One of the difficulties with your surface analysis of Thoreau vs Austen is
that Thoreau wrote a memoir and Austen wrote fictional narrative. If the
texts were available, it might be interesting to see how something like
Bridget Jones compares. It will clearly have a lot of female 3rd person in
it,
Sorry - it's more reflective of me and my amateur status
Cindy Harper, Systems Librarian
Colgate University Libraries
char...@colgate.edu
315-228-7363
On Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 9:46 AM, Rob Casson rob.cas...@gmail.com wrote:
And I probably should have added to your thread on NGC4LIB, rather
Eric,
Shlomo Argamon and Mark Olsen have done some related work on text
classification. You may have been at DHCS for their paper analyzing
differences in word use by male and female authors, for example.[1] There are
bibliographies from the IIT Linguistic Cognition Laboratory and the ARTFL
Columbia has this very specific framework for developing applications,
it's called WIND
http://www.columbia.edu/acis/rad/authmethods/wind/index.html#d0e37
Is this just a name for another form of login system, or is it really
a totally independent piece of architecture?
- Ian
--
Ian Mulvany |
It looks to me like they have done considerable hacking, so the
answer, IMO, would be neither.
Cary
On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 8:47 AM, Ian Mulvany ian.mulv...@mendeley.com wrote:
Columbia has this very specific framework for developing applications,
it's called WIND