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Literary & Linguistic Computing, Volume 26
Volume 26, Number 1, April 2011
- Marilyn Deegan:
Editorial. 1 - Edward Vanhoutte:
Editorial. 3-4
- Charles D. Bernholz, Brian L. Pytlik Zillig:
Comparing nearly identical treaty texts: a note on the Treaty of Fort Laramie with Sioux, etc., 1851 and Levenshtein's edit distance metric. 5-16 - Folkert de Vriend, Lou Boves, Roeland van Hout, Jos Swanenberg:
Visualization as a research tool for dialect geography using a geo-browser. 17-34 - Kim Luyckx, Walter Daelemans:
The effect of author set size and data size in authorship attribution. 35-55 - Evangelos C. Papakitsos:
Computerized Scansion of Ancient Greek Hexameter. 57-69 - G. Bruce Schaalje, Paul J. Fields, Matthew Roper, Gregory L. Snow:
Extended nearest shrunken centroid classification: A new method for open-set authorship attribution of texts of varying sizes. 71-88 - Nathan Shrefler:
Lexical bundles and German bibles. 89-106 - Wybo Wiersma, John Nerbonne, Timo Lauttamus:
Automatically Extracting Typical Syntactic Differences from Corpora. 107-124 - Andrew Wilson:
The Regressive Imagery Dictionary: A test of its concurrent validity in English, German, Latin, and Portuguese. 125-135
- Michael Bender:
3D Shape. Its Unique Place in Visual Perception.Zygmunt Pizlo. 137-138
Volume 26, Number 2, June 2011
- Yoko Iyeiri, Michiko Yaguchi, Yasumasa Baba:
Principal component analysis of turn-initial words in spoken interactions. 139-152 - Defeng Li, Chunling Zhang, Kanglong Liu:
Translation Style and Ideology: a Corpus-assisted Analysis of two English Translations of Hongloumeng. 153-166 - Tanja Säily, Terttu Nevalainen, Harri Siirtola:
Variation in noun and pronoun frequencies in a sociohistorical corpus of English. 167-188
- Stuart Dunn:
Introduction to the Special Section on Digital Objects: digital objects, digital humanities - Questions, Processes, and Outputs. 189-192 - Mona Hess, Francesca Simon Millar, Stuart Robson, Sally MacDonald, Graeme Were, Ian Brown:
Well Connected to Your Digital Object? E-Curator: A Web-based e-Science Platform for Museum Artefacts. 193-215 - Leta Hunt, Marilyn Lundberg, Bruce Zuckerman:
Getting beyond the common denominator. 217-231 - Ségolène M. Tarte:
Papyrological investigations: transferring perception and interpretation into the digital world. 233-247
- Nicola Bozzi:
Designing MediaBill Moggridge. 249-250
Volume 26, Number 3, September 2011
- Lisa Lena Opas-Hänninen, Julia Flanders, Dan O'Donnell, Michael Eberle-Sinatra, Ray Siemens, Edward Vanhoutte:
In Memoriam Charles Douglas Bush (1948-2011). 251
- John Nerbonne, Bethany Nowviskie, Paul Spence, Paul Vetch:
Introducing DH 2010. 253-256
- Melissa Terras:
Present, not voting: Digital Humanities in the Panopticon: closing plenary speech, Digital Humanities 2010. 257-269 - Marcus Bingenheimer, Jen-Jou Hung, Simon Wiles:
Social network visualization from TEI data. 271-278 - Claire Brierley, Eric Atwell:
Non-traditional prosodic features for automated phrase break prediction. 279-284 - Christopher W. Forstall, Sarah L. Jacobson, Walter J. Scheirer:
Evidence of intertextuality: investigating Paul the Deacon's Angustae Vitae. 285-296 - Ian N. Gregory, Andrew Hardie:
Visual GISting: bringing together corpus linguistics and Geographical Information Systems. 297-314 - Jan Rybicki, Maciej Eder:
Deeper Delta across genres and languages: do we really need the most frequent words? 315-321 - Philip Sabin:
The benefits and limits of computerization in conflict simulation. 323-328 - Maxime B. Sainte-Marie, Jean Guy Meunier, Nicolas Payette, Jean-François Chartier:
The concept of evolution in the Origin of Species: a computer-assisted analysis. 329-334 - Lynne Siemens, Richard Cunningham, Wendy Duff, Claire Warwick:
A tale of two cities: implications of the similarities and differences in collaborative approaches within the digital libraries and digital humanities communities. 335-348 - Ségolène M. Tarte:
Digitizing the act of papyrological interpretation: negotiating spurious exactitude and genuine uncertainty. 349-358 - Weijia Xu, Maria Esteva:
Finding stories in the archive through paragraph alignment. 359-363 - Amélie Zöllner-Weber:
Text encoding and ontology - enlarging an ontology by semi-automatic generated instances. 365-370
Volume 26, Number 4, December 2011
- Richard J. Evans:
Comparing methods for the syntactic simplification of sentences in information extraction. 371-388 - Peter Garrard, Anne-Marie Haigh, Celeste de Jager:
Techniques for transcribers: assessing and improving consistency in transcripts of spoken language. 389-405 - Andrew Kane, Frank Wm. Tompa:
Janus: the intertextuality search engine for the electronic Manipulus florum project. 407-415 - Katia Lida Kermanidis:
Linguistic steganography with knowledge-poor paraphrase generation. 417-434 - Xuan Le, Ian Lancashire, Graeme Hirst, Regina Jokel:
Longitudinal detection of dementia through lexical and syntactic changes in writing: a case study of three British novelists. 435-461 - Elena Pierazzo:
A rationale of digital documentary editions. 463-477
- Béla Hollósy:
Data Processing and Management for Quantitative Linguistics with FoxPro.Fengxiang Fan. 479-481 - Carlos Monroy:
Expressive Processing: Digital Fictions, Computer Games, and Software Studies. Noah Wardrip-Fruin. 481-483 - David Robey:
L'umanista digitale.Teresa Numerico, Domenico Fiormonte and Francesca Tomasi. 483-484 - Vincent Vandeghinste:
Learning Machine Translation.Cyril Goutte, Nicola Cancedda, Marc Dymetman, and George Foster. 484-486
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