6.1626, Sum: Specialised Lists

The Linguist List linguist at tam2000.tamu.edu
Sat Nov 18 05:53:35 UTC 1995


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LINGUIST List:  Vol-6-1626. Fri Nov 17 1995. ISSN: 1068-4875. Lines:  345
 
Subject: 6.1626, Sum: Specialised Lists
 
Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Texas A&M U. <aristar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
            Helen Dry: Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at emunix.emich.edu>
 
Associate Editor:  Ljuba Veselinova <lveselin at emunix.emich.edu>
Assistant Editors: Ron Reck <rreck at emunix.emich.edu>
                   Ann Dizdar <dizdar at tam2000.tamu.edu>
                   Annemarie Valdez <avaldez at emunix.emich.edu>
 
Software development: John H. Remmers <remmers at emunix.emich.edu>
 
Editor for this issue: avaldez at emunix.emich.edu (Annemarie Valdez)
 
---------------------------------Directory-----------------------------------
1)
Date:  Fri, 17 Nov 1995 11:27:28 +0700
From:  Jan=Engberg%DATLING%HHASPR at LNG.HHA.DK
Subject:  Summary: Specialised Lists
 
---------------------------------Messages------------------------------------
1)
Date:  Fri, 17 Nov 1995 11:27:28 +0700
From:  Jan=Engberg%DATLING%HHASPR at LNG.HHA.DK
Subject:  Summary: Specialised Lists
 
Dear netters:
 
A week ago I posted a question, whether someone on the
list knew of specialised lists on LSP and/or on
Translation. Thanks a lot to Marie-Louise Hannan,
Montreal and Jane A. Edwards, Berkeley for giving the
answers, which I pass on to the list below. There seems
to be no list on especially LSP for the time being - is that
because no need is felt for such a list? Please post
reactions to this question to the list or directly to me
(jan at lng.hha.dk).
 
Regards,
 
Jan Engberg
Aarhus School of Business
Denmark
 
- --------------------------------------------
(Jane Edwards:)
I'm appending two things:
(1) an updated version of what I wrote in my survey of
corpora and corpus-related resources in Edwards & Lampert (1993)
_Talking Data:
Transcription and Coding in Discourse Research._
Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
 
(2) a web page for translators by Mazzoldi in Dublin
(though you probably already know if - just making sure).
 
Best Wishes,
 
-Jane
 
    ---------------------------
[updated 1/31/95]
   1.  Begun in 1992, CORPORA is an international email
discussion list for information and questions about text corpora,
such as availability,aspects of compiling and using corpora, software,
tagging, parsing,bibliography, and related matters.  To join the list,
send the following one-line command to LISTSERV at UIB.NO:
 
subscribe corpora
 
To submit a contribution to the list, send it to
CORPORA at hd.uib.no.
The list administrator is Knut Hofland, NCCH,
Humanistisk Datasenter, Harald Haarfagres gt. 31,
N-5007 Bergen, Norway; Tel: +47 (55) 212954;
FAX:  +47 (55) 322656; email:  knut.hofland at hd.uib.no,
or
CORPORA-REQUEST at HD.UIB.NO.
 
   2.  HUMANIST is an international email discussion list
for issues relating to the application of computers to scholarship
in the humanities.  This includes linguistics, comparative
literature,philosophy, Biblical studies, and several other fields.
Begun in 1987 under joint sponsorship of the ACH, the ALLC and the
University of Toronto's Centre for Computing in the Humanities, it is
currently housed at Brown University and moderated by Elaine
Brennan and Allen Renear.  It has over 600 members in 24 countries.
To subscribe, mail
"subscribe humanist <your name>" to
 
listserv at brownvm.brown.edu; to post
 
articles, mail them to humanist at brownvm.brown.edu.
Articles submitted to HUMANIST are archived on a file server and
can be searched remotely by means of one-line listserv commands.
 
