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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Linguistic Informatics – State of the Art and the Future

The first international conference on Linguistic Informatics

Edited by Yuji Kawaguchi, Susumu Zaima, Toshihiro Takagaki, Kohji Shibano and Mayumi Usami
Tokyo University of Foreign Studies

2005. viii, 363 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 3313 4 / EUR 95.00
978 1 58811 641 3 / USD 143.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9442 5 / EUR 95.00 / USD 143.00
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It is widely believed that linguistic theories and information technology have considerably influenced foreign language education. However, the collaboration of these three domains has not brought about new scientific results. It it thus, our attempt to realize an integration of theoretical and applied linguistics on the basis of computer sciences, and establish a new synthetic field called "Linguistic Informatics." The present volume constitutes the Proceedings of the First International Conference on Linguistic Informatics held at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies (TUFS) in December 2003. The volume is comprised of five chapters. 1. Computer-Assisted Linguistics: Potential for collaboration between linguistics and informatics. 2. Corpus Linguistics : Status report on corpus-based linguistic research. 3. Applied Linguistics : Relationship between second language acquisition and linguistic theory. 4. Discourse Analysis and Language Teaching : Current status of natural dialogue-based discourse analysis. 5. TUFS Language Modules : Development of multilingual e-learning materials covering 17 different languages.


Table of contents

Opening Address
Setsuho Ikehata
1–2
Center of Usage-Based Linguistic Informatics (UBLI)
Yuji Kawaguchi
3–8
1. Computer-Assisted Linguistics
One or Two Phonemes: /ø/–/u/ in Old French, /s/–/z/ in Dutch and Frisian: New Solutions to an Old Problem
Pieter van Reenen and Anke Jongkind
9–28
The Lexicon-Grammar of French Verbs: A Syntactic Database
Christian Leclère
29–45
A Formal Analysis of Spanish Adjective Position
Masami Miyamoto
46–63
On the Language of Portuguese Estoria do Muy Nobre Vespesiano: Linguistic Change and its Documental Evidence Based on the Corpus Study
Naotoshi Kurosawa
64–65
Analysing Texts in a Specific Domain with Local Grammars: The Case of Stock Exchange Market Reports
Takuya Nakamura
76–98
Multivariate Analysis in Dialectology: A Case Study of the Standardization in the Environs of Paris
Kanetaka Yarimuzu, Yuji Kawaguchi and Masanori Ichikawa
99–119
2. Corpus Linguistics
Corpora of Spoken Spanish Language: The Representativeness Issue
Francisco Moreno Fernández
120–144
Methods of “Hand-made” Corpus Linguistics: A Bilingual Database and the Programming of Analyzers
Hiroto Ueda
145–166
Multilateral Interpretation of Corpus-based Semantic Analysis: The Case of the German Verb of Movement fahren
Yoshiyuki Muroi
167–179
Tools for Creating Online Dictionaries Judeo-Spanish: A Case Study
Antonio Ruiz Tinoco
180–195
3. Applied Linguistics
Socio-pragmatic Aspects of Workplace Talk
Janet Holmes
196–220
What Do We Mean by “second” in Second Language Acquisition
David Block
221–241
Integrating Applied Linguistics Research Outcome into Japanese Language Pedagogy: A Challenge in Contrastive Pragmatics
Suzuko Nishihara
242–247
Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL): Moving into the Networked Future
Mark Peterson
248–257
Beyond the Novelty: Providing Meaning in CALL
Malcolm H. Field
258–278
4. Discourse Analysis and Language Teaching
Why Do We Need to Analyze Natural Conversation Data in Developing Conversation Teaching Materials? Some Implications for Developing TUFS Language Modules
Mayumi Usami
279–294
An Analysis of Teaching Materials Based on New Zealand English Conversation in Natural Settings: Implications for the Development of Conversation Teaching Materials
Takashi Suzuki, Koji Matsumoto and Mayumi Usami
295–315
5. TUFS Language Modules
The Creation of the TUFS Pronunciation Module
Tsutomu Kigoshi
316–332
Development and Assesment of TUFS Dialogue Module: Multilingual and Functional Syllabus
Kentaro Yuki, Kazuya Abe and Chunchen Lin
333–357
Concluding Remarks
Yuji Kawaguchi
358
Index of Proper Nouns
359–360
Index of Subjects
361–363