Extracting Information from Classics Scholarly Texts (Romanello)

(PhD Research Project in Digital Humanities)

Working Title:
Structured and Unstructured: Extracting Information from Classics Scholarly Texts

Matteo Romanello

Supervisors:
 * Willard McCarty (Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London)
 * Jonathan Ginzburg (Department of Computer Science, King's College London)

Abstract
The project is an ongoing Computational Linguistic and Text Analytic study of how the language and structure of explicitly encoded data sources can be used to help mining texts of unencoded corpora.

The two corpora being currently considered contain respectively OCRed journal papers and working papers about Classical(Greek and Latin) texts.

The presented project aims at showing how - and with which gain in terms of accuracy - information extracted from structured data sources can be used to automatically extract information from an unstructured corpus. The extracted information is meant to be used in order to provide semantic access over the corpus itself.

Presentations

 * poster presentation at the Arts and Humanities Week 2009, King's College London : [poster]
 * presentation at the PhD Seminar (CCH/KCL) : [slides]
 * presentation at the EIRI – CCH Conference on the Digitization in the Humanities at Keio University (Tokyo): [slides]
 * poster presentation at the DH2010 conference: [poster], [HTML abstract], [PDF abstract]
 * Presentation at the Digital Classicist seminar, June 25, 2010 (abstract, audio, slides)

Material

 * The bibliographic material I am collecting for the literature review is being shared at [this Wiki page]
 * A first piece of software I developed for my project and made available under open access license is CRefEx a canonical references extractor: code, wiki. Please join the development of this tool if you are interested on this topic!