   3.  LINGUIST is an international list intended as a place
for discussion of issues of concern to the academic discipline
of linguistics and related fields.  It is moderated by Anthony
Aristar(Texas A&M University) and Helen Dry (Eastern Michigan
University). It explicitly welcomes discussion of any linguistic
subfield.
To subscribe to LINGUIST, send email to the LINGUIST
listserver
(listserv at TAMVM1.tamu.edu), containing the following
one-line message:
 
SUBSCRIBE LINGUIST <your name>
 
for example, "subscribe linguist john smith."
To submit a posting to the list, email it to
 linguist at TAMVM1.tamu.edu.
The LINGUIST fileserver contains contributed files of
interest to language researchers, such as the LSA or Georgetown
lists of corpora, and linguists' email addresses and these are
similarly obtainable by one-line commands.  For more information,
send the one-line command "help linguist" via email to
linguist-request at TAMVM1.tamu.edu.
For questions requiring human attention, send a message to:
linguist-editors at TAMVM1.tamu.edu.
 
   4.  LN, Langage Naturel, is an international list for
computational linguistics, sponsored by the Association for
Computational Linguistics (ACL) and the Association for
Computers and the Humanities (ACH).  Its goal is to
disseminate calls for papers, conference and seminar
announcements, requests for software, corpora, and
various types of data, project descriptions, and discussions on
technical topics.  The list is primarily French-speaking, but many
items are circulated in English.  The list owners and editors
are Philippe Blache, Jean Veronis, and Pierre Zweigenbaum.
To subscribe to LN, send the following one-line
message to  listserv at FRMOP11.cnusc.fr:
 
SUBSCRIBE LN firstname lastname
 
To post a message to the list as a whole, email it to
LN at frmop11.cnusc.fr.
If you have question about the LN list, write to the list
owners at the generic address: LN-request at FRMOP11.CNUSC.FR.
 
   5.  PROSODY is an international list with members
representing a broad spectrum of approaches including linguistics,
psycholinguistics, and computer science.  It serves a vital function of
disseminatinginformation concerning available resources in a
technologically rapidly expanding area.  To subscribe, send:
 "subscribe prosody <your name>" to
LISTSERV at msu.edu.
To post a message to the list as a whole, send to
prosody at msu.edu.  To contact the list owners, write to
PROSODY-request at MSU.EDU.  The list is managed by
George Allen, Michigan State University, who also owns the list,
"HYPERCRD."
 
   6.  FUNKNET, headed by Talmy Givon and Paul Hopper,
is a discussion list concerned with various aspects of human language,
communication, cognition, socioculture, neuropsychology, and other
facets of cognitive and communicative behavior, viewed from what might
loosely be called the functionalist perspective, that is, language
viewed as an instrument of communication, coding experience, an evolved
neurobiological phenomenon, a sociocultural phenomenon,or a
combination of these, with an emphasis on empirical language study,
including especially corpus data.
For further information, contact
Talmy Givon at: funknet-request at oregon.uoregon.edu.
To post to the
entire list, send to:  funknet at oregon.uoregon.edu.
 
   7.  EMPIRICISTS is a list for corpus-based
computational linguistics, with over 800 subscribers.
It originated from the empiricist/rationalist
machine translation debate at TMI-92. While similar to
CORPORA, the list is filtered to minimize volume. It is
currently moderated by David Yarowsky
(yarowsky at unagi.cis.upenn.edu).
To subscribe, send email to
empiricists-request at unagi.cis.upenn.edu. Send
contributions to
empiricists at unagi.cis.upenn.edu.
 
   8. INFO-CHILDES is an international email distribution
list moderated by Brian MacWhinney, Psychology Department, Carnegie
Mellon University, which circulates information concerning
corpus-related child language research.  To subscribe, send email to
brian+ at andrew.cmu.edu.
To post to the list as a whole, send to
info-childes at andrew.cmu.edu.
 
   9. INFO-PSYLING is an international email distribution
list, moderated by Kerry Kilborn, Psychology Department, University of
Glasgow, which circulates information on psycholinguistics.  To
subscribe, send email to kerry at psy.gla.ac.uk.
To post to the list as a whole,send to
info-psyling at psy.gla.ac.uk.
 
   10.  COGLING is a discussion list for Cognitive
Linguistics, and the study of metaphor.  To subscribe,
send the following command to
listserv at ucsd.edu:
 
ADD yourloginaddress cogling
 
To post to the entire list, send to cogling at ucsd.edu.
For additional questions, the list owners can be reached at:
owner-cogling at ucsd.edu.
 
