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Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33
Volume 33, Number 1, April 2018
- Vaibhav Agarwal, Parteek Kumar:
A public platform for developing language-independent applications. 1-5 - Gülsüm Baydar, Murat Komesli, Ahenk Yilmaz, Kivanç Kilinç:
Digitizing Lefebvre's Spatial Triad. 6-20 - D. M. Carter, Mirjam Broersma, K. Donnelly, Agnieszka Konopka:
Presenting the Bangor Autoglosser and the Bangor Automated Clause-Splitter. 21-28 - Abdulrahman Essa Al Lily:
Crowd-authoring versus peer-reviewing: An epistemic clash in the field of educational technology. 29-45 - Hartmut Ilsemann:
More news on Sir Thomas More. 46-58 - Corina Koolen, Andreas van Cranenburgh:
Blue eyes and porcelain cheeks: Computational extraction of physical descriptions from Dutch chick lit and literary novels. 59-71 - Moshe Koppel, Shachar Seidman:
Detecting pseudepigraphic texts using novel similarity measures. 72-81 - John Lee, Yin Hei Kong, Mengqi Luo:
Syntactic patterns in classical Chinese poems: A quantitative study. 82-95 - Javier Martín Arista:
The semantic poles of Old English: Toward the 3D representation of complex polysemy. 96-111 - Xiaxing Pan, Xinying Chen, Haitao Liu:
Harmony in diversity: The language codes in English-Chinese poetry translation. 128-142 - Jacques Savoy:
Analysis of the style and the rhetoric of the 2016 US presidential primaries. 143-159 - Pek San Tay, Cheng Peng Sik, Wai Meng Chan:
Rethinking the concept of an 'Author' in the face of digital technology advances: A perspective from the copyright law of a commonwealth country. 160-172 - Alejandro H. Toselli, Luis A. Leiva, Isabel Bordes-Cabrera, Celio Hernández-Tornero, Vicente Bosch Campos, Enrique Vidal:
Transcribing a 17th-century botanical manuscript: Longitudinal evaluation of document layout detection and interactive transcription. 173-202 - Nuria Yáñez-Bouza, Joan C. Beal, Ranjan Sen, Christine Wallis:
'Proper' pro-nun-ʃha-ʃhun in Eighteenth-Century English: ECEP as a New Tool for the Study of Historical Phonology and Dialectology. 203-227
- Yali Shi:
Grammatical Complexity in Academic English: Linguistic Change in Writing. Douglas Biber and Bethany Gray. 228-230
Volume 33, Number 2, June 2018
- Luís Fernando Costa:
A method for content analysis applied to newspaper coverage of Japanese personalities in Brazil and Portugal. 231-247 - Johanna Drucker:
Non-representational approaches to modeling interpretation in a graphical environment. 248-263 - Anna Foka, Anna Misharina, Viktor Arvidsson, Stefan Gelfgren:
Beyond humanities qua digital: Spatial and material development for digital research infrastructures in HumlabX. 264-278 - Wilbert Heeringa, Femke Swarte, Anja Schüppert, Charlotte Gooskens:
Measuring syntactical variation in Germanic texts. 279-296 - Robert Hogenraad:
Smoke and mirrors: Tracing ambiguity in texts. 297-315 - Lihe Huang:
Issues on multimodal corpus of Chinese speech acts: A case in multimodal pragmatics. 316-326 - Patrick Juola:
Authorship attribution, constructed languages, and the psycholinguistics of individual variation. 327-335 - Florian Kräutli, Matteo Valleriani:
CorpusTracer: A CIDOC database for tracing knowledge networks. 336-346 - Nikos Manousakis, Efstathios Stamatatos:
Devising Rhesus: A strange 'collaboration' between Aeschylus and Euripides. 347-361 - Manuel Márquez Cruz:
A lexicographical model based on the predicative framework theory (functional grammar) for sense disambiguation. An application to Latin author dictionaries. 362-373 - Sean G. Weidman, James O'Sullivan:
The limits of distinctive words: Re-evaluating literature's gender marker debate. 374-390 - Thorsten Ries:
The rationale of the born-digital dossier génétique: Digital forensics and the writing process: With examples from the Thomas Kling Archive. 391-424 - Mirco Kocher, Jacques Savoy:
Distributed language representation for authorship attribution. 425-441 - Marco Tamburelli, Lissander Brasca:
Revisiting the classification of Gallo-Italic: a dialectometric approach. 442-455 - Melissa Terras, James Baker, James Hetherington, David Beavan, Martin Zaltz Austwick, Anne Welsh, Helen O'Neill, Will Finley, Oliver Duke-Williams, Adam Farquhar:
