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ZZSeries 25 01 13 Yasmina Khan Wet Hot Indian W...
ZZSeries 25 01 13 Yasmina Khan Wet Hot Indian W...
ZZSeries 25 01 13 Yasmina Khan Wet Hot Indian W...
ZZSeries 25 01 13 Yasmina Khan Wet Hot Indian W...
ZZSeries 25 01 13 Yasmina Khan Wet Hot Indian W...
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ZZSeries 25 01 13 Yasmina Khan Wet Hot Indian W...
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Zzseries 25 01 13 Yasmina Khan Wet Hot Indian W...

“Wet Hot Indian Women: A Computational Analysis of Gendered Language in Contemporary Indian Media”

| Section | Suggested content | |---------|-------------------| | | Briefly state the research question, data sources (e.g., 10 M words from newspapers, Bollywood scripts, Twitter), methods (topic modeling, sentiment analysis, word‑embedding bias tests), and main findings (e.g., disproportionate association of “wet” with sexualized descriptors for women). | | Introduction | Contextualize gendered language in Indian media; cite prior work on “wet” metaphors in English‑language corpora; highlight the gap concerning Indian contexts. | | Data & Pre‑processing | Describe collection pipelines (web scraping, API usage), cleaning steps (tokenization, lemmatization), and ethical considerations (anonymization of user‑generated content). | | Methodology | - Lexicon‑based search for “wet” collocations.- Word‑embedding bias (e.g., WEAT) to quantify gendered associations.- Topic modeling (LDA) to uncover thematic clusters. | | Results | Present quantitative metrics (frequency counts, effect sizes) and qualitative examples (quotes showing “wet” used in sexual vs. non‑sexual contexts). | | Discussion | Interpret findings in relation to cultural norms, media framing, and potential policy implications for gender‑sensitive reporting. | | Conclusion & Future Work | Summarize contributions; suggest extending the study to regional languages or longitudinal analysis. | | References | Include seminal works on gendered language, computational bias detection, and Indian media studies. | ZZSeries 25 01 13 Yasmina Khan Wet Hot Indian W...