11.0523 new online

Humanist Discussion Group (humanist@kcl.ac.uk)
Mon, 19 Jan 1998 18:37:59 +0000 (GMT)

Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 11, No. 523.
Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
<http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/>
<http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/>

[1] From: Patrick Durusau <pdurusau@emory.edu> (74)
Subject: Seminar on Biblical Language Texts

[2] From: David Green <david@ninch.org> (123)
Subject: ARL: Directory of E-Journals Now Online

[3] From: dougb@bobo.link.cs.cmu.edu (23)
Subject: Lexical FreeNet

--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 1998 10:12:34 -0500
From: Patrick Durusau <pdurusau@emory.edu>
Subject: Seminar on Biblical Language Texts

****************Biblical Language Standards Mailing List****************

Announcing the Biblical Language Standards mailing list!

The Biblical Language Standards mailing list is a forum for discussion
of and announcements concerning the ongoing work of the SBL Seminar on
Electronic Standards for Biblical Language Texts. Biblical scholars,
publishers, librarians, archivists, researchers and software designers
need good computer tools for working with biblical langauges and texts.
This seminar is dedicated to solving problems such as interchange and
publication of materials containing biblical languages, creation of
electronic texts for analysis and archiving, and other problems
routinely faced by those working with biblical materials. The goals of
the seminar are to:

(1) Create standards for electronic representation and interchange of
all types of documents in biblical and related studies. These standards
will include naming, description, and analysis.

(2) Encourage the development of software implementing these standards.

(3) Produce a set of sample documents and software developed as models
which are consistent with these standards.

(4) Build a consensus for adoption of these standards.

(5) Provide training in their use.

The Seminar is using the TEI Guidelines as the starting point for its
discussion of encoding biblical language texts with a view of modifying
or extending those guidelines as necessary.

Current Working Groups of the Seminar and their members include:

Critical apparatus: Jimmy Adair, jadair@emory.edu (chair), Winfried
Bader, bader@dbg.de, Lewis Barth, lbarth@mizar.usc.edu, Michael Bakker,
mbakker@let.uva.nl, Bruce Morrill, bruce@math.ksu.edu, Bernard Taylor,
taylorb@earthlink.net.

Dictionaries: Stephen Kaufman, skaufman@cn.huc.edu (Chair), Erik
Eynikel, e.eynikel@theo.kun.nl, Peter Burton,
burto009@maroon.tc.umn.edu, Dale Wheeler, dalemw@teleport.com, Richard
Whitaker, Richard.Whitaker@ptsem.edu.

Entity Sets and Writing System Declarations: Patrick Durusau,
pdurusau@emory.edu, Kirk Lowery, KirkLowery@xc.org.

Hebrew Syntax: Kirk Lowery, KirkLowery@xc.org, Dale Wheeler,
dalemw@teleport.com.

Imaging: Robert Kraft, kraft@ccat.sas.upenn.edu.

Practical Applications: Proposed group for short-term projects and
testing of proposed solutions from other working groups.

Participation in the work of the Seminar and its groups is open to
biblical scholars of all viewpoints, publishers and software developers.
New working groups will be formed to address additional issues as the
work of the Seminar
progresses. Please contact either Patrick Durusau, pdurusau@emory.edu,
or Susan Hockey, Susan.Hockey@UAlberta.ca, the co-chairs of the Seminar
if you would like to formally participate in the work of the Seminar.

Subscription to the list is open to any interested party but the list is
moderated. To subscribe send the following command to
majordomo@shemesh.scholar.emory.edu:

subscribe bls

The Seminar hopes to result in standards that will assist scholars,
publishers, librarians and archivists, software developers and anyone
else involved in biblical studies. Your support is appreciated.

Patrick

Patrick Durusau
Information Technology
Scholars Press
pdurusau@emory.edu
Co-Chair, SBL Seminar on Electronic Standards for Biblical Language
Texts

--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 1998 16:59:37 -0500
From: David Green <david@ninch.org>
Subject: ARL: Directory of E-Journals Now Online

NINCH ANNOUNCEMENT
January 15, 1998

Association of Research Libraries'
DIRECTORY OF ELECTRONIC JOURNALS,
NEWSLETTERS & ACADEMIC DISCUSSION LISTS
New Seventh Edition
<http://www.arl.org:591/>

>Date: Fri, 16 Jan 1998 15:13:46 -0500 (EST)
>From: Patricia Brennan <patricia@arl.org>
>To: Multiple recipients of list <arl-announce@arl.org>
>
January 15, 1998

ARL Announces...

Seventh Edition of the Directory of Electronic Journals, Newsletters
and Academic Discussion Lists

<http://www.arl.org/scomm/edir>

The Association of Research Libraries is pleased to announce the
availability of the most recent edition of the Directory of Electronic
Journals, Newsletters and Academic Discussion Lists (1997). Now in its
seventh year, the Directory includes over 7,000 listings of journals,
newsletters, zines, and professional e-conferences accessible via the
Internet and has become the standard reference work for these resources.
The Directory is edited by Dru W. Mogge, ARL Electronic Services
Coordinator, of ARL's Office of Scholarly Communication. For the first
time, a complete, fully searchable version of the Directory is available on
the Web.