   11.  Comserve is an electronic information service for
professionals and students interested in human communication studies.
It is located at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and coordinated by
Timothy Stephen and Teresa Harrison, both of whom are professors in
communication studies. Comserve keeps archives of bibliographies,
course materials, job announcements, text transcripts, and other
materials, with the author retaining the rights and the copyright.
It coordinates a number of hotlines on communication, which can
be subscribed to via the listserver.  To subscribe to the
Ethnomethodology hotline, send the following one-line message to
  comserve at rpiecs.bitnet:
 
Join Ethno Your_name
 
To obtain a long list of useful bibliographic information,
send the following one-line message to comserve at rpiecs.bitnet:
 
send compunet biblio
 
Send materials to be posted to the net to
ethno at rpiecs.bitnet and
materials to be archived to support at rpiecs.bitnet.
 
   12.  SLLING-L is a list for linguistic study of signed
languages, including all linguistic areas, including syntax,
acquisition,phonology, morphology, psycholinguistics, and cognition.
To subscribe, send:
 
SUB SLLING-L <your name>
 
to listserv at yalevm.cis.yale.edu.  The listowner is
Dave.Moskovitz at vuw.ac.nz
(Dave Moskovitz).  A previous incarnation of this was
ASLING-L.
 
   13.  Applied linguistics lists.  From Ken Willing at
Macquarie University, I learned of the following lists:
TESL-L  (Teaching English as a Second Language)
Listserver address:  listserv at cunyvm.bitnet or
listserv at cunyvm.cuny.edu
SLART-L  (Second Language Acquisition Research and
Teaching)
Listserver address:  listserv at psuvm.bitnet or
listserv at psuvm.psu.edu
MULTI-L  (Language and Education in Multicultural
Settings)
Listserver address:  listserv at barilvm.bitnet or
listserv at vm.biu.ac.il
To subscribe, send a one-line email message to the
indicated address,
containing:
 
subscribe XXXXXX john smith
 
where XXXXXX is the list-name (e.g. TESL-L), and John
Smith is your name.
 
   14.  The List of Language Lists (LoLL) describes a large
number of electronic discussion groups devoted primarily to the
linguistic study of individual languages and groups of languages
(though a couple of others, in particular lists for language
learners, have been included as well). The LoLL was compiled
by Bernard Comrie and Michael Everson
and is available by anonymous ftp at midir.ucd.ie
(137.43.1.13) in /pub/everson.  For further questions,
contact Michael Everson, School of Architecture, UCD;
Richview, Clonskeagh; Dublin 14; E/ire,
email:
everson at irlearn.ucd.ie.
 
   15.  List of lists.  A very lengthy list of Bitnet and
Internet discussion lists (presently over one megabyte long)
can be obtained via anonymous ftp to ftp.nisc.sri.com (192.33.33.22)
in the directory netinfo as "interest-groups.Z" or by sending the
following one-line message to mail-server at nisc.sri.com,
making sure in advance that your system has sufficient
space to receive it:
 
SEND NETINFO/INTEREST-GROUPS
 
A related list can be obtained by sending email to
listserv at ndsuvm1.bitnet with the following one-line
message:
 
sendme interest package
 
For further information concerning electronic discussion
lists, see the ARL Directory of Electronic Publications (below).
 
   -------------------------------
 
From
<@cmsa.Berkeley.EDU:owner-linguist at TAMVM1.TAMU.E
DU> Thu Oct 12 08:47:17 1995
Date:  Wed, 11 Oct 1995 18:17:02
From:  mazzoldi at iol.ie ("Anna Mazzoldi")
Subject:  New Web page with links for translators
 
I am a freelance translator working in Ireland, and I
would like to announce my new web page with links of
interest to translators. The URL is:
 
<http://www.iol.ie/~mazzoldi/lang/index.html>
 
This page is entirely a personal effort, and of
course it is still under construction (and what
isn't?): I will be glad for any suggestions, comments
or pointers. At the same time, I think that it is a
potentially useful collection of links to resources
for translators - you might like to have a look.
 
Thank you
 
Anna
 
Anna Mazzoldi
mazzoldi at iol.ie
Dublin, Ireland
 ---------------------------------------------------
 ---------------------
 
(M.L. Hannan:)
 
You will find some useful links to general language
resources, and quite possibly some to specific resources on LSP's,
if you look at the following Web site:
 
        http://www.iol.ie/~mazzoldi/lang/index.html
 
This is a collection of links to linguistic tools and
resources for translators. It includes a link to the Translator's
Home Companion and the Human-Languages Page, and I have
found it very comprehensive and helpful.
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