6.101 FYI: Dissertations available on WWW, Microsoft application

The Linguist List linguist at tam2000.tamu.edu
Wed Jan 25 16:45:55 UTC 1995


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LINGUIST List:  Vol-6-101. Wed 25 Jan 1995. ISSN: 1068-4875. Lines: 163
 
Subject: 6.101 FYI: Dissertations available on WWW, Microsoft application
 
Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Texas A&M U. <aristar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
            Helen Dry: Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at emunix.emich.edu>
 
Asst. Editors: Ron Reck <rreck at emunix.emich.edu>
               Ann Dizdar <dizdar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
               Ljuba Veselinova <lveselin at emunix.emich.edu>
 
-------------------------Directory-------------------------------------
 
1)
Date: Mon, 23 Jan 95 22:24:13 EST
From: OSDL (osdl1 at ling.ohio-state.edu)
Subject: Ohio State Dissertations in Linguistics
 
2)
Date: Tue, 24 Jan 1995 10:23:33 -0500
From: gb661 at csc.albany.edu (George Aaron Broadwell)
Subject: Linguistic applications of MS Organization Chart
 
-------------------------Messages--------------------------------------
1)
Date: Mon, 23 Jan 95 22:24:13 EST
From: OSDL (osdl1 at ling.ohio-state.edu)
Subject: Ohio State Dissertations in Linguistics
 
 
Ohio State Linguistics students are now making available dissertations
written since  1992 by  students in  the linguistics  department.  For
more  information  regarding available  titles  and  abstracts  as  of
January 1995, please visit our
 
                     World Wide Web (WWW) Server
 
                                  at
 
       http://ling.ohio-state.edu/Department/Dissertations.html
 
For information and ordering procedures, please contact
 
OSDL (Ohio State Dissertations in Linguistics)
Department of Linguistics
Ohio State University
222 Oxley Hall                          osdl at ling.ohio-state.edu
1712 Neil Avenue
Columbus, OH 43210-1289
USA
 
Dissertations available as of January 1995:
 
Benjamin Xiaoping Ao (1993)
        Phonetics and Phonology of Nantong Chinese
                (Advisor: David Odden)
 
Hee-Rahk Chae (1992)
        Lexically Triggered Unbounded Discontinuities in English:
        An Indexed Phrase Structure Grammar Approach
                (Advisor: Arnold Zwicky)
 
John Xiang-ling Dai (1992)
        Chinese Morphology and its Interface with the Syntax
                (Advisor: Arnold Zwicky)
 
Sun-Ah Jun (1993)
        The Phonetics and Phonology of Korean Prosody
                (Advisor: Mary E. Beckman)
 
Gina Maureen Lee (1993)
        Comparative, Diachronic and  Experimental  Perspectives on the
        Interaction between Tone and Vowel in Standard Cantonese
                (Advisor: Brian D. Joseph)
 
Katherine Welker (1994)
        Plans in the Common Ground:
        Toward a Generative Account of Conversational Implicature
                (Advisor: Craige Roberts)
 
PS: Anyone reading LINGUIST via the WWW page at Rochester may
    visit our site by simply clicking
    (A HREF="http://ling.ohio-state.edu/Department/Dissertations.html")
        here(/A).
 
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2)
Date: Tue, 24 Jan 1995 10:23:33 -0500
From: gb661 at csc.albany.edu (George Aaron Broadwell)
Subject: Linguistic applications of MS Organization Chart
 
LINGUIST readers,
 
        I recently discovered an application that had been lurking on my
hard drive for a while which has turned out to have some useful
applications.  The application is Microsoft Organization Chart.  It came as
a part of the Microsoft Office suite of applications that was bundled with
my new Gateway.  I imagine many of you may also have this application -- it
is generally associated with PowerPoint, but it can run on its own, or in
association with any other Windows program that allows object linking (OLE).
 
        MS Organization chart was designed for showing corporate
organization structures, and it is organized around boxes that stand in
hierarchical mother-daughter relationships to each other.  The program makes
adding and deleting nodes in such hierarchies very easy, and automatically
connects then with the appropriate lines.
 
        I've experimented with this program and two linguistic applications:
1.) Genetic trees in historical linguistics, and 2.) Syntactic tree
diagrams.  A little discussion of each:
 
1.) Trees for historical linguistics -- The program does a superb job at
rendering the sort of genetic trees that are conventionally used in
discussions of historical linguistics.  The user can manipulate just about
every detail of the trees -- the order of branches, the types of fonts used
for the labels, the thickness of the lines that connect the nodes.  There
are also options that allow the user to make any particular branch in the
tree either vertical or horizontal, which is great for fitting lots of
information onto a page.
        The resulting tree can be inserted into your other Windows
applications.  I've inserted them into my WordPerfect documents, and they
work beautifully.   (In WordPerfect 6.0 for Windows, I choose Insert Object
from the
menus, select Microsoft Organization Chart from the list, and create the
tree.  When I'm through, the tree acts like a graphic that I can move
around, resize, etc.) On a scale of 1 to 10, I'd give this program a 10 for
this application.
 
2.)  Syntactic tree diagrams
 
        The program is not as good at these,  but it does a pretty decent
job at syntactic trees as well, and it has the virtue of being very quick
and easy.
 
A few notes on drawing syntactic trees:
 
 -- The default setting puts a box around each node in the tree, but you can
easily select the boxes and set the border to "none".
--  A more serious problem -- the default lines connecting the node are only
vertical and horizontal, not diagonal, as is standard in syntactic diagrams.
 After some consideration, I've decided that this really doesn't bother me
very much; you may disagree. It is possible to draw in diagonal lines by
hand, but I found this tedious.
 
        I don't know if I would advise people to buy this program just for
syntactic trees -- if the perfect  syntactic tree drawing program would get
a 10, I'd give Microsoft Organization Chart an 8 - it is quick and easy, but it
doesn't do everything you might want.
 
Overall, I've found this piece of software to be one of the more useful I've
seen.  I'd encourage LINGUIST readers to give it a try.  Given the extensive
distribution of MS Office software, you or your university may already have
this.
 
George Aaron Broadwell,  g.broadwell at albany.edu
Anthropology; Linguistics and Cognitive Science,
 SUNY-Albany, Albany, NY 12222 | 518-442-4711
 -----
"I really do not know that anything has ever been more exciting than
diagraming sentences" -- Gertrude Stein
 
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