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INQSCRIBE LANGUAGE SOFTWARE
Initially, I considered using software for animal behavior research. Besides representing an exciting sample of 174 focal follows of all group members, this also meant that a long transcription process was ahead of me. Once I finished my field work, I ended up with 539 hours of behavioral records. By following particular individuals, I tried to capture information on how social interactions can influence the monkey’s movement decisions and gain insight on the general principles which shape their social organization. This means that the identity of the members of any given subgroup is quite unpredictable (except for the infants and juveniles who usually stay together with their mothers). Instead, individuals constantly join and leave subgroups on an hourly basis. Members of a spider monkey group are rarely found all together. To conduct my research I spent 20 months living in a nearby village, going in to study the monkeys for 4-8 hours at a time with another PhD student and village experts.Įach day, I chose one of the 22 monkeys from the group and recorded detailed accounts of its behavior, including interactions with other individuals as well as general information on grouping and movement patterns. As part of my project, I collected hundreds of hours of behavioral data which I am currently transcribing and processing. I’m specifically studying a wild group of black handed spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi) which live in the Otoch Ma’ax Yetel Kooh protected area in Yucatan, Mexico. My research focuses on understanding the relationship between spider monkey social structure and space-use. Smith Aguilar, PhD student at the Interdisciplinary Research Center for Regional Development ( CIIDIR) Campus Oaxaca, of the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN) in Mexico. Posted on February 3rd, 2016 Alex No commentsĭid you know you can use InqScribe to transcribe just about any language? Yes, even the language of spider monkeys.īy: Sandra E. With that said, it won’t affect your end results when exporting the transcript as a subtitle file, in formats like SubRip SRT, WebVTT, Plain Text, etc. They will no longer be clickable and cannot be saved as a subtitled QuickTime Movie. Note that this will effectively “break” the timecodes in your transcript. You can work around this limitation by offsetting your timecodes so that they match up after the gap. InqScribe bases its timecode on the total length of the video itself, not the on-screen footage that makes up the video. The problem is that InqScribe can’t read the burned in running timecode and has no way of knowing about the gap. A transcript with a gap like this is said to have discontinuous timecodes. However, you may also have a gap in the middle of the footage that causes the on-screen timecode to becomes out of sync with InqScribe. You can easily resolve this by running a timecode adjustment.
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The most common issue is that the on-screen running timecode doesn’t match up with InqScribe’s default starting point. We often hear from users working with video that has a running timecode burned in to the video image. Posted on April 6th, 2018 Alex No comments