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1
Digital Mediations: A Report on Digital Transformations in Modern Languages ...
Spence, Paul; Brandão, Renata. - : Zenodo, 2022
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2
Digital Mediations: A Report on Digital Transformations in Modern Languages ...
Spence, Paul; Brandão, Renata. - : Zenodo, 2022
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3
Disrupting Digital Monolingualism: A report on multilingualism in digital theory and practice ...
Spence, Paul. - : Zenodo, 2021
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4
Disrupting Digital Monolingualism: A report on multilingualism in digital theory and practice ...
Spence, Paul. - : Zenodo, 2021
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5
Introduction
In: LLC. - Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press 28 (2013) 4, 491
OLC Linguistik
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6
Introducing DH 2010
In: LLC. - Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press 26 (2011) 3, 253-256
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OLC Linguistik
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7
Introducing DH 2010
Nerbonne, John; Nowviskie, Bethany; Spence, Paul. - : Oxford University Press, 2011
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8
Expressing complex associations in medieval historical documents: the Henry III Fine Rolls Project
In: Literary & linguistic computing. - Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press 23 (2008) 3, 311-326
OLC Linguistik
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9
Selected papers from Digital Humanities 2007, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 2 - 8 June 2007
Siemens, Raymond George (Hrsg.); Unsworth, John (Hrsg.); McCarty, Willard. - Oxford : Oxford Univ. Press, 2008
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10
Expressing complex associations in medieval historical documents: the Henry III Fine Rolls Project
Ciula, Arianna; Spence, Paul; Vieira, José Miguel. - : Oxford University Press, 2008
Abstract: This article focuses on the use of technologies traditionally associated with knowledge representation to express complex associations between entities in historical texts that have been marked up in XML, according to the Text Encoding Initiative guidelines. In particular, we describe our exploration of the potential role of an ontology in facilitating the interpretation of implicit and hidden associations in the sources of interest, examining its use, and limits in a digital humanities project in connection with editing tools and delivery issues. We demonstrate our findings based on the Henry III Fine Rolls project, where an ontology—built using the RDF (Resource Description Framework)/OWL (Web Ontology Language) technologies—is being developed to make explicit information about person, place, and subject entities marked up as instances in the core texts themselves. For any historian, there is a natural tension between primary sources (as documentary records) and the analysis that produces a context for interpretation. We will argue that the combination of core mark-up (encoded in TEI) and an ontology (in RDF/OWL) provides a powerful model for representing the complexity of this tension and facilitates the necessarily dynamic process of scholarly interpretation.
Keyword: Original Articles
URL: http://llc.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/23/3/311
https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqn018
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