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India2011- Digital Linguistics

In October 2011, NTNU will arrange a week-long event, called India 2011, with India as the theme. The focus will be on broad cooperation

in culture, research, higher education and business.
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The present arrangement between the University of Hyderabad and the Institute of Languages and

Communication Studies and the Institute of Modern Languages at NTNU has Indian languages as its focus.

The arrangement of several talks and workshops, announced here, is part of the NTNU's India week.


India is a continent of many languages. Ethnologue [1] refers to 452 listed languages of India. The nation is not only rich in languages. Grounded on work dating back to Pāṇini, Indian linguistics has had a significant influence on the development of linguistics as we know it today.


Digital Language Description, Knowledge Representation and Formal Linguistics for Indic Languages

In a workshop on Digital Language Description, Knowledge Representation and Formal Linguistics, linguists from Hyderabad and Trondheim will work together on the representation and formalisation of some of the salient aspects of selected languages from the Dravidian, the Indo-Aryan and the Austro-Asiatic language families of India.

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The workshop will take place in a digital communication environment. A group of linguists will work on qualitative language description and linguistic formalisation of Indian languages. Keynote talks addressing central issues in the digitisation and formalisation of Indic languages will be combined with group sessions dedicated to the documentation and formalisation of central Indic construction types. Legacy-data will be digitised and enriched by further layers of annotation. Results of the workshop will be made accessible online using software developed at NTNU.

The arrangement situates modern approaches to language description and documentation in the environment of the rise of linguistic sciences, namely the languages in the tradition of formal description of Sanskrit dating back nearly 3000 years. Vibrant communities in Hyderabad and Trondheim will develop and refine methods of digitised formal language research together, with staff and students from both universities informing each other on both formal, computational and empirical issues. Where the Sanskrit grammarian Panini made the first systematic symbolic approach to language description, the present arrangement focuses on symbolic approaches relative to current technologies and formal frameworks.



Keynote Talks

Several Keynote talks will address central issues in the digitisation and formalisation of Indic languages

The Architecture and Processing of Brahmi-Derived Scripts

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Professor Sengupta


                       ABSTRACT



Construction Types – systems for formal multilingual classification

Professor Hellan



                        ABSTRACT








Workshop

The workshop will be introduced by a talk on Collaborative corpus creation - qualitