AplikaceAplikace
Nastavení

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
en:cnk:obc [2020/02/14 15:00] – [The digitalization process] Michal Škrabalen:cnk:obc [2021/02/10 15:39] (current) – [How to cite] Michal Křen
Line 18: Line 18:
 Each text of the OBC is annotated for its metainformation, including the date of the trial, the year of publishing, the categories and subcategories of the offences, the verdicts, and the punishments.  Each text of the OBC is annotated for its metainformation, including the date of the trial, the year of publishing, the categories and subcategories of the offences, the verdicts, and the punishments. 
  
-In the trial account, the direct speeches are tagged for individual //utterance//s; each utterance in the text is also tagged for various metadata, such as the gender, age, occupation (see [[https://iisg.amsterdam/en/data/data-websites/history-of-work|HISCO]]), and social class (see HISCLASS FIXME!) of the speaker of the utterance, the speaker’s role in the court, the scribe, the printer, and the publisher of the individual proceedings. More information about the metadata can be found in Lesson 5.+In the trial account, the direct speeches are tagged for individual //utterance//s; each utterance in the text is also tagged for various metadata, such as the gender, age, occupation (see [[https://iisg.amsterdam/en/data/data-websites/history-of-work|HISCO]]), and social class (see HISCLASS FIXME!) of the speaker of the utterance, the speaker’s role in the court, the scribe, the printer, and the publisher of the individual proceedings. More information about the metadata can be found in [[en:obc:intro_to_metadata|Lesson 5]].
    
 Single words are assigned a part-of-speech (POS) tags according to the [[http://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/claws7tags.html|CLAWS 7]] tagset; more information on the POS tagging process is available [[http://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/claws/|here]]. Single words are assigned a part-of-speech (POS) tags according to the [[http://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/claws7tags.html|CLAWS 7]] tagset; more information on the POS tagging process is available [[http://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/claws/|here]].
  
-Please note that we have changed some of the tagging of the original corpus by Huber, Nissel and Puga. In the original data, some of the attributes such as offences, verdicts marked those parts of the proceedings that spelled them out. For example, when the text noted that a particular defendant was charged with murder, the word murder or the sentence containing it would be tagged as an offence with an attribute of murder. We copied these attributes to //text// making it much easier to form queries such as “find all adjectives spoken by female defendants in trials concerned with murder and ending in acquittal”, although it also causes certain problems when multiple different offences, verdicts or punishments are mentioned in the same trial (see lessons 5 and 6).+Please note that we have changed some of the tagging of the original corpus by Huber, Nissel and Puga. In the original data, some of the attributes such as offences, verdicts marked those parts of the proceedings that spelled them out. For example, when the text noted that a particular defendant was charged with murder, the word murder or the sentence containing it would be tagged as an offence with an attribute of murder. We copied these attributes to //text// making it much easier to form queries such as “find all adjectives spoken by female defendants in trials concerned with murder and ending in acquittal”, although it also causes certain problems when multiple different offences, verdicts or punishments are mentioned in the same trial (see lessons [[en:obc:intro_to_metadata|5]] and [[en:obc:specific_query|6]]).
  
 {{:en:obc02.png?400|}} {{:en:obc02.png?400|}}
Line 36: Line 36:
 For a basic overview of how to use the OBC corpus and how to input the data into the search interface check our wiki-course in eight lessons: For a basic overview of how to use the OBC corpus and how to input the data into the search interface check our wiki-course in eight lessons:
  
-  * [[en:eebo:first_query|Lesson 1 (First query)]] +  * [[en:obc:query_types|Lesson 1 (Query types)]] 
-  * [[en:eebo:orthography_spelling|Lesson 2 (Orthography and Spelling)]] +  * [[en:obc:spelling|Lesson 2 (Spelling)]] 
-  * [[en:eebo:competing_forms|Lesson 3 (Competing forms)]] +  * [[en:obc:spell2|Lesson 3 (Spelling variation continued)]] 
-  * [[en:eebo:specify_query|Lesson 4 (Specify query)]] +  * [[en:obc:spell3|Lesson 4 (Spelling III: Searching with tags)]] 
-  * [[en:eebo:collocations|Lesson 5 (Collocations)]] +  * [[en:obc:intro_to_metadata|Lesson 5 (Introduction to metadata)]] 
-  * [[en:eebo:morphology1|Lesson 6 (Morphology I)]] +  * [[en:obc:specific_query|Lesson 6 (Specify query: Metadata continued))]] 
-  * [[en:eebo:morphology2|Lesson 7 (Morphology II)]] +  * [[en:obc:frequency_distribution|Lesson 7 (Two-attribute interrelationship frequency distribution)]] 
-  * [[en:eebo:multiword|Lesson 8 (Multiword expressions)]]+  * [[en:obc:collocations|Lesson 8 (Collocations)]]
  
-TOHLE BUDE SAMOZŘEJMĚ POTŘEBA UPRAVIT A PŘESMĚROVAT NA OBC. 
 ===== How to cite ===== ===== How to cite =====
  
 <WRAP round tip 70%> <WRAP round tip 70%>
-//OBC: The Old Bailey Corpus 2.0//. Ústav Českého národního korpusu FF UK, Prague 2020. Available from WWW: http://www.korpus.cz+//OBC: The Old Bailey Corpus 2.0//. Ústav Českého národního korpusu FF UK, Prague 2021. Available from WWW: http://www.korpus.cz
  
 **The original Old Bailey Corpus**: Huber, M. - Nissel, M. - Puga, K. (2016): //Old Bailey Corpus 2.0//. [[http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-246C-0000-0023-8CFB-2|hdl:11858/00-246C-0000-0023-8CFB-2]] **The original Old Bailey Corpus**: Huber, M. - Nissel, M. - Puga, K. (2016): //Old Bailey Corpus 2.0//. [[http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-246C-0000-0023-8CFB-2|hdl:11858/00-246C-0000-0023-8CFB-2]]