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Computers and the Humanities, Volume 29
Volume 29, Number 1, January 1995
- Charles F. Goldfarb:
Preface. 1 - Nancy Ide, Jean Véronis:
Introduction. 3-4 - Nancy Ide, C. M. Sperberg-McQueen:
The TEI: History, goals, and future. 5-15 - C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, Lou Burnard:
The design of the TEI encoding scheme. 17-39 - Lou Burnard:
What is SGML and how does it help? 41-50 - Harry E. Gaylord:
Character representation. 51-73 - Richard Giordano:
The TEI header and the documentation of electronic texts. 75-84 - Dominic Dunlop:
Practical considerations in the use of TEI headers in a large corpus. 85-98
Volume 29, Number 2, March 1995
- David Chisholm, David Robey:
Encoding verse texts. 99-111 - John Lavagnino, Elli Mylonas:
The show must go on: 1 Problems of tagging performance texts. 113-121 - Robin C. Cover, Peter M. W. Robinson:
Encoding textual criticism. 123-136 - Daniel Greenstein, Lou Burnard:
Speaking with one voice: Encoding standards and the prospects for an integrated approach to computing in history. 137-148 - Stig Johansson:
The encoding of spoken texts. 149-158 - Alan K. Melby:
E-Tif: An electronic terminology interchange format. 159-165 - Nancy Ide, Jean Véronis:
Encoding dictionaries. 167-179
Volume 29, Number 3, May 1995
- Steven J. DeRose, David G. Durand:
The TEI hypertext guidelines. 181-190 - D. Terence Langendoen, Gary F. Simons:
A rationale for the TEI recommendations for feature-structure markup. 191-209 - David T. Barnard, Lou Burnard, Jean-Pierre Gaspart, Lynne A. Price, C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, Giovanni B. Varile:
Hierarchical encoding of text: Technical problems and SGML solutions. 211-231
Volume 29, Number 4, July 1995
- James H. Bradford, Paulette Côté-Laurence:
An application of artificial intelligence to the choreography of dance. 233-240 - Khosrow Kaikhah, Craig Gandy:
Generating non-intentional semantically-correct english sentences in an object-oriented environment. 241-257 - Colin Martindale, Dean McKenzie:
On the utility of content analysis in author attribution: The Federalist. 259-270 - Lee Sigelman:
By their (new) words shall ye know them: Edith Wharton, Marion Mainwaring, and The Buccaneers. 271-283 - M. W. A. Smith:
Virtuoso pianism from the QWERTY keyboard: The electronic realization of Liszt's scores. 285-296 - Karen Lunsford:
Electronic texts and the internet: A review of The English Server. 297-305 - James E. Everett:
Technical review. 307-316 - David Graham:
Courseware review. 317-319 - Maria Daniels:
Book review. 321-322 - Harry E. Gaylord:
Character representation. 323-326
Volume 29, Number 5, October 1995
- Louis T. Milic:
The century of prose corpus: A half-million word historical data base. 327-337 - Julius Laffal:
A concept analysis of Jonathan Swift's A tale of a Tub and Gulliver's Travels. 339-361 - Estelle Irizarry:
Weighing the evidence: Legal discourse in the 19th-Century Spanish feminist Concepción Arenal. 363-374 - Alan Bailin:
Intelligent computer-assisted language learning: A bibliography. 375-387 - Allen Renear:
Understanding (hyper) media: Required readings. 389-407 - Eric Johnson:
Computer documentation: Writing about technology. 409-411
Volume 29, Number 6, December 1995
- Michael W. Berry, Paul G. Young:
Using latent semantic indexing for multilanguage information retrieval. 413-429 - Carol L. Winkelmann:
Electronic literacy, critical pedagogy, and collaboration: A case for cyborg writing. 431-448 - David Lowe, Robert Matthews:
Shakespeare vs. fletcher: A stylometric analysis by radial basis functions. 449-461 - Michael Levison, Gregory Lessard:
New words from old: A formalism for word-formation. 463-479 - John Lavagnino, Jeff Tennant:
Book reviews. 481-483
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