Language archives provide an excellent service for structuring collections and for making them accessible. Connecting speakers with archival sources scattered in different locations, only available via the internet, is addressed by our use of local subcollections – files with their descriptions exported from the collection and delivered on local wifi transmitters. (session 2.1.1
Over the past two decades, there has been a rise in utilizing language archives not only for linguis...
During the past 10 years, the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics has developed an extensive ...
© 2013 Dr. Nicholas ThiebergerHundreds of hours of ethnographic field recordings and their associate...
The popular expression ‘locked in the archive’ suggests that items are impossible to find and access...
Fieldwork, description, and preservation of research results are often seen as endpoints of language...
Language archives play an important role in keeping records of the world’s languages safe. Accessibl...
Creating archive deposits of language materials that are usable beyond descriptive linguistics remai...
Language archives, like other scholarly digital repositories, are built with two major audiences in ...
In crude quantitative terms, Zipf’s law tells us that documentation of something as simple as word u...
The last ten years has seen the linguistic scientific domain gain a new, though now established, sub...
Article reporting the experiences made in preparing a corpus of historic Austrian dialect recordings...
With the emergence of language documentation as a distinct sub-discipline of linguistics, and recent...
The Language Archive manages one of the largest and most varied sets of natural language data. This ...
Yurok is a severely endangered language still spoken by about half a dozen elderly people in northwe...
Language resources are the bread and butter of language documentation and linguistic investigation. ...
Over the past two decades, there has been a rise in utilizing language archives not only for linguis...
During the past 10 years, the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics has developed an extensive ...
© 2013 Dr. Nicholas ThiebergerHundreds of hours of ethnographic field recordings and their associate...
The popular expression ‘locked in the archive’ suggests that items are impossible to find and access...
Fieldwork, description, and preservation of research results are often seen as endpoints of language...
Language archives play an important role in keeping records of the world’s languages safe. Accessibl...
Creating archive deposits of language materials that are usable beyond descriptive linguistics remai...
Language archives, like other scholarly digital repositories, are built with two major audiences in ...
In crude quantitative terms, Zipf’s law tells us that documentation of something as simple as word u...
The last ten years has seen the linguistic scientific domain gain a new, though now established, sub...
Article reporting the experiences made in preparing a corpus of historic Austrian dialect recordings...
With the emergence of language documentation as a distinct sub-discipline of linguistics, and recent...
The Language Archive manages one of the largest and most varied sets of natural language data. This ...
Yurok is a severely endangered language still spoken by about half a dozen elderly people in northwe...
Language resources are the bread and butter of language documentation and linguistic investigation. ...
Over the past two decades, there has been a rise in utilizing language archives not only for linguis...
During the past 10 years, the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics has developed an extensive ...
© 2013 Dr. Nicholas ThiebergerHundreds of hours of ethnographic field recordings and their associate...