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Bermúdez Sabel, Helena
Nom
Bermúdez Sabel, Helena
Affiliation principale
Fonction
Post-doctorante
Email
helena.bermudez@unine.ch
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Résultat de la recherche
Voici les éléments 1 - 10 sur 24
- PublicationAccès libreValidation of a metadata application profile domain model(: Open Journal Systems, 2018-9-10)
;Curado Malta, Mariana; ;Baptista, Ana AliceGonzález-Blanco, ElenaThe development of Metadata Application Profiles is done in several phases. According to the Me4MAP method, one of this phases is the creation of the domain model. This paper reports the validation process of a domain model developed under the project POSTDATA - Poetry Standardization and Linked Open Data. The development of the domain model ran with two steps of construction and two of validation. The validation steps drew on the participation of specialists in European poetry and the use of real resources. On the first validation we used tables with information about resources related properties and for which the experts had to fill certain fields like, for examples, the values. The second validation used a XML framework to control the input of values in the model. The validation process allowed us to find and fix flaws in the domain model that would otherwise have been passed to the Description Set Profile and possibly would only be found after implementing the application profile in a real case. - PublicationAccès libreTrobadores de corte en corte: Visualización dos centros culturais ibéricos tradomedievais(Santiago de Compostela: Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Servizo de Publicacións,, 2021)The dynamics of political negotiations, social conflicts, and relations of power in society are inseparable from the culture it produces. The complexity of the Galician-Portuguese lyric provides a particularly illuminating opportunity to examine how the relations of cultural centers change through the Late Middle Ages by studying the biographic profiles of the creators of texts and their relations of patronage. The following is a proposal to explore from an educational perspective the sociocultural context in which the cultural movement of the troubadours was born and developed.
- PublicationAccès libreSetting Up Bilingual Comparable Corpora with Non-Contemporary Languages(Marseille, France: European Language Resources Association, 2022)
; ; ; This paper presents the project “Les corpora latins et français: une fabrique pour l’accès à la représentation des connaissances” (Latin and French Corpora: a Factory For Accessing Knowledge Representation) whose focus is the study of modality in both Latin and French by means of multi-genre, diachronic comparable corpora. The setting up of such corpora involves a number of conceptualisation challenges, in particular with regard to how to compare two asynchronous textual productions corresponding to different cultural frameworks. In this paper we outline the rationale of designing comparable corpora to explore our research questions and then focus on some of the issues that arise when comparing different diachronic spans of Latin and French. We also explain how these issues were dealt with, thus providing some grounds upon which other projects could build their methodology. - PublicationAccès libreTEI-friendly annotation scheme for medieval named entities: a case on a Spanish medieval corpus(2021)
;Álvarez-Mellado, Elena ;Díez-Platas, M.L. ;Ruiz Fabo, Pablo; ;Ros, SalvadorGonzález-Blanco, ElenaMedieval documents are a rich source of historical data. Performing named-entity recognition (NER) on this genre of texts can provide us with valuable historical evidence. However, traditional NER categories and schemes are usually designed with modern documents in mind (i.e. journalistic text) and the general-domain NER annotation schemes fail to capture the nature of medieval entities. In this paper we explore the challenges of performing named-entity annotation on a corpus of Spanish medieval documents: we discuss the mismatches that arise when applying traditional NER categories to a corpus of Spanish medieval documents and we propose a novel humanist-friendly TEI-compliant annotation scheme and guidelines intended to capture the particular nature of medieval entities. - PublicationAccès libreEncoding of Variant Taxonomies in TEI(2019-12-19)The inherent flexibility of the digital format has favored the rise of editions that enable access to every witness of a particular textual work. These types of editions might have different goals and seek to answer different research questions, but they usually coincide in drawing attention to the importance of textual variants. To maximize the computational analysis that may be practiced with the variants in different witnesses, a complex taxonomy that reflects the diversity of cases is required. Many scholars have followed the recommended TEI method for encoding types of variants—that is, through the attributes @cause or @type inside the element —while others find that method insufficient. These attributes are not able to enclose the hierarchy intrinsic to complicated taxonomies or the overlap of classes in an efficient way. However, the TEI Guidelines do offer a module that addresses this complex encoding issue: feature structures. The method proposed in this paper does not advocate for a controlled vocabulary to categorize types of variants. What it offers instead is a pliable encoding method that allows the editor to include multiple layers of information in each apparatus tagset.
