Intertextual Pointers in the Text Alignment Network

The Text Alignment Network (TAN) is a suite of XML encoding formats intended to serve anyone who wishes to encode, exchange, and study multiple versions of texts (e.g., translations, paraphrases), and annotations on those texts (e.g., quotations, word-for-word correspondences). This article focuses...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of data mining and digital humanities Vol. Special Issue on...; no. Project presentations
Main Author: Kalvesmaki, Joel
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: INRIA 27.10.2017
Nicolas Turenne
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ISSN:2416-5999, 2416-5999
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:The Text Alignment Network (TAN) is a suite of XML encoding formats intended to serve anyone who wishes to encode, exchange, and study multiple versions of texts (e.g., translations, paraphrases), and annotations on those texts (e.g., quotations, word-for-word correspondences). This article focuses on TAN’s innovative intertextual pointers, which, I argue, provide an unprecedented level of readability, interoperability, and semantic context. Because TAN is a new, experimental format, this article provides a brief introduction to the format and concludes with comments on progress and future prospects.
ISSN:2416-5999
2416-5999
DOI:10.46298/jdmdh.3710