Enabling complex analysis of large-scale digital collections: humanities research, high-performance computing, and transforming access to British Library digital collections. 456-466
Volume 33, Number 3, September 2018
- Tim Causer, Kris Grint, Anna-Maria Sichani, Melissa Terras:
'Making such bargain': Transcribe Bentham and the quality and cost-effectiveness of crowdsourced transcription. 467-487 - Seyed Mohammad Sadegh Dashti, Amid Khatibi Bardsiri, Vahid Khatibi Bardsiri:
Correcting real-word spelling errors: A new hybrid approach. 488-499 - Mark Eisen, Alejandro Ribeiro, Santiago Segarra, Gabriel Egan:
Stylometric analysis of Early Modern period English plays. 500-528 - Carlos García-Zorita, Ana R. Pacios:
Topic modelling characterization of Mudejar art based on document titles. 529-539 - Amy Larner Giroux, Connie Harper, R. Paul Wiegand:
Evaluating multi-criteria Connection mechanisms: A new algorithm for browsing digital archives. 540-547 - Hartmut Ilsemann:
Stylometry approaching Parnassus. 548-556 - Dirk Kinable:
At the crossroads of digital humanities and historical lexicography: The Middle Dutch 'seemly play (abel spel) of Winter and Summer' as a research case. 557-574 - Timo Korkiakangas:
Spelling variation in historical text corpora: The case of early medieval documentary Latin. 575-591 - Changsoo Lee:
Do language combinations affect translators' stylistic visibility in translated texts? 592-603 - Anne K. Luther:
Visual meta-data in qualitative analysis. 604-611 - Federico Nanni, Laura Dietz, Simone Paolo Ponzetto:
Toward a computational history of universities: Evaluating text mining methods for interdisciplinarity detection from PhD dissertation abstracts. 612-620 - Andrea Nini:
An authorship analysis of the Jack the Ripper letters. 621-636 - Michael P. Oakes:
Computer stylometry of C. S. Lewis's The Dark Tower and related texts. 637-650 - Amir Hossein Rasekh, Amir Hossein Arshia, Seyed Mostafa Fakhrahmad, Mohammad Hadi Sadreddini:
Mining and discovery of hidden relationships between software source codes and related textual documents. 651-669 - Donald Sturgeon:
Unsupervised identification of text reuse in early Chinese literature. 670-684 - Arjuna Tuzzi, Michele A. Cortelazzo:
What is Elena Ferrante? A comparative analysis of a secretive bestselling Italian writer. 685-702
- Erratum. 703
Volume 33, Number 4, December 2018
- Valentina Bartalesi, Carlo Meghini, Daniele Metilli, Mirko Tavoni, Paola Andriani:
A web application for exploring primary sources: The DanteSources case study. 705-723 - John Burrows:
Rho-grams and rho-sets: Significant links in the web of words. 724-747 - Saeed Farzi, Heshaam Faili, Sahar Kianian:
A preordering model based on phrasal dependency tree. 748-765 - Tuomas Heikkilä, Teemu Roos:
Quantitative methods for the analysis of medieval calendars. 766-787 - Hartmut Ilsemann:
Christopher Marlowe: Hype and Hoax. 788-820 - Gabi Kirilloff, Peter J. Capuano, Julius Fredrick, Matthew L. Jockers:
From a distance 'You might mistake her for a man': A closer reading of gender and character action in Jane Eyre, The Law and the Lady, and A Brilliant Woman1. 821-844 - Sabine Lang, Björn Ommer:
Attesting similarity: Supporting the organization and study of art image collections with computer vision. 845-856 - Magdalena Pastuch, Beata Duda, Karolina Lisczyk, Barbara Mitrenga, Joanna Przyklenk, Katarzyna Sujkowska-Sobisz:
Digital Humanities in Poland from the Perspective of the Historical Linguist of the Polish Language: Achievements, Needs, Demands. 857-873 - Mahmoud Rahat, Alireza Talebpour:
Parsa: An open information extraction system for Persian. 874-893 - Nikhil Kumar Rajput, Bhavya Ahuja, Manoj Kumar Riyal:
A novel approach towards deriving vocabulary quotient. 894-901 - Jacques Savoy:
Is Starnone really the author behind Ferrante? 902-918
- Mina Momeni:
A Prehistory of the Cloud. Tung-Hui Hu. 919-920 - Lirong Xu:
Quantitative Historical Linguistics: A Corpus Framework (Oxford Studies in Diachronic and Historical Linguistics). Gard B. Jenset and Barbara McGillivray. 920-922 - Huayong Li:
Corpus Linguistics for Vocabulary: A Guide for Research. Paweł Szudarski. 923-925
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