Issue navigation
Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018
Original Articles
A method for content analysis applied to newspaper coverage of Japanese personalities in Brazil and Portugal
Luís Fernando Costa
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 231–247, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx050
Non-representational approaches to modeling interpretation in a graphical environment
Johanna Drucker
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 248–263, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx034
Beyond humanities qua digital: Spatial and material development for digital research infrastructures in HumlabX
Anna Foka and others
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 264–278, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx008
Measuring syntactical variation in Germanic texts
Wilbert Heeringa and others
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 279–296, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx029
Smoke and mirrors: Tracing ambiguity in texts
Robert Hogenraad
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 297–315, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx044
Issues on multimodal corpus of Chinese speech acts: A case in multimodal pragmatics
Lihe Huang
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 316–326, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx040
Authorship attribution, constructed languages, and the psycholinguistics of individual variation
Patrick Juola
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 327–335, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx045
CorpusTracer: A CIDOC database for tracing knowledge networks
Florian Kräutli and Matteo Valleriani
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 336–346, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx047
Devising Rhesus: A strange ‘collaboration’ between Aeschylus and Euripides
Nikos Manousakis and Efstathios Stamatatos
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 347–361, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx021
A lexicographical model based on the predicative framework theory (functional grammar) for sense disambiguation. An application to Latin author dictionaries
Manuel Márquez Cruz
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 362–373, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx037
The limits of distinctive words: Re-evaluating literature’s gender marker debate
Sean G Weidman and James O’Sullivan
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 374–390, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx017
The rationale of the born-digital dossier génétique: Digital forensics and the writing process: With examples from the Thomas Kling Archive
Thorsten Ries
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 391–424, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx049
Distributed language representation for authorship attribution
Mirco Kocher and Jacques Savoy
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 425–441, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx046
Revisiting the classification of Gallo-Italic: a dialectometric approach
Marco Tamburelli and Lissander Brasca
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 442–455, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx041
Enabling complex analysis of large-scale digital collections: humanities research, high-performance computing, and transforming access to British Library digital collections
Melissa Terras and others
Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Volume 33, Issue 2, June 2018, Pages 456–466, https://doi.org/10.1093/llc/fqx020
Advertisement
Advertisement