Linguist List
The LINGUIST List is a major online resource for the academic field of linguistics. It was founded by Anthony Aristar in early 1990 at the University of Western Australia,[1] and is used as a reference by the National Science Foundation in the United States.[2] Its main and oldest feature is the premoderated electronic mailing list, now with thousands of subscribers all over the world, where queries and their summarized results, discussions, journal table of contents, dissertation abstracts, calls for papers, book and conference announcements, software notices and other useful pieces of linguistic information are posted.
History
Between 1991 and 2013 the resource has been run by Anthony Aristar and Helen Aristar-Dry. In 1991 it moved from Australia to Texas A&M University, and Eastern Michigan University was established as the main editing site. Already in 1994 there were over 5,000 subscribers.[3] From October 14 through November 6, 1996, it held its first on-line conference, Geometric and Thematic Structure in Binding, devoted to the Binding Theory and opened by the keynote address by Howard Lasnik.[4] LINGUIST List moved from Texas A&M to its own site in 1997. Wayne State University in Michigan was established as the second editing site in 1998, but in 2006 all its operations moved to nearby Eastern Michigan University. In 2013 Helen Aristar-Dry and Anthony Aristar retired from Eastern Michigan University and Damir Cavar became the moderator and director of the resource operations. In 2014 Malgorzata E. Cavar became the second moderator. In 2014 LINGUIST List was moved to Indiana University and it has been hosted at the Department of Linguistics since then, with Damir Cavar and Malgorzata E. Cavar as the co-directors of the resource operations.
The LINGUIST List is funded by its donations from supporting publishers, institutions and its subscribers during the fund drive month each spring. Some LINGUIST List projects were funded by grants from the National Science Foundation. In recent years it has become a site for research into linguistic infrastructure on the web, and has received numerous grants from the National Science Foundation to do this work.[5]
Services
The LINGUIST List hosts two mailing lists LINGUIST and LINGLITE:
- LINGUIST, a mailing list that forwards all postings to the subscriber directly or as a daily digest.[6]
- LINGLITE, a mailing list that forwards once a day a list of postings with titles and links to the subscribers.[7]
The LINGUIST List mailing lists are free and open for subscription using a web interface.[8]
Everybody can submit postings to The LINGUIST List lists without being subscribed or in any way a registered member.[9] A web interface is used to submit postings to the lists.[10]
Besides these two lists, The LINGUIST List also hosts numerous mailing lists that serve the linguistic community. The public and open lists can be accessed at the LINGUIST List list-server.[11]
Postings to the LINGUIST List and other information is also disseminated using social media and blogs:
The LINGUIST List also hosts websites and information services for some linguistic communities and organizations.
Projects
The LINGUIST List has been one of the resources for the creation of the new ISO 639-3 language identification standard (aiming to classify all known languages with an alpha-3 language code).[16] While the Ethnologue was used as the resource for natural languages currently in use, Linguist List has provided the information on historic varieties, ancient languages, international auxiliary languages and constructed languages.
The LINGUIST List has also received grants for
- the Catalogue of Endangered Languages project, a joint effort with the University of Hawai'i at Manoa to build the most reliable, up-to-date source of information on the world's endangered languages[17]
- the EMELD Project, designed to build infrastructure to facilitate the preservation of endangered languages data
- the DATA project, designed to digitize data for the Dena'ina language[18]
- the LL-MAP project (defunct), designed to produce a comprehensive GIS site for language;[19]
- the MultiTree project, designed to produce a complete database and tree-viewing facility to study language relationships[20]
- the AARDVARC project, designed to address the problem of not transcribed, and therefore unavailable, documentation of understudied languages by building an interdisciplinary community of linguists, anthropologists, and computer scientists to share knowledge and collaborate on the specification of a repository and suite of tools to facilitate automatic or semi-automatic transcription and analysis of audio and visual information[21]
The EMELD project[22] was the instigator of the GOLD ontology, the furthest advanced of the current attempts to build an ontology for the morphosyntax of linguistic data.[23] It has also produced a phonetics ontology, based upon Peter Ladefoged's and Ian Maddieson's The Sounds of the World's Languages.
Some projects emerged from funded or internal activities at LINGUIST List:
- GeoLing, a GIS-based information service that places events, jobs, institutions, conferences, and other announcements with a geo-location that are announced on LINGUIST List on the global map.[24]
- AskALing, a discussion forum and question and answer platform for linguistically relevant questions and issues.[25]
- GORILLA, a platform for archiving of language data, recordings, word lists, corpora, and technologies, and the development and conversion of language data to corpora and resources that bridge language documentation of low-resourced and endangered languages, and Human Language Technology (HLT) and Natural Language Processing (NLP).[26]
References
- ↑ About Us. The Linguist List
- ↑ "Documenting Endangered Languages (DEL) nsf05590".
- ↑ "5.1005 LINGUIST subscription by country". Linguist List. 19 September 1994.
- ↑ "1st LINGUIST Conference: Geometric & Thematic Structure in Binding". Linguist List. 1 April 1996.
- ↑ Supported Projects. The Linguist List
- ↑ http://listserv.linguistlist.org/mailman/listinfo/linguist The LINGUIST List: The LINGUIST Mailing List
- ↑ http://listserv.linguistlist.org/mailman/listinfo/linglite The LINGUIST List: The LINGLITE Mailing List
- ↑ http://linguistlist.org/LL/subs-index.cfm The LINGUIST List Subscription Page
- ↑ http://linguistlist.org/LL/subs-index.cfm The LINGUIST List Subscription Interface
- ↑ http://linguistlist.org/LL/posttolinguist.cfm The LINGUIST List Posting Submission Interface
- ↑ http://listserv.linguistlist.org The LINGUIST List mailing lists
- ↑ https://www.facebook.com/linguistlist The LINGUIST List Facebook Page
- ↑ https://twitter.com/linguistlist The LINGUIST List Twitter Feed
- ↑ https://plus.google.com/+LINGUISTList/posts The LINGUIST List Google+ Page
- ↑ http://blog.linguistlist.org The LINGUIST List Blog
- ↑ "OpenStax CNX".
- ↑ "Linguist List - Projects". The LINGUIST List. Retrieved 30 October 2012.
- ↑ Dena'ina
- ↑ "LL-Map".
- ↑ "MultiTree".
- ↑ Malgosia Cavar, Damir Cavar. "Automatically Annotated Repository of Digital Audio and Video Resources Community".
- ↑ E-MELD
- ↑ "GOLD Community: General Ontology for Linguistic Description".
- ↑ http://geoling.linguistlist.org GeoLing:GIS-based linguistic events and information
- ↑ http://askaling.linguistlist.org/ AskALing:Linguistic Question and Answer platform
- ↑ http://gorilla.linguistlist.org GORILLA:Global Open Resources and Information for Language and Linguistic Analysis