Journal: LLC

Volume 31, Issue 4

671 -- 688Stephen Brown. Words, words. They're all we have to go on: Image finding without the pictures
689 -- 710Jonathan Dunn, Shlomo Argamon, Amin Rasooli, Geet Kumar. Profile-based authorship analysis
711 -- 724Takako Hashimoto, Yukari Shirota, Basabi Chakraborty. Developing a framework for an advisory message board for female victims after disasters: A case study after east Japan great earthquake
725 -- 745Robert Hogenraad. Deaf sentences1 over Ukraine: Mysticism versus ethics
746 -- 761Jan Rybicki. Vive la différence: Tracing the (authorial) gender signal by multivariate analysis of word frequencies
762 -- 772Rachele Sprugnoli, Sara Tonelli, Alessandro Marchetti, Giovanni Moretti. Towards sentiment analysis for historical texts
773 -- 781Viatcheslav Yatsko. Zonal text processing
785 -- 796Wout Dillen, Vincent Neyt. Digital scholarly editing within the boundaries of copyright restrictions
797 -- 810Paul Eggert. The reader-oriented scholarly edition
811 -- 818Murray McGillivray. 'Why don't we do it in the road?': The case for scholarly editing as a public intellectual activity
819 -- 828Meg Meiman. Documentation for the public: Social editing in The Walt Whitman Archive
829 -- 849Allison Muri, Catherine Nygren, Benjamin Neudorf. The Grub Street Project: A digital social edition of London in the long 18th century
850 -- 865Roger Osborne, Anna Gerber, Jane Hunter. Archiving, editing, and reading on the AustESE Workbench: Assembling and theorizing an ontology-based electronic scholarly edition of Joseph Furphy's Such is Life
866 -- 874Kenneth M. Price. The Walt Whitman Archive and the prospects for social editing
875 -- 889Peter M. W. Robinson. Project-based digital humanities and social, digital, and scholarly editions
890 -- 897Peter Shillingsburg. Reliable social scholarly editing
898 -- 910Joris J. van Zundert. The case of the bold button: Social shaping of technology and the digital scholarly edition
911 -- 919Gabriel Egan. Afterword

Volume 31, Issue 3

441 -- 456Paul Caruana-Galizia. Politics and the German language: Testing Orwell's hypothesis using the Google N-Gram corpus
457 -- 469Maciej Eder. Rolling stylometry
470 -- 492Ainara Estarrona, Izaskun Aldezabal, Arantza Díaz de Ilarraza, María Jesús Aranzabe. A methodology for the semiautomatic annotation of EPEC-RolSem, a Basque corpus labeled at predicate level following the PropBank-VerbNet model
493 -- 498Jérôme Jacquin. IMPACT: A tool for transcribing and commenting on oral data, for teaching, learning, and research
499 -- 512Belen Labrador. Translation as an aid to ELT: Using an English-Spanish parallel corpus (P-ACTRES) to study English both and its Spanish counterparts
513 -- 516Elena Spadini, Anna-Maria Sichani. Digital Scholarly Editing. Theories, Models and Methods. Elena Pierazzo
516 -- 519Wenchao Su, Defeng Li. Corpus-Based Studies of Translational Chinese in English-Chinese Translation (2015). Richard Xiao and Xianyao Hu
520 -- 522Tuomas Heikkilä, Teemu Roos. Thematic Section on Studia Stemmatologica
523 -- 539Tara L. Andrews. Analysis of variation significance in artificial traditions using Stemmaweb
540 -- 562Giles Bergel, Christopher J. Howe, Heather F. Windram. Lines of succession in an English ballad tradition: The publishing history and textual descent of The Wandering Jew's Chronicle
563 -- 577Barbara Bordalejo. The genealogy of texts: Manuscript traditions and textual traditions
578 -- 593Marko Halonen. Computer-assisted stemmatology in studying Paulus Juusten's 16th-century chronicle Catalogus et ordinaria successio Episcoporum Finlandensium
594 -- 610Odd Einar Haugen. The silva portentosa of stemmatology: Bifurcation in the recension of Old Norse manuscripts
611 -- 636Jamshid Tehrani, Quan Nguyen, Teemu Roos. Oral fairy tale or literary fake? Investigating the origins of Little Red Riding Hood using phylogenetic network analysis
637 -- 651Peter Robinson 0003. Four rules for the application of phylogenetics in the analysis of textual traditions
652 -- 669Marina Buzzoni, Eugenio Burgio, Martina Modena, Samuela Simion. Open versus closed recensions (Pasquali): Pros and cons of some methods for computer-assisted stemmatology

