[RNLD] current work on digital data-based ling descriptions?
Jorge Emilio Rosés Labrada
jrosesla at uwo.ca
Sat Dec 2 17:12:04 UTC 2017
Hi Joseph,
There's an excellent LD&C Special Publications volume edited by Sebastian
Nordhoff (available here: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/Ov1pBEt3MqdJS2?domain=nflrc.hawaii.edu) that might be
of interest.
Best,
Jorge
-------------
Jorge Emilio Rosés Labrada
Assistant Professor, Indigenous Language Sustainability
Department of Linguistics
University of Alberta
Tel: (+1) 780-492-5698
jrosesla at ualberta.ca
*The University of Alberta acknowledges that we are located on Treaty 6
territory, **and respects the history, languages, and cultures of the First
Nations, Métis, Inuit, **and all First Peoples of Canada, whose presence
continues to enrich our institution.*
On Sat, Dec 2, 2017 at 9:36 AM, Joseph Brooks <josephdbrooks at umail.ucsb.edu>
wrote:
> Hi everyone,
> I'm wondering if anyone out there is working on (or perhaps like me "very
> interested in but lacking the tech-know how") creating digital linguistic
> descriptions that link directly to the primary data, perhaps even in new
> and creative ways (esp including audiovisual data)? Thinking along the
> lines here of something inspired from a combination of Thieberger's South
> Efate grammar and 2009 paper + Berez(-Kroeker) Gawne & Kelly's (among
> others) recent work emphasizing data citation and resolvability in
> linguistics.
>
> I know that some grammars have gone as far as including CDs and that there
> are also websites devoted to this sort of endeavor, but I'm mostly trying
> to find out about alternatives to those, eg the type of thing one could
> archive and have openly accessible.
>
> Thanks!
> Joseph
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/resource-network-linguistic-diversity/attachments/20171202/b951c5bb/attachment.htm>
More information about the Resource-network-linguistic-diversity
mailing list