Browse by Aston Author

Up a level
Export as [feed] Atom [feed] RSS
Group by: Item Type | Date | No Grouping
Number of items: 25.

Newsome-Chandler, Helen and Grant, Tim (2024). Developing a Resource Model of Power and Authority in Anonymous Online Criminal Interactions. Language and Law / Linguagem e Direito, 10 (1),

Petyko, Marton, Busso, Lucia, Grant, Tim and Atkins, Sarah (2022). The Aston Forensic Linguistic Databank (FoLD). Language and Law/Linguagem e Direito, 9 (1), pp. 9-24.

Hunter, Madison and Grant, Tim (2022). Killer stance:An investigation of the relationship between attitudinal resources and psychological traits in the writings of four serial murderers. Language and Law / Linguagem e Direito, 9 (1), pp. 48-72.

Busso, Lucia, Petyko, Marton, Atkins, Sarah and Grant, Tim (2022). Operation Heron – Latent topic changes in an abusive letter series. Corpora, 17 (2), pp. 225-258.

Grant, Tim (2022). The idea of progress in forensic authorship analysis. Cambridge Elements in Forensic Linguistics . Cambridge University Press.

Grant, Tim and Grieve, Jack (2022). The Starbuck Case: Methods for addressing confirmation bias in forensic authorship analysis. IN: Methodologies and Challenges in Forensic Linguistic Casework. Perkins, Ria; Picornell, Isabel and Coulthard, Malcolm (eds) Wiley.

Morrison, Geoffrey Stewart, Neumann, Cedric, Geoghegan, Patrick Henry, Edmond, Gary, Grant, Tim, Ostrum, R. Brent, Roberts, Paul, Saks, Michael, Syndercombe Court, Denise, Thompson, William C. and Zabell, Sandy (2021). Reply to Response to Vacuous standards – subversion of the OSAC standards-development process. Forensic Science International: Synergy, 3 ,

Grant, Tim (2020). Text messaging forensics revisited. IN: Routledge Handbook of Forensic Linguistics. Coulthard, Malcolm; May, Alison and Sousa Silva, Rui (eds) Routledge Taylor & Francis Group.

Kredens, Krzysztof, Perkins, Ria and Grant, Tim (2019). Developing a framework for the explanation of interlingual features for native and other language influence detection. Language and Law / Linguagem e Direito, 6 (2), pp. 10-23.

Chiang, Emily and Grant, Timothy D (2019). Deceptive identity performance:Offender moves and multiple identities in online child abuse conversations. Applied Linguistics, 40 (4), 675–698.

Hurt, Marlon and Grant, Timothy D (2019). Pledging to harm:A linguistic appraisal analysis of judgment comparing realized and non-realized violent fantasies. Discourse and Society, 30 (2), pp. 154-171.

Kloess, Julianne, Woodhams, Jessica, Whittle, Helen, Grant, Timothy D and Hamilton-Giachritsis, Catherine (2019). The challenges of identifying and classifying child sexual abuse material. Sexual Abuse, 31 (2), pp. 173-196.

Perkins, Ria and Grant, Tim (2018). Native language influence detection for forensic authorship analysis:Identifying L1 persian bloggers. International Journal of Speech, Language and the Law, 25 (1), pp. 1-20.

Schneevogt, Daniela, Chiang, Emily and Grant, Timothy D (2018). Do Perverted Justice chat logs contain examples of Overt Persuasion and Sexual Extortion?:A research note responding to Chiang and Grant 2017 and 2018. Language and Law/Linguagem e Direito, 5 (1), pp. 97-102.

Grant, Timothy D and MacLeod, Nicci (2018). Resources and constraints in linguistic identity performance:a theory of authorship. Language and Law/Linguagem e Direito, 5 (1), pp. 80-96.

Carmody, Emily and Grant, Timothy D (2017). Online grooming:moves and strategies. Language and Law / Linguagem e Direito, 4 (1), pp. 103-141.

MacLeod, Nicci and Grant, Timothy D (2017). ‘go on cam but dnt be dirty’:linguistic levels of identity assumption in undercover online operations against child sex abusers. Language and Law/Linguagem e Direito, 4 (2), pp. 157-175.

Grant, Tim (2017). Duppying yoots in a dog eat dog world, kmt:determining the senses of slang terms for the Courts. Semiotica, 2017 (216), pp. 479-495.

MacLeod, Nicci and Grant, Tim (2016). "You have ruined this entire experiment…shall we stop talking now?" Orientations to the experimental setting as an interactional resource. Discourse, Context & Media, 14 , pp. 63-70.

Grant, Tim and Macleod, Nicci (2016). Assuming identities online:experimental linguistics applied to the policing of online paedophile activity. Applied Linguistics, 37 (1), pp. 50-70.

Grant, Tim (2013). TXT 4N6:method, consistency, and distinctiveness in the analysis of sms text messages. Journal of Law and Policy, 21 (2), pp. 467-494.

Macleod, Nicci and Grant, Tim (2012). Whose Tweet? Authorship analysis of micro-blogs and other short-form messages. IN: Proceedings of the International Association of Forensic Linguists’ tenth biennial conference. Tomblin, Samuel; MacLeod, Nicci; Sousa-Silva, Rui and Coulthard, Malcolm (eds) GBR: Aston University.

Sousa Silva, Rui, Grant, Tim and Maia, Belinda (2010). “I didn’t mean to steal someone else’s words!”:a forensic linguistic approach to detecting intentional plagiarism. IN: 4th International Plagiarism Conference. 2010-06-21 - 2010-06-23.

Norton, Russell and Grant, Tim D. (2008). Rape myth in true and false rape allegations. Psychology, Crime and Law, 14 (4), pp. 275-285.

Woodhams, Jessica and Grant, Tim D. (2006). Developing a categorisation system for rapists' speech. Psychology, Crime and Law, 12 (3), pp. 245-260.

This list was generated on Tue Nov 19 04:01:01 2024 GMT.