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News corpora, social media analysis, movie/music metadata, sports data, cultural datasets, misinformation
11,020 datasets
52-dimensional MediaPipe blendshape features extracted from web-crawled images of Asian facial expressions. The dataset is structured for seven distinct emotion categories. Its origin and specific collection details are not provided in the available metadata.
A list of 100 top-rated movies from IMDb. The dataset includes genre, release year, and a description for each film. It was cleaned via an API, but the original author and update date are unknown.
Polygon data from the City of Austin's AMANDA system details zoning cases submitted for permit review. The dataset includes information on location, proposed uses, proposed unit counts, applicants, owners, and case managers.
Over 1,000 Nintendo 3DS games are listed with release and user review information. The data was sourced from the open-source repository and API of RAWG.io, which catalogs information for over 480,000 video game titles. The dataset is shared under a CC0 1.0 public domain dedication license.
Over 1000 Nintendo 3DS games are listed with their release and user review information. The data was aggregated from the RAWG.io open-source video game repository and API service. The dataset is shared under a permissive CC0-1.0 license.
A dataset of top-rated movies, likely containing titles, ratings, and other film metadata. Published on Kaggle, a platform for data science and machine learning projects. The specific source, collection method, and temporal coverage are unknown from the provided metadata.
Twitter data associated with user 'Rahal4462', uploaded to HuggingFace by author 'daaxila'. The dataset was last updated on April 1, 2026, suggesting recent collection or modification. The title and platform tag 'Regionus' imply it may contain region-specific social media posts.
A historical text by S. H. Lee analyzing the American influence on Korean culture during the Lyndon B. Johnson administration. The work is structured into chapters covering American and Korean perspectives, cultural influence, mass entertainment, women's lives, modernization, and nationalism. It is sourced from the paperswithcode platform and is licensed as closed.
A historical analysis by Larry Grubbs examines early U.S. policy toward postcolonial Africa during the 1960s. The work draws on government documents, contemporary press accounts, and scholarship on U.S.-Africa relations. It presents a cultural history of the American campaign to modernize Africa, exploring the contradictions of its underlying ideology.
American Indian tribal communities have integrated cultural activities into substance abuse prevention programs since the late 1960s. The dataset, authored by Ruth Sanchez-Way, likely documents this indigenous cultural renaissance and its relationship to community health. The data source is paperswithcode, but specific volume and temporal details are not provided.
John Bulloch authored a book providing a history of the Kurds, using the post-war Iraqi-Kurdish rebellion as a starting point. The text covers the period since the break-up of the Ottoman Empire, discussing Kurdish identity and a brief account of Kurdistan during the Middle Ages. The bulk of the book describes the troubled history of the Kurds since World War I.
Warren Christopher authored a study analyzing the portrayal of Iran in mainstream U.S. journalism. The work examines the link between press and policy, suggesting the press may not fulfill its watchdog role in democratic theory. The dataset likely contains textual analysis of media content related to Iran and U.S. foreign policy.
Hugh Wilford's research explores the complex interactions between the United States and the British Labour Party during the Cold War. The work likely contains case studies on intelligence operations, cultural diplomacy, and the influence of organizations like the CIA and the Congress for Cultural Freedom. Its specific data format and size are not detailed in the provided metadata.
Searching for the Bright Path is a historical text by James Taylor Carson, published by the University of Nebraska Press in 1999. The book provides a history of the Choctaw people from before European contact through the removal period, spanning approximately 1500 to the mid-1800s. It relies on archaeological evidence and ethnohistorical readings of Euro-American documents to analyze cultural continuity and change.
Bill Loving authored a paper exploring how digital editing technology facilitates public misrepresentation. The work examines the ease, prevalence, and impact of such editing on public discourse. The dataset likely contains textual analysis or related materials from this research.
Lawrence Harrison's book analyzes the cultural and institutional contrasts between Anglo-Protestant and Ibero-Catholic societies in the Americas. The text explores historical initiatives like the Alliance for Progress and the Good Neighbor Policy to assess prospects for a Pan-American community. It examines fundamental differences in views of work, education, merit, and authority as potential barriers to partnership.
A historical monograph analyzing American foreign policy towards Europe between 1919 and 1933. The work argues that U.S. officials actively sought to settle war debts, stabilize currencies, and revive markets. Originally published in 1979, it is presented as an unaltered reprint from the University of North Carolina Press.
A collection of chapters analyzing television's role during the McCarthyism era of the Cold War in the United States. The work, authored by T. Doherty, covers topics such as censorship, blacklisting, and key televised events like the Army-McCarthy hearings. The specific temporal coverage and data volume are not provided in the input.
Michael Nelson's research, based on first-hand interviews and Soviet Communist Party documents, analyzes the role of Western radio broadcasts in the Cold War. The work details the activities of the BBC, Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, and Voice of America, and the Soviet response including signal jamming and production controls. It covers the period of the Cold War, focusing on the cultural and political impact of these broadcasts behind the Iron Curtain.
Gil Troy's book 'Morning in America' provides a year-by-year analysis of the 1980s, integrating the story of the Reagan presidency with cultural events and media. The work argues Reagan acted as a conciliator, fostering a political culture centered on individualism and consumption. It reassesses the decade's legacy, suggesting many 1960s innovations like civil rights became mainstream.