Annotation, exploitation and evaluation of parallel corpora: TC3 I

Silvia Hansen-Schirra   Stella Neumann   Oliver Čulo  

Synopsis

Exchange between the translation studies and the computational linguistics communities has traditionally not been very intense. Among other things, this is reflected by the different views on parallel corpora. While computational linguistics does not always strictly pay attention to the translation direction (e.g. when translation rules are extracted from (sub)corpora which actually only consist of translations), translation studies are amongst other things concerned with exactly comparing source and target texts (e.g. to draw conclusions on interference and standardization effects). However, there has recently been more exchange between the two fields – especially when it comes to the annotation of parallel corpora. This special issue brings together the different research perspectives. Its contributions show – from both perspectives – how the communities have come to interact in recent years.

Chapters

  • Introduction
    Stella Neumann, Silvia Hansen-Schirra, Oliver Čulo
  • Building and querying parallel treebanks
    Martin Volk, Torsten Marek, Yvonne Samuelsson
  • Enriching Slovene wordnet with domain-specific terms
    Špela Vintar, Darja Fišer
  • Empty links and crossing lines
    Querying multi-layer annotation and alignment in parallel corpora
    Oliver Čulo, Silvia Hansen-Schirra, Karin Maksymski, Stella Neumann
  • On drafting and revision in translation
    A corpus linguistics oriented analysis of translation process data
    Fabio Alves, Daniel Couto Vale
  • Computerlinguistik in der Dolmetschpraxis unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Korpusanalyse
    Claudio Fantinuoli

Statistics

Biographies

Silvia Hansen-Schirra

Silvia Hansen-Schirra, Dipl.-Übers., Dr. phil., PD, is a full professor of English linguistics and translation studies at Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz in Germersheim, Germany. Her main research interests include specialized communication, text comprehensibility, post-editing, translation process and competence research. As fellow of the Gutenberg Research College she is the director of the Translation & Cognition (TRACO) Center in Germersheim and co-editor of the online book series "Translation and Multilingual Natural Language Processing ".

Stella Neumann

Stella Neumann is a full professor of English Linguistics at RWTH Aachen University, Germany. She holds a degree in translation from Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn and received a PhD in translation studies and a habilitation in English linguistics from Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany. Her research interests include the combination of corpus-linguistic and experimental methods for the empirical modelling of translation as well as quantitative register analysis across varieties of English and across languages.

Oliver Čulo

Oliver currently holds an Assistant Professor ("Juniorprofessor") position for Translation-relevant Linguistics at the Translation Faculty at Mainz University. He attended Saarland University, where he received his diploma in computational linguistics and his PhD in machine translation. His thesis work focused on developing ways of automatically comparing verb valence between English and German using parallel corpora. During a one-year stay at ICSI at the University of California in Berkeley in 2011 and 2012, he worked with researchers in the FrameNet Project, who are building a lexical database based on frame semantic analyses. He is interested in how grammar and semantics interact in translation.

Published

February 27, 2017
LaTeX source on GitHub
Cite as
Hansen-Schirra, Silvia, Neumann, Stella & Čulo, Oliver (eds.). 2017. Annotation, exploitation and evaluation of parallel corpora: TC3 I. (Translation and Multilingual Natural Language Processing 3). Berlin: Language Science Press. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.283376

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Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Details about the available publication format: PDF

PDF

ISBN-13 (15)

978-3-946234-85-2

Publication date (01)

2016-02-27

doi

10.5281/zenodo.283376

Details about the available publication format: Chapter 1

Chapter 1

doi

10.5281/zenodo.283408

Details about the available publication format: Chapter 2

Chapter 2

doi

10.5281/zenodo.283438

Details about the available publication format: Chapter 3

Chapter 3

doi

10.5281/zenodo.283489

Details about the available publication format: Chapter 4

Chapter 4

doi

10.5281/zenodo.283498

Details about the available publication format: Chapter 5

Chapter 5

doi

10.5281/zenodo.283500

Details about the available publication format: Chapter 6

Chapter 6

doi

10.5281/zenodo.283501

Details about the available publication format: Hardcover

Hardcover

ISBN-13 (15)

978-3-946234-89-0