Volume 31, Issue 2

227 -- 243Mohammad Arshi Saloot, Norisma Idris, AiTi Aw, Dirk Thorleuchter. Twitter corpus creation: The case of a Malay Chat-style-text Corpus (MCC)
244 -- 263Costanza Asnaghi, Dirk Speelman, Dirk Geeraerts. Geographical patterns of formality variation in written Standard California English
264 -- 282Zeeshan Bhatti, Imdad Ali Ismaili, Dil Nawaz Hakro, Waseem Javid Soomro. Phonetic-based Sindhi spellchecker system using a hybrid model
283 -- 300Susan Brown. Tensions and tenets of socialized scholarship
301 -- 320Douglas Bruster, Geneviève Smith. A new chronology for Shakespeare's plays
321 -- 332Jack Elliott. Vocabulary decay in category romance
333 -- 356Dustin Heckmann, Anette Frank, Matthias Arnold, Peter Gietz, Christian Roth. Citation segmentation from sparse & noisy data: A joint inference approach with Markov logic networks
357 -- 367Renkui Hou, Minghu Jiang. Analysis on Chinese quantitative stylistic features based on text mining
368 -- 373Richard Khoury, Francesca Sapsford. Latin word stemming using Wiktionary
374 -- 397Jefrey Lijffijt, Terttu Nevalainen, Tanja Säily, Panagiotis Papapetrou, Kai Puolamäki, Heikki Mannila. Significance testing of word frequencies in corpora
398 -- 410Theo Meder, Dong Nguyen, Rilana Gravel. The apocalypse on Twitter
411 -- 427Behzad Mirzababaei, Heshaam Faili. Discriminative reranking for context-sensitive spell-checker
428 -- 440Andrea Sartori. Towards an intellectual history of digitization: Myths, dystopias, and discursive shifts in museum computing

Volume 31, Issue 1

1 -- 20Ahmad Alqurneh, Aida Mustapha, Masrah Azrifah Azmi Murad, Nurfadhlina Mohd Sharef. Stylometric model for detecting oath expressions: A case study for Quranic texts
21 -- 29Fadoua Ataa-Allah. Finite-state transducer for Amazigh verbal morphology
30 -- 54Ehud Alexander Avner, Noam Ordan, Shuly Wintner. Identifying translationese at the word and sub-word level
55 -- 71David Correia Saavedra. Automatically identifying blend splinters that are morpheme candidates
72 -- 83Rodrigo Duarte Seabra, Valter Pereira Romano, Vanderci de Andrade Aguilera, Nathan Oliveira. A Brazilian contribution to teaching Geolinguistics from a tool for generating and for visualizing linguistic maps
84 -- 94Miguel Escobar Varela. The Essay/ontology Workflow, Challenges in Combining Formal and Interpretive Methods
95 -- 117Heshaam Faili, Nava Ehsan, Mortaza Montazery, Mohammad Taher Pilehvar. Vafa spell-checker for detecting spelling, grammatical, and real-word errors of Persian language
118 -- 139Thomas Krause, Amir Zeldes. ANNIS3: A new architecture for generic corpus query and visualization
140 -- 151John Lee, Yin Hei Kong. A dependency treebank of Chinese Buddhist texts
152 -- 163John Lee, Ying Cheuk Hui, Yin Hei Kong. Knowledge-rich, computer-assisted composition of Chinese couplets
164 -- 180Gi-Zen Liu, Hui-Ching Lu, Chun-Ting Lai. Towards the construction of a field: The developments and implications of mobile assisted language learning (MALL)
181 -- 203Parisa Saeedi, Heshaam Faili, Azadeh Shakery. Semantic role induction in Persian: An unsupervised approach by using probabilistic models
204 -- 217Walter J. Scheirer, Christopher W. Forstall, Neil Coffee. The sense of a connection: Automatic tracing of intertextuality by meaning
218 -- 219Harriett E. Green. Information 2.0: New Models of Information Production, Distribution and Consumption, 2nd Edition. Martin De Saulles
219 -- 221Lisa Spiro. Martin Paul Eve, Open Access and the Humanities: Contexts, Controversies and the Future
221 -- 223Ken S. McAllister. Rhetoric and the Digital Humanities. Jim Ridolfo and William Hart-Davidson (eds.)
223 -- 225Kathleen Marie Smith. Cultural Heritage Information: Access and Management. Ian Ruthven and G. G. Chowdhury (eds)