How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data :: speech acts and beyond /
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
[2018]
|
Schriftenreihe: | Studies in corpus linguistics ;
v. 84. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource. |
Bibliographie: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
ISBN: | 9789027264299 9027264295 |
ISSN: | 1388-0373 ; |
Internformat
MARC
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100 | 1 | |a Weisser, Martin, |e author. | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : |b speech acts and beyond / |c Martin Weisser. |
264 | 1 | |a Amsterdam ; |a Philadelphia : |b John Benjamins Publishing Company, |c [2018] | |
300 | |a 1 online resource. | ||
336 | |a text |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |a computer |b c |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |a online resource |b cr |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 1 | |a Studies in corpus linguistics (SCL), |x 1388-0373 ; |v volume 84 | |
504 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index. | ||
505 | 0 | |a Intro; How to Do Corpus Pragmatics on Pragmatically Annotated Data; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; List of tables; List of figures; Abbreviations; 1. Introduction; 1.1 Previous approaches to pragmatics and discourse; 1.2 Speech acts; 1.3 Approaches to corpus-/computer-based pragmatics; 1.4 Outline of the book; 1.5 Conventions used in this book; 2. Computer-based data in pragmatics; 2.1 Linguistic corpora and pragmatics; 2.2 Issues and standards in text representation and annotation; 2.2.1 General computer-based representation; 2.2.2 Text vs. meta-information. | |
505 | 8 | |a 2.2.3 General linguistic annotation2.3 Problems and specifics in dealing with spoken language transcription; 2.3.1 Issues concerning orthographic representation; 2.3.2 Issues concerning prosody; 2.3.3 Issues concerning segmental and other features; 2.3.4 Issues concerning sequential integrity; 2.3.5 Issues concerning multi-modality; 3. Data, tools and resources; 3.1 Corpus data used in the research; 3.1.1 The SPAADIA Trainline Corpus; 3.1.2 The selection from Trains 93; 3.1.3 The selection from the Switchboard Annotated Dialogue Corpus; 3.1.4 Discarded data; 3.1.5 Supplementary data. | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.2 The DART implementation and its use in handling dialogue data3.2.1 The DART functionality; 3.2.2 The DART XML format; 3.3 Morpho-syntactic resources required for pragmatic analysis; 3.3.1 The generic lexicon concept; 3.3.2 The DART tagset; 3.3.3 Morphology and morpho-syntax; 3.3.4 â#x80;#x98;Synthesisingâ#x80;#x99; domain-specific lexica; 4. The syntax of spoken language units; 4.1 Sentence vs. syntactic types (C-Units); 4.2 Units of analysis and frequency norming for pragmatic purposes; 4.3 Unit types and basic pragmatic functions; 4.3.1 Yes-units; 4.3.2 No-units; 4.3.3 Discourse markers. | |
505 | 8 | |a 4.3.4 Forms of address4.3.5 Wh-questions; 4.3.6 Yes/no- and alternative questions; 4.3.7 Declaratives; 4.3.8 Imperatives; 4.3.9 Fragments and exclamatives; 5. Semantics and semantico-pragmatics; 5.1 The DAMSL annotation scheme; 5.2 Modes; 5.2.1 Grammatical modes; 5.2.2 Interactional modes; 5.2.3 Point-of-view modes; 5.2.4 Volition and personal stance modes; 5.2.5 Social modes; 5.2.6 Syntax-indicating modes; 5.3 Topics; 5.3.1 Generic topics; 5.3.2 Domain-specific topics; 6. The annotation process; 6.1 Issues concerning the general processing of spoken dialogues. | |
505 | 8 | |a 6.1.1 Pre-processing â#x80;#x93; manual and automated unit determination6.1.2 Fillers, pauses, backchannels, overlap, etc; 6.1.3 Handling initial connectors, prepositions and adverbs; 6.1.4 Dealing with disfluent starts; 6.1.5 Parsing and chunking for syntactic purposes; 6.2 Identifying and annotating the individual unit types automatically; 6.2.1 Splitting off and annotating shorter units; 6.2.2 Tagging wh-questions; 6.2.3 Tagging yes/no-questions; 6.2.4 Tagging fragments, imperatives and declaratives; 6.3 Levels above the c-unit; 6.3.1 Answers and other responses; 6.3.2 Echoes. | |
588 | 0 | |a Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on April 19, 2018). | |
630 | 0 | 0 | |a Quantitative linguistics. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n42011360 |
650 | 0 | |a Pragmatics |x Data processing. | |
650 | 0 | |a Pragmatics |x Research |x Methodology. | |
650 | 0 | |a Speech acts (Linguistics) |x Data processing. | |
650 | 0 | |a Speech acts (Linguistics) |x Research |x Methodology. | |
650 | 6 | |a Pragmatique |x Informatique. | |
650 | 6 | |a Pragmatique |x Recherche |x Méthodologie. | |
650 | 6 | |a Actes de parole |x Informatique. | |
650 | 6 | |a Actes de parole |x Recherche |x Méthodologie. | |
650 | 7 | |a LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES |x General. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a Pragmatics |x Data processing |2 fast | |
655 | 4 | |a Electronic book. | |
758 | |i has work: |a How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data (Text) |1 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCH3m8C9WH9Bcjdg7ChR8yd |4 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork | ||
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Print version: |a Weisser, Martin. |t How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data. |d Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2018] |z 9789027200471 |w (DLC) 2017056561 |
830 | 0 | |a Studies in corpus linguistics ; |v v. 84. |x 1388-0373 |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n98023070 | |
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author_facet | Weisser, Martin |
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contents | Intro; How to Do Corpus Pragmatics on Pragmatically Annotated Data; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; List of tables; List of figures; Abbreviations; 1. Introduction; 1.1 Previous approaches to pragmatics and discourse; 1.2 Speech acts; 1.3 Approaches to corpus-/computer-based pragmatics; 1.4 Outline of the book; 1.5 Conventions used in this book; 2. Computer-based data in pragmatics; 2.1 Linguistic corpora and pragmatics; 2.2 Issues and standards in text representation and annotation; 2.2.1 General computer-based representation; 2.2.2 Text vs. meta-information. 2.2.3 General linguistic annotation2.3 Problems and specifics in dealing with spoken language transcription; 2.3.1 Issues concerning orthographic representation; 2.3.2 Issues concerning prosody; 2.3.3 Issues concerning segmental and other features; 2.3.4 Issues concerning sequential integrity; 2.3.5 Issues concerning multi-modality; 3. Data, tools and resources; 3.1 Corpus data used in the research; 3.1.1 The SPAADIA Trainline Corpus; 3.1.2 The selection from Trains 93; 3.1.3 The selection from the Switchboard Annotated Dialogue Corpus; 3.1.4 Discarded data; 3.1.5 Supplementary data. 3.2 The DART implementation and its use in handling dialogue data3.2.1 The DART functionality; 3.2.2 The DART XML format; 3.3 Morpho-syntactic resources required for pragmatic analysis; 3.3.1 The generic lexicon concept; 3.3.2 The DART tagset; 3.3.3 Morphology and morpho-syntax; 3.3.4 â#x80;#x98;Synthesisingâ#x80;#x99; domain-specific lexica; 4. The syntax of spoken language units; 4.1 Sentence vs. syntactic types (C-Units); 4.2 Units of analysis and frequency norming for pragmatic purposes; 4.3 Unit types and basic pragmatic functions; 4.3.1 Yes-units; 4.3.2 No-units; 4.3.3 Discourse markers. 4.3.4 Forms of address4.3.5 Wh-questions; 4.3.6 Yes/no- and alternative questions; 4.3.7 Declaratives; 4.3.8 Imperatives; 4.3.9 Fragments and exclamatives; 5. Semantics and semantico-pragmatics; 5.1 The DAMSL annotation scheme; 5.2 Modes; 5.2.1 Grammatical modes; 5.2.2 Interactional modes; 5.2.3 Point-of-view modes; 5.2.4 Volition and personal stance modes; 5.2.5 Social modes; 5.2.6 Syntax-indicating modes; 5.3 Topics; 5.3.1 Generic topics; 5.3.2 Domain-specific topics; 6. The annotation process; 6.1 Issues concerning the general processing of spoken dialogues. 6.1.1 Pre-processing â#x80;#x93; manual and automated unit determination6.1.2 Fillers, pauses, backchannels, overlap, etc; 6.1.3 Handling initial connectors, prepositions and adverbs; 6.1.4 Dealing with disfluent starts; 6.1.5 Parsing and chunking for syntactic purposes; 6.2 Identifying and annotating the individual unit types automatically; 6.2.1 Splitting off and annotating shorter units; 6.2.2 Tagging wh-questions; 6.2.3 Tagging yes/no-questions; 6.2.4 Tagging fragments, imperatives and declaratives; 6.3 Levels above the c-unit; 6.3.1 Answers and other responses; 6.3.2 Echoes. |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1019835842 |
dewey-full | 401/.45 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 401 - Philosophy and theory |
dewey-raw | 401/.45 |
dewey-search | 401/.45 |
dewey-sort | 3401 245 |
dewey-tens | 400 - Language |
discipline | Sprachwissenschaft |
format | Electronic eBook |
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series | Studies in corpus linguistics ; |
series2 | Studies in corpus linguistics (SCL), |
spelling | Weisser, Martin, author. How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : speech acts and beyond / Martin Weisser. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2018] 1 online resource. text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Studies in corpus linguistics (SCL), 1388-0373 ; volume 84 Includes bibliographical references and index. Intro; How to Do Corpus Pragmatics on Pragmatically Annotated Data; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; List of tables; List of figures; Abbreviations; 1. Introduction; 1.1 Previous approaches to pragmatics and discourse; 1.2 Speech acts; 1.3 Approaches to corpus-/computer-based pragmatics; 1.4 Outline of the book; 1.5 Conventions used in this book; 2. Computer-based data in pragmatics; 2.1 Linguistic corpora and pragmatics; 2.2 Issues and standards in text representation and annotation; 2.2.1 General computer-based representation; 2.2.2 Text vs. meta-information. 2.2.3 General linguistic annotation2.3 Problems and specifics in dealing with spoken language transcription; 2.3.1 Issues concerning orthographic representation; 2.3.2 Issues concerning prosody; 2.3.3 Issues concerning segmental and other features; 2.3.4 Issues concerning sequential integrity; 2.3.5 Issues concerning multi-modality; 3. Data, tools and resources; 3.1 Corpus data used in the research; 3.1.1 The SPAADIA Trainline Corpus; 3.1.2 The selection from Trains 93; 3.1.3 The selection from the Switchboard Annotated Dialogue Corpus; 3.1.4 Discarded data; 3.1.5 Supplementary data. 3.2 The DART implementation and its use in handling dialogue data3.2.1 The DART functionality; 3.2.2 The DART XML format; 3.3 Morpho-syntactic resources required for pragmatic analysis; 3.3.1 The generic lexicon concept; 3.3.2 The DART tagset; 3.3.3 Morphology and morpho-syntax; 3.3.4 â#x80;#x98;Synthesisingâ#x80;#x99; domain-specific lexica; 4. The syntax of spoken language units; 4.1 Sentence vs. syntactic types (C-Units); 4.2 Units of analysis and frequency norming for pragmatic purposes; 4.3 Unit types and basic pragmatic functions; 4.3.1 Yes-units; 4.3.2 No-units; 4.3.3 Discourse markers. 4.3.4 Forms of address4.3.5 Wh-questions; 4.3.6 Yes/no- and alternative questions; 4.3.7 Declaratives; 4.3.8 Imperatives; 4.3.9 Fragments and exclamatives; 5. Semantics and semantico-pragmatics; 5.1 The DAMSL annotation scheme; 5.2 Modes; 5.2.1 Grammatical modes; 5.2.2 Interactional modes; 5.2.3 Point-of-view modes; 5.2.4 Volition and personal stance modes; 5.2.5 Social modes; 5.2.6 Syntax-indicating modes; 5.3 Topics; 5.3.1 Generic topics; 5.3.2 Domain-specific topics; 6. The annotation process; 6.1 Issues concerning the general processing of spoken dialogues. 6.1.1 Pre-processing â#x80;#x93; manual and automated unit determination6.1.2 Fillers, pauses, backchannels, overlap, etc; 6.1.3 Handling initial connectors, prepositions and adverbs; 6.1.4 Dealing with disfluent starts; 6.1.5 Parsing and chunking for syntactic purposes; 6.2 Identifying and annotating the individual unit types automatically; 6.2.1 Splitting off and annotating shorter units; 6.2.2 Tagging wh-questions; 6.2.3 Tagging yes/no-questions; 6.2.4 Tagging fragments, imperatives and declaratives; 6.3 Levels above the c-unit; 6.3.1 Answers and other responses; 6.3.2 Echoes. Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on April 19, 2018). Quantitative linguistics. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n42011360 Pragmatics Data processing. Pragmatics Research Methodology. Speech acts (Linguistics) Data processing. Speech acts (Linguistics) Research Methodology. Pragmatique Informatique. Pragmatique Recherche Méthodologie. Actes de parole Informatique. Actes de parole Recherche Méthodologie. LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES General. bisacsh Pragmatics Data processing fast Electronic book. has work: How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data (Text) https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCH3m8C9WH9Bcjdg7ChR8yd https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork Print version: Weisser, Martin. How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2018] 9789027200471 (DLC) 2017056561 Studies in corpus linguistics ; v. 84. 1388-0373 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n98023070 FWS01 ZDB-4-EBA FWS_PDA_EBA https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1735758 Volltext CBO01 ZDB-4-EBA FWS_PDA_EBA https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1735758 Volltext |
spellingShingle | Weisser, Martin How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : speech acts and beyond / Studies in corpus linguistics ; Intro; How to Do Corpus Pragmatics on Pragmatically Annotated Data; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; List of tables; List of figures; Abbreviations; 1. Introduction; 1.1 Previous approaches to pragmatics and discourse; 1.2 Speech acts; 1.3 Approaches to corpus-/computer-based pragmatics; 1.4 Outline of the book; 1.5 Conventions used in this book; 2. Computer-based data in pragmatics; 2.1 Linguistic corpora and pragmatics; 2.2 Issues and standards in text representation and annotation; 2.2.1 General computer-based representation; 2.2.2 Text vs. meta-information. 2.2.3 General linguistic annotation2.3 Problems and specifics in dealing with spoken language transcription; 2.3.1 Issues concerning orthographic representation; 2.3.2 Issues concerning prosody; 2.3.3 Issues concerning segmental and other features; 2.3.4 Issues concerning sequential integrity; 2.3.5 Issues concerning multi-modality; 3. Data, tools and resources; 3.1 Corpus data used in the research; 3.1.1 The SPAADIA Trainline Corpus; 3.1.2 The selection from Trains 93; 3.1.3 The selection from the Switchboard Annotated Dialogue Corpus; 3.1.4 Discarded data; 3.1.5 Supplementary data. 3.2 The DART implementation and its use in handling dialogue data3.2.1 The DART functionality; 3.2.2 The DART XML format; 3.3 Morpho-syntactic resources required for pragmatic analysis; 3.3.1 The generic lexicon concept; 3.3.2 The DART tagset; 3.3.3 Morphology and morpho-syntax; 3.3.4 â#x80;#x98;Synthesisingâ#x80;#x99; domain-specific lexica; 4. The syntax of spoken language units; 4.1 Sentence vs. syntactic types (C-Units); 4.2 Units of analysis and frequency norming for pragmatic purposes; 4.3 Unit types and basic pragmatic functions; 4.3.1 Yes-units; 4.3.2 No-units; 4.3.3 Discourse markers. 4.3.4 Forms of address4.3.5 Wh-questions; 4.3.6 Yes/no- and alternative questions; 4.3.7 Declaratives; 4.3.8 Imperatives; 4.3.9 Fragments and exclamatives; 5. Semantics and semantico-pragmatics; 5.1 The DAMSL annotation scheme; 5.2 Modes; 5.2.1 Grammatical modes; 5.2.2 Interactional modes; 5.2.3 Point-of-view modes; 5.2.4 Volition and personal stance modes; 5.2.5 Social modes; 5.2.6 Syntax-indicating modes; 5.3 Topics; 5.3.1 Generic topics; 5.3.2 Domain-specific topics; 6. The annotation process; 6.1 Issues concerning the general processing of spoken dialogues. 6.1.1 Pre-processing â#x80;#x93; manual and automated unit determination6.1.2 Fillers, pauses, backchannels, overlap, etc; 6.1.3 Handling initial connectors, prepositions and adverbs; 6.1.4 Dealing with disfluent starts; 6.1.5 Parsing and chunking for syntactic purposes; 6.2 Identifying and annotating the individual unit types automatically; 6.2.1 Splitting off and annotating shorter units; 6.2.2 Tagging wh-questions; 6.2.3 Tagging yes/no-questions; 6.2.4 Tagging fragments, imperatives and declaratives; 6.3 Levels above the c-unit; 6.3.1 Answers and other responses; 6.3.2 Echoes. Quantitative linguistics. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n42011360 Pragmatics Data processing. Pragmatics Research Methodology. Speech acts (Linguistics) Data processing. Speech acts (Linguistics) Research Methodology. Pragmatique Informatique. Pragmatique Recherche Méthodologie. Actes de parole Informatique. Actes de parole Recherche Méthodologie. LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES General. bisacsh Pragmatics Data processing fast |
subject_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n42011360 |
title | How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : speech acts and beyond / |
title_auth | How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : speech acts and beyond / |
title_exact_search | How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : speech acts and beyond / |
title_full | How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : speech acts and beyond / Martin Weisser. |
title_fullStr | How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : speech acts and beyond / Martin Weisser. |
title_full_unstemmed | How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : speech acts and beyond / Martin Weisser. |
title_short | How to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data : |
title_sort | how to do corpus pragmatics on pragmatically annotated data speech acts and beyond |
title_sub | speech acts and beyond / |
topic | Quantitative linguistics. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n42011360 Pragmatics Data processing. Pragmatics Research Methodology. Speech acts (Linguistics) Data processing. Speech acts (Linguistics) Research Methodology. Pragmatique Informatique. Pragmatique Recherche Méthodologie. Actes de parole Informatique. Actes de parole Recherche Méthodologie. LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES General. bisacsh Pragmatics Data processing fast |
topic_facet | Quantitative linguistics. Pragmatics Data processing. Pragmatics Research Methodology. Speech acts (Linguistics) Data processing. Speech acts (Linguistics) Research Methodology. Pragmatique Informatique. Pragmatique Recherche Méthodologie. Actes de parole Informatique. Actes de parole Recherche Méthodologie. LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES General. Pragmatics Data processing Electronic book. |
url | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=1735758 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT weissermartin howtodocorpuspragmaticsonpragmaticallyannotateddataspeechactsandbeyond |