNDERGRAD JU First and second year undergraduates
SENIOR UNDERGRAD SU Third year and above undergraduates
MIXED UNDERGRAD MU Mixed undergraduates
JUNIOR GRADUATE JG First and second year or Master’s level graduate students
SENIOR GRADUATE SG Third year and above Ph.D. students
MIXED GRADUATE MG Mixed grad students
JUNIOR FACULTY JF Lecturers and Assistant Professors
SENIOR FACULTY SF Associate Professors and above
MIXED FACULTY MF Mixed faculty
RESEARCHER RE Non-teaching researchers
POST-DOC FELLOW PD Post-doctoral research fellows
STAFF ST Non-teaching University employees
VISITOR/OTHER VO Non-UM or non-academic affiliates
MIXED MX Mixed faculty, staff, students

Primary Discourse Mode

Refers to the predominant type of discourse characterizing the speech event.

Category Code Definition/Comments
MONOLOGIC MLG One speaker monopolizes the floor, sometimes followed by question and answer period
PANEL PNL Several consecutive monologues usually followed by multi-speaker interactions
INTERACTIVE INT Interactional discourse involving two or more speakers
MIXED MIX No one discourse mode is predominant

Speaker Attributes

Gender

Category Code
FEMALE F
MALE M

Age Group

Category Code
17 – 23 1
24 – 30 2
31 – 50 3
51 and older 4

Academic Role

Category Code Definition/Comments
JUNIOR UNDERGRAD JU First and second year undergraduates
SENIOR UNDERGRAD SU Third year and above undergraduates
JUNIOR GRADUATE JG First and second year or Master’s level graduate students
SENIOR GRADUATE SG Third year and above Ph.D. students
JUNIOR FACULTY JF Lecturers and Assistant Professors
SENIOR FACULTY SF Associate Professors and above
RESEARCHER RE Non-teaching researchers
POST-DOC FELLOW PD Post-doctoral research fellows
STAFF ST Non-teaching University employees
VISITOR/OTHER VO Non-University of Michigan affiliates

Native Speaker Status

Category Code Definition/Comments
NATIVE SPEAKER NS Native speakers of North American English
NATIVE SPEAKER OTHER NSO Native speakers of non-American English
NEAR NATIVE SPEAKER NRN Non-native speakers who consider English as their current dominant language and who appear to have native-like fluency and grammatical proficiency.
NON-NATIVE SPEAKER NNS Non-native speaker of English other than near-native speakers

First Language

Only shown when first language is other than North American English.

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