Language archives, like other scholarly digital repositories, are built with two major audiences in mind. These are depositors of language data and various potential end-users of these materials: researchers (linguistics and others), language communities, students, educators, artists, etc. Being a relatively new phenomenon, language archives have made significant strides forward in providing access to digital language data. With the purpose of identifying the needs of language archive end-users (both met and currently unmet), our interdisciplinary team of linguists and information scientists interviewed language archive managers, end-users, and depositors. This study offers a first look into the decision-making processes and end-user experi...
Data collection is essential to the great majority of research projects in linguistics, but sadly ma...
Users of digital language archives face a number of barriers when trying to discover and reuse the m...
Fieldwork, description, and preservation of research results are often seen as endpoints of language...
Conference paper elucidates the issues facing language archive managers and users through two steps:...
In the past two decades, federal agencies such as National Science Foundation and Institute for Muse...
This article describes findings from a workshop that initiated a dialogue between the fields of user...
Lack of adequate descriptive metadata remains a major barrier to accessing and reusing language docu...
Article explores the training gap between the way these materials are organized and represented and ...
This contribution presents “The Language Archive” (TLA), a new unit at the MPI for Psycholinguistics...
This article analyzes item‐level metadata in three language archives by focusing on free‐text metada...
Citizen scientists (who may be speakers of endangered languages) who want to document a language may...
Technological developments in the last decades enabled an unprecedented growth in volumes and qualit...
While many language archives were originally conceived for the purpose of preserving linguistic data...
We survey the history of practices, theories, and trends in archiving for the purposes of language d...
With the emergence of language documentation as a distinct sub-discipline of linguistics, and recent...
Data collection is essential to the great majority of research projects in linguistics, but sadly ma...
Users of digital language archives face a number of barriers when trying to discover and reuse the m...
Fieldwork, description, and preservation of research results are often seen as endpoints of language...
Conference paper elucidates the issues facing language archive managers and users through two steps:...
In the past two decades, federal agencies such as National Science Foundation and Institute for Muse...
This article describes findings from a workshop that initiated a dialogue between the fields of user...
Lack of adequate descriptive metadata remains a major barrier to accessing and reusing language docu...
Article explores the training gap between the way these materials are organized and represented and ...
This contribution presents “The Language Archive” (TLA), a new unit at the MPI for Psycholinguistics...
This article analyzes item‐level metadata in three language archives by focusing on free‐text metada...
Citizen scientists (who may be speakers of endangered languages) who want to document a language may...
Technological developments in the last decades enabled an unprecedented growth in volumes and qualit...
While many language archives were originally conceived for the purpose of preserving linguistic data...
We survey the history of practices, theories, and trends in archiving for the purposes of language d...
With the emergence of language documentation as a distinct sub-discipline of linguistics, and recent...
Data collection is essential to the great majority of research projects in linguistics, but sadly ma...
Users of digital language archives face a number of barriers when trying to discover and reuse the m...
Fieldwork, description, and preservation of research results are often seen as endpoints of language...