The Directory is organized into two main sections: E-Journals and
Newsletters, and Scholarly and Professional E-Conferences. The e-journals
section is compiled and maintained by ARL, while the e-conferences entries
come from Diane Kovacs of Kovacs Consulting. New with the 7th edition is a
much expanded subject guide covering both sections; an index of keywords,
publishers/distributors, and titles is also included. In addition,
organization and layout of the journal entries have been enhanced for ease
of use. For each entry, title, description, URL/subscription information,
ISSN, costs, first issue date, frequency, and contact information is
included. Each journal entry includes peer-review status and back issue
availability; each list entry indicates whether it is moderated or not and
if archives are available.

This year's Directory includes over 3,400 serial titles, twice as many as
were included last year. Summary analysis of the entries in this year's
Directory indicate that, out of 1,465 titles categorized as electronic
journals, 1,002 are peer-reviewed and 708 charge in some manner for access.
In the 1996 edition, 47 journals were peer-reviewed and 168 were only
available on a fee basis. Increasingly, traditional print publishers are
making their titles available electronically. These exist both as
e-versions of their paper products and as new electronic products that
supplement or replace the print journal. Scientific journals constitute the
greatest number of entries in the journals section, with 29%. Fourteen
percent of the journal titles are categorized as arts and humanities
journals, while 28% are social science titles.

The online version of the Directory offers users the ability to browse
through individual entries or to search for specific items. Search options
include searching by title, description, publisher, peer review basis, or
subject. Also included online is the thesaurus used to classify the
entries, thereby allowing users to search by specific keywords. All
web-accessible e-journals have a link from the Directory entry to the
journal's actual site. The electronic version of the Directory is available
as a stand-alone product, while purchasers of print copies automatically
receive access to the e-version.

Each year, ARL chooses a particularly relevant or noteworthy article on
electronic scholarly publishing for inclusion in the Directory: the 7th
Edition article is Judy Luther's " Full Text Journal Subscriptions: An
Evolutionary Process." Previously published in the June 1997 issue of
Against the Grain, " Full Text Journal Subscriptions" reviews options
offered to libraries by commercial publishers, subscription agents, and
not-for-profit publishers. Luther addresses issues such as licensing
packages and pricing structures, as well as various types of format.

The Association of Research Libraries is a not-for-profit membership
organization comprising 121 libraries of North American research
institutions. Its mission is to shape and influence forces affecting the
future of research libraries in the process of scholarly communication. ARL
programs and services promote equitable access to and effective use of
recorded knowledge in support of teaching, research, scholarship, and
community service. The Association articulates the concerns of research
libraries and their institutions, forges coalitions, influences information
policy development, and supports innovation and improvements in research
library operations. ARL operates as a forum for the exchange of ideas and
as an agent for collective action.
For more information about the Directory contact Dru Mogge, ARL Electronic
Services Coordinator at <dru@arl.org>.

For information on how to order a copy contact Ken Rodriguez in the ARL
Publications Office at <pubs@arl.org>.

___________________________________________________________________________
ORDER FORM

Directory of Electronic Journals, Newsletters and Academic Discussion Lists,
7th Edition (1997)
ISSN: 1057-1337
950 pbk

Order online at: http://www.arl.org/pubscat/order/

Prices:
Print and electronic package: members, $65
nonmembers, $95

Electronic access only: members, $50
nonmembers, $70

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--[3]------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 1998 06:20:46 +0000
From: dougb@bobo.link.cs.cmu.edu (by way of Willard McCarty
<Willard.McCarty@kcl.ac.uk>)
Subject: Lexical FreeNet

Now available on the Web for your entertainment and edification is
a semantic network program called Lexical FreeNet:

http://www.link.cs.cmu.edu/lexfn/

FreeNet is a database system for creating and querying "finite
relation expression networks". Lexical FreeNet combines several
WordNet-derived relations with a statistically-derived trigger
relation, and throws in a couple phonetic dictionary-derived relations
for good measure. The result is, I hope, a useful resource for
discovering relationships between concepts across dimensions of
meaning and sound. You can presently issue shortest path queries,
concept "intersection" queries, and "rhyme coercion" queries. The
latter finds rhyming word pairs that are similar in meaning to two
input concepts. You can also use the system simply to lookup the
words that are related in some way to a source, so in some ways this
program supercedes my WordNet-enhanced online rhyming dictionary
(http://www.link.cs.cmu.edu/dougb/rhyme.html), but not completely.

My intent is to use the system for continued research on automatic
segmentation, summarization, and information extraction on transcripts
of spontaneous speech. The code is not yet publically available but
if there is sufficient interest I would be happy to make it so.
Please feel free to check out the program and read the technical
note if you get a chance. Any feedback is much appreciated.

Regards,
Doug

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