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  • ODISSEI Knowledge Graph

    This repository contains the software we used to extract, transform and load (ETL) data into the platform kg.odissei.nl. If you are mainly interested in the resulting data, feel free to ignore this repository and go to this platform directly.
  • Odissei Code Library

    The ODISSEI code library is a collection of code and scripts used to execute projects using the ODISSEI infrastructure. ODISSEI (Open Data Infrastructure for Social Science and Economic Innovations) is the national research infrastructure for the social sciences in the Netherlands. ODISSEI brings together researchers with the necessary data, expertise and resources to conduct ground-breaking research and embrace the computational turn in social enquiry. Through ODISSEI, researchers have access to large-scale, longitudinal data collections as well as innovative and diverse new forms of data. These can be linked to administrative data at Statistics Netherlands (CBS). Combining data from a wide range of sources enables researchers to answer new, exciting, interdisciplinary research questions and to investigate existing questions in novel, new ways.
  • stam

    Stand-off Text Annotation Model (STAM) is a data model for stand-off-text annotation where any information on a text is represented as an annotation. This repository contains the model's full specification, extensions, schemas, examples and documentation.
  • LASSY Word Relations Search Web Application

    The LASSY word relations web application makes it possible to search for sentences that contain pairs of words between which there is a grammatical relation. One can search in the Dutch LASSY-SMALL Treebank (1 million tokens), in which the syntactic parse of each sentence has been manually verified, and in (a part of) the LASSY-LARGE Treebank (700 million tokens ),in which the syntactic parse of each sentence has been added by the automatic parser Alpino. One can restrict the query to search for words of a particular Part-of-Speech, which is very useful in the case of syntactic ambiguities. One can also leave out the string of the word, so that one can obtain e.g. a list of sentences in which any adverb modifies a given verb, or even any word modifies a given verb. On the page that lists the found sentences one can view the exact syntactic structure of each sentence by a simple click. The application also provides detailed frequency information of all found sentences and word pairs. The Lassy treebanks have been made by the KU Leuven and the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen through financing of the Dutch Language Union. One can obtain these treebanks through the HLT Agency (TST-Centrale). Use PaQu (http://dev.clarin.nl/node/4182) for many more options and if you want to search for word pairs in your own text corpus.
  • FLAT: FoLiA-Linguistic-Annotation-Tool

    FLAT is a web-based linguistic annotation environment based around the FoLiA format (http://proycon.github.io/folia), a rich XML-based format for linguistic annotation. FLAT allows users to view annotated FoLiA documents and enrich these documents with new annotations, a wide variety of linguistic annotation types is supported through the FoLiA paradigm. It is a document-centric tool that fully preserves and visualises document structure. Features Web-based, multi-user environment Server-side document storage, divided into 'namespaces', by default each user has his own namespace. Active documents are held in memory server-side. Read and write permissions to access namespaces are fully configurable. Concurrency (multiple users may edit the same document similtaneously) Full versioning control for documents (using git), allowing limitless undo operations. (in foliadocserve) Full annotator information, with timestamps, is stored in the FoLiA XML and can be displayed by the interface. The git log also contains verbose information on annotations. Annotators can indicate their confidence for each annotation Highly configurable interface; interface options may be disabled on a per-configuration basis. Multiple configurations can be deployed on a single installation Displays and retains document structure (divisions, paragraphs, sentence, lists, etc) Support for corrections, of text or linguistic annotations, and alternative annotations. Corrections are never mere substitutes, originals are always preserved! Spelling corrections for runons, splits, insertions and deletions are supported. Supports FoLiA Set Definitions to display label sets. Sets are not predefined in FoLiA and anybody can create their own. Supports Token Annotation and Span Annotation Supports complex span annotations such as dependency relations, syntactic units (constituents), predicates and semantic roles, sentiments, stratements/attribution, observations Simple metadata editor for editing/adding arbitrary metadata to a document. Selected metadata fields can be shown in the document index as well. User permission model featuring groups, group namespaces, and assignable permissions File/document management functions (copying, moving, deleting) Allows converter extensions to convert from other formats to FoLiA on upload In-document search (CQL or FQL), advanced searches can be predefined by administrators Morphosyntactic tree visualisation (constituency parses and morphemes) Higher-order annotation: associate features, comments, descriptions with any linguistic annotation
  • PICCL: Philosophical Integrator of Computational and Corpus Libraries

    PICCL is a set of workflows for corpus building through OCR, post-correction, modernization of historic language and Natural Language Processing. It combines Tesseract Optical Character Recognition, TICCL functionality and Frog functionality in a single pipeline. Tesseract offers Open Source software for optical character recognition. TICCL (Text Induced Corpus Clean-up) is a system that is designed to search a corpus for all existing variants of (potentially) all words occurring in the corpus. This corpus can be one text, or several, in one or more directories, located on one or more machines. TICCL creates word frequency lists, listing for each word type how often the word occurs in the corpus. These frequencies of the normalized word forms are the sum of the frequencies of the actual word forms found in the corpus. TICCL is a system that is intended to detect and correct typographical errors (misprints) and OCR errors (optical character recognition) in texts. When books or other texts are scanned from paper by a machine, that then turns these scans, i.e. images, into digital text files, errors occur. For instance, the letter combination `in' can be read as `m', and so the word `regeering' is incorrectly reproduced as `regeermg'. TICCL can be used to detect these errors and to suggest a correct form. Frog enriches textual documents with various linguistic annotations.
    Martin Reynaert, Maarten van Gompel, Ko van der Sloot and Antal van den Bosch. 2015. PICCL: Philosophical Integrator of Computational and Corpus Libraries. Proceedings of CLARIN Annual Conference 2015, pp. 75-79. Wrocław, Poland. http://www.nederlab.nl/cms/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/Reynaert_PICCL-Philosophical-Integrator-of-Computational-and-Corpus-Libraries.pdf
    PICCL
  • Automatic Annotation of Multi-modal Language Resources

    The AAM-LR project provides a web service that helps field researchers to annotate audio- and video-recordings. At the top level the service marks the time intervals at which specific persons in the recording are speaking. In addition, the service provides a global phonetic annotation, using language independent phone models and phonetic features. Speech is separated from speaker noises such as laughing. Note: this service has been withdrawn and the URLs and PID do not resolve anymore!