27.2285, TOC: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (DSH) 31 / 2 (2016)
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LINGUIST List: Vol-27-2285. Thu May 19 2016. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 27.2285, TOC: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (DSH) 31 / 2 (2016)
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Date: Thu, 19 May 2016 10:52:06
From: Carolyn Napolitano [Carolyn.Napolitano at oup.com]
Subject: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (DSH) Vol. 31, No. 2 (2016)
Publisher: Oxford University Press
http://www.oup.com/us
Journal Title: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (DSH)
Volume Number: 31
Issue Number: 2
Issue Date: 2016
Main Text:
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities
Read Volume 31 Issue 2 online now at http://bit.ly/25bWmXT
Original articles:
Twitter corpus creation: The case of a Malay Chat-style-text Corpus (MCC)
By Mohammad Arshi Saloot, Norisma Idris, AiTi Aw, and Dirk Thorleuchter
Geographical patterns of formality variation in written Standard California
English
By Costanza Asnaghi, Dirk Speelman, and Dirk Geeraerts
Phonetic-based Sindhi spellchecker system using a hybrid model
By Zeeshan Bhatti, Imdad Ali Ismaili, Dil Nawaz Hakro, and Waseem Javid Soomro
Tensions and tenets of socialized scholarship
By Susan Brown
A new chronology for Shakespeare’s plays
By Douglas Bruster and Geneviève Smith
Vocabulary decay in category romance
By Jack Elliott
Citation segmentation from sparse & noisy data: A joint inference approach
with Markov logic networks
By Dustin Heckmann, Anette Frank, Matthias Arnold, Peter Gietz, and Christian
Roth
Analysis on Chinese quantitative stylistic features based on text mining
By Renkui Hou and Minghu Jiang
Latin word stemming using Wiktionary
By Richard Khoury and Francesca Sapsford
Significance testing of word frequencies in corpora
By Jefrey Lijffijt, Terttu Nevalainen, Tanja Säily, Panagiotis Papapetrou, Kai
Puolamäki, and Heikki Mannila
The apocalypse on Twitter
By Theo Meder, Dong Nguyen, and Rilana Gravel
Discriminative reranking for context-sensitive spell–checker
By Behzad Mirzababaei and Heshaam Faili
Towards an intellectual history of digitization: Myths, dystopias, and
discursive shifts in museum computing
By Andrea Sartori
Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics
General Linguistics
Historical Linguistics
Lexicography
Sociolinguistics
Text/Corpus Linguistics
Subject Language(s): Chinese, Mandarin (cmn)
English (eng)
Latin (lat)
Malay (mly)
Persian, Iranian (pes)
Sindhi (snd)
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