- PublicationAccès librePygmalion in the classroom: a tool to draw lexicographic diachronic maps and their application to didactics(Madrid: Guillermo Escolar Editor, 2022)
; ; This contribution presents Pygmalion, a tool that facilitates the creation of interactive diachronic maps, and focuses on some of its possible applications to the didactics of languages and linguistics. Pygmalion was conceived in the framework of the project A world of possibilities. Modal pathways over an extra-long period of time: the diachrony of modality in the Latin language (WoPoss). Although its initial conceptualisation was heavily influenced by the research questions of this project and, therefore, the visualisation of modality was a decisive feature, the tool was later redesigned for a broader use. In fact, to increase usability, we offer three different versions to better suit users’ requirements. The primary goal of Pygmalion is to provide scholars, teachers, and learners with an instrument to visually represent the heterogenous diachronic linguistic information contained in lexicographic works. The conceptualisation of this type of resource raises a twofold objective: while we need to address the difficulties of designing a visualisation that illustrates complex concepts, such as semantic shifts and meaning relations, it is crucial to ensure the readability of the data through a user-friendly and intuitive tool. - PublicationMétadonnées seulementUsing RDFa to Link Text and Dictionary Data for Medieval French(: European Language Resources Association (ELRA), 2018-5-12)
;Tittel, Sabime; Chiarchos, ChristianThis paper presents an endeavor to transform a scholarly text edition (of a medical treatise written in Middle French) into a digital edition enriched with references to an on-line dictionary. Hitherto published as a book, the resulting digital edition will use RDFa to interlink its vocabulary with the corresponding lexical entries of the Dictionnaire étymologique de l’ancien français (DEAF). We demonstrate the feasibility of RDFa for the semantic enrichment of digital editions within the philologies. In particular, the technological support forRDFa excels beyond domain-specific solutions favored by the TEI community. Our findings may thus contribute to future technological bridges between TEI/XML and (Linguistic) Linked Open Data resources.The original data of the edition is available in a LATEX format that includes profound semantic markup. We convert this data into XML/TEI, and integrate RDFa-compliant attributes for every lexeme attested in the text. The HTML5 edition generated from the XML sources preserves the RDFa attributes and thus (a) embeds (links) its vocabulary within the overall system of the medieval French language, and that (b) provides and displays linguistic features (say, sense definitions given in the original corpus data) along with the critical apparatus of the original book publication. - PublicationAccès libreDigital Tools for Semantic Annotation: the WoPoss Use Case(2019)This paper examines the use of annotation platforms to perform semantic annotation of textual contents. It focuses on a specific tool called INCEpTION. This review stems from a project that studies modality in Latin from a diachronic perspective; thus, the analysis emanates from the development of an annotation pipeline for this particular use case. I briefly overview the role of semantic annotation in the project so as to delve into the specific requirements of the annotation process and how a customized tool assists in this procedure. After justifying the selection of INCEpTION over other annotation environments, a description of the functionalities of the tool is presented. The paper continues with a discussion of the tool’s customization that was undertaken in order to meet the requirements of the project. This part draws attention to how the annotation challenges were tackled. To conclude, a general reflection on the use of annotation platforms is presented.
- PublicationAccès libreL’édition numérique au service de la philologie matérielle. Modèles de la lyrique galégo-portugaise(Santiago de Compostela: Centro Ramón Piñeiro para a Investigación en Humanidades, 2022)
- PublicationAccès libreReviewing the bread and butter of CoReMa, Cooking Recipes of the Middle Ages(2021)CoReMa, Cooking Recipes of the Middle Ages is an ongoing project whose method involves a semantically annotated, conservative edition of medieval manuscripts containing cooking recipes. With a rigorous philological approach and the aid of semantic web technologies, CoReMa’s method aims at teasing out the textual relations between different recipe collections, even enabling the comparison between manuscripts in different languages. Its semantic model covers many and very heterogeneous aspects of the transmission of cooking knowledge including, just to give an example, the treatments of a condition or illness. CoReMa is an ambitious project and food historians will not be the only scholars that will benefit from such a comprehensive (and intuitive) resource.
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