[RNLD] current work on digital data-based ling descriptions?
Nick Thieberger
thien at unimelb.edu.au
Mon Dec 4 02:30:35 UTC 2017
Hi,
These are all good attempts at a solution and I can offer http://eopas.org
as another. It takes elan or toolbox files in a particular format and
presents interlinear text plus media with citation down to the level of the
morpheme. Each file in eopas would need to be in an archive as well, but
the citation is to the text that should still resolve to an archival
location.
PARADISEC has been exploring ways of presenting text and media directly
from objects in the repository. See an example at
http://catalog.paradisec.org.au/viewer/#/NT1/98007 and click on 'Show
interlinear text' (you need to be logged in to see this).
Nick
On 3 December 2017 at 06:55, Luke Gessler <lukegessler at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Including citations in glosses (as I see Thieberger did in his grammar) is
> a great idea. I'm curious, would you mind sharing some of the websites
> you've seen that attempt to do this?
>
> You say you're looking for alternatives to websites, but if a grammar were
> prepared as a web document, it would be possible to hyperlink from the
> gloss in the description to the primary data, whether it's a written text,
> an audio recording, or something else. That seems pretty ideal, right?
>
> I think your concern might be that websites are often fragile and
> ephemeral (they definitely often are), but this isn't endemic to the
> medium. It is possible to use a website as a front end to a proper archive.
> One example that comes to mind is Lise Dobrin's Arapesh Grammar and
> Digital Language Archive
> <http://www.arapesh.org/>,
> which has been around since 2006 and is maintained by a technical
> organization at her university
> <http://www.iath.virginia.edu/>
> .
>
> Was that the limitation you saw in websites, or are there others you see?
>
> Regards,
> Luke Gessler
>
> On Sat, Dec 2, 2017 at 11:12 AM, Jorge Emilio Rosés Labrada <
> jrosesla at uwo.ca> wrote:
>
>> Hi Joseph,
>>
>> There's an excellent LD&C Special Publications volume edited by Sebastian
>> Nordhoff (available here: http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/ldc/?p=263
>> <http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/ldc/?p=263>)
>> 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 <(780)%20492-5698>
>> 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
>>>
>>>
>>
>
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