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Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 30
Volume 30, Number 1, April 2015
- Edward Vanhoutte:
30 Years of Academic Service. 1-5
- Michael Dalvean:
Ranking contemporary American poems. 6-19 - Panagiotis Gakis, Christos T. Panagiotakopoulos, Kyriakos N. Sgarbas, Christos Tsalidis:
Analysis of lexical ambiguity in Modern Greek using a computational lexicon. 20-38 - Yu Hou:
A corpus-based study of nominalization in English translations of Chinese literary prose. 39-52 - Ana Lucic, Catherine Blake:
A syntactic characterization of authorship style surrounding proper names. 53-70 - Julianne Nyhan, Andrew Flinn, Anne Welsh:
Oral History and the Hidden Histories project: towards histories of computing in the humanities. 71-85 - Michele Pasin, John Bradley:
Factoid-based prosopography and computer ontologies: towards an integrated approach. 86-97 - Vered Volansky, Noam Ordan, Shuly Wintner:
On the features of translationese. 98-118 - Mike Baxter:
On the distributional regularity of shot lengths in film. 119-128 - Jordan DeLong:
Horseshoes, handgrenades, and model fitting: the lognormal distribution is a pretty good model for shot-length distribution of Hollywood films. 129-136 - Nick Redfern:
The log-normal distribution is not an appropriate parametric model for shot length distributions of Hollywood films. 137-151
- Peter Boot:
Distant Reading. Franco Moretti. 152-154 - Peter Boot:
Defining Digital Humanities. A Reader. Melissa Terras, Julianne Nyhan and Edward Vanhoutte (eds). 154-156
Volume 30, Number 2, June 2015
- Marta R. Costa-jussà, Mireia Farrús:
Towards human linguistic machine translation evaluation. 157-166 - Maciej Eder:
Does size matter? Authorship attribution, small samples, big problem. 167-182 - Lorna M. Hughes, Paul S. Ell, Gareth A. G. Knight, Milena Dobreva:
Assessing and measuring impact of a digital collection in the humanities: An analysis of the SPHERE (Stormont Parliamentary Hansards: Embedded in Research and Education) Project. 183-198 - Mike Kestemont, Sara Moens, Jeroen Deploige:
Collaborative authorship in the twelfth century: A stylometric study of Hildegard of Bingen and Guibert of Gembloux. 199-224 - Suleiman Odat, Tudor Groza, Jane Hunter:
Extracting structured data from publications in the Art Conservation Domain. 225-245 - Jacques Savoy:
Comparative evaluation of term selection functions for authorship attribution. 246-261 - Seth van Hooland, Max De Wilde, Ruben Verborgh, Thomas Steiner, Rik Van de Walle:
Exploring entity recognition and disambiguation for cultural heritage collections. 262-279 - David-Antoine Williams:
Method as tautology in the digital humanities. 280-293 - Tarrin Wills:
Relational data modelling of textual corpora: The Skaldic Project and its extensions. 294-313
Volume 30, Number 3, September 2015
- Edward Vanhoutte:
Special and thematic issues then and now. 315-321
- Michael A. Covington, Iris Potter, Tony Snodgrass:
Stylometric classification of different translations of the same text into the same language. 322-325 - Clarence Green:
An analysis of the relationship between cohesion and clause combination in English discourse employing NLP and data mining approaches. 326-343 - Shesen Guo, Ganzhou Zhang, Run Zhai, Zehua Song:
Distribution of English syllables in e-books of Project Gutenberg and the evolution of syllable number in two subcorpora. 344-353 - Manuel Portela, António Rito Silva:
A model for a virtual LdoD. 354-370 - Peter Petré:
What grammar reveals about sex and death: interdisciplinary applications of corpus-based linguistics. 371-387 - Ana Isabel Queiroz, Margarida Lopes Fernandes, Filipa Soares:
The Portuguese literary wolf. 388-404 - Edoardo Saccenti, Leonardo Tenori:
Multivariate modeling of the collaboration between Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa for the librettos of three operas by Giacomo Puccini. 405-422 - Gerold Schneider, Hans Martin Lehmann, Peter Schneider:
Parsing early and late modern English corpora. 423-439 - Charalampos Tsimpouris, Kyriakos N. Sgarbas, Sofia Panagiotopoulou:
Acronym identification in Greek legal texts. 440-451 - Ronald Haentjens Dekker, Dirk Van Hulle, Gregor Middell, Vincent Neyt, Joris van Zundert:
Computer-supported collation of modern manuscripts: CollateX and the Beckett Digital Manuscript Project. 452-470
Volume 30, Number 4, December 2015
- Martin Andert, Frank Berger, Paul Molitor, Jörg Ritter:
An optimized platform for capturing metadata of historical correspondence. 471-480 - Rebecca Day Babcock, Elizabeth Bilbrey McMellon, Sailaja Athyala:
Teaching online courses in linguistics. 481-494 - Ofer Biller, Jihad El-Sana, Klara Kedem:
The influence of language orthographic characteristics on digital word recognition. 495-502 - Christopher W. Forstall, Neil Coffee, Thomas Buck, Katherine Roache, Sarah L. Jacobson:
Modeling the scholars: Detecting intertextuality through enhanced word-level n-gram matching. 503-515 - Aurélie Herbelot:
The semantics of poetry: A distributional reading. 516-531 - Levi King, Sandra Kübler, Wallace Hooper:
Word-level language identification in The Chymistry of Isaac Newton. 532-540 - Kunlaphak Kongsuwannakul:
Theoretical considerations of applications and implications of concordance-based cloze tests. 541-558 - Kieran O'Halloran:
Deconstructing arguments via digital mining of online comments. 559-588 - Karol R. Opara:
Grammatical rhymes in Polish poetry: A quantitative analysis. 589-598 - Ayaka Uesaka, Masakatsu Murakami:
Verifying the authorship of Saikaku Ihara's work in early modern Japanese literature; a quantitative approach. 599-607
- Greta Franzini:
Digital Critical Editions (2014) Daniel Apollon, Claire Bélisle and Philippe Régnier. 608-609 - Anna Jobin:
Online Evaluation of Creativity and the Arts. Hiesun Cecilia Suhr (ed.). 609-611 - Liangping Wu:
The Web as Corpus: Theory and Practice. Maristella Gatto. 611-614
Volume 30, Number Suppl-1, December 2015
- Melissa Terras:
Introduction. i1-i3
- Bethany Nowviskie:
Digital Humanities in the Anthropocene. i4-i15 - Marc Alexander, Fraser Dallachy, Scott Piao, Alistair Baron, Paul Rayson:
Metaphor, Popular Science, and Semantic Tagging: Distant Reading with the Historical Thesaurus of English. i16-i27 - Valentina Bartalesi, Carlo Meghini, Paola Andriani, Mirko Tavoni:
Towards a Semantic Network of Dante's Works and Their Contextual Knowledge. i28-i35 - Laura Dimmit, Gabrielle Kirilloff, Chandler Warren, James Wehrwein:
Exploring the Intersection of Personal and Public Authorial Voice in the Works of Willa Cather. i36-i42 - Lukas Rosenthaler, Peter Fornaro, Claire Clivaz:
DASCH: Data and Service Center for the Humanities. i43-i49 - Uta Hinrichs, Beatrice Alex, Jim Clifford, Andrew Watson, Aaron J. Quigley, Ewan Klein, Colin Coates:
Trading Consequences: A Case Study of Combining Text Mining and Visualization to Facilitate Document Exploration. i50-i75 - Katherine M. Faull, Diane Jakacki:
Digital Learning in an Undergraduate Context: Promoting Long-Term Student-Faculty Place-Based Collaboration. i76-i82 - Stefan Jänicke, Annette Geßner, Greta Franzini, Melissa Terras, Simon Mahony, Gerik Scheuermann:
TRAViz: A Visualization for Variant Graphs. i83-i99 - Patrick Juola:
The Rowling Case: A Proposed Standard Analytic Protocol for Authorship Questions. i100-i113 - Carmen Klaussner, John Nerbonne, Çagri Çöltekin:
Finding Characteristic Features in Stylometric Analysis. i114-i129 - Lauren F. Klein, Jacob Eisenstein, Iris Sun:
Exploratory Thematic Analysis for Digitized Archival Collections. i130-i141 - James O'Sullivan, Diane Jakacki, Mary Galvin:
Programming in the Digital Humanities. i142-i147 - Marie Saldaña:
An Integrated Approach to the Procedural Modeling of Ancient Cities and Buildings. i148-i163 - Amir Zeldes, Caroline T. Schroeder:
Computational Methods for Coptic: Developing and Using Part-of-Speech Tagging for Digital Scholarship in the Humanities. i164-i176 - Valerie Burton, Robert C. H. Sweeny:
Realizing the Democratic Potential of Online Sources in the Classroom. i177-i184 - Johannes Thomann:
The Arabic Papyrology Database. i185-i186 - Jörg Wettlaufer, Christopher Johnson, Martin Scholz, Mark Fichtner, Sree Ganesh Thotempudi:
Semantic Blumenbach: Exploration of Text-Object Relationships with Semantic Web Technology in the History of Science. i187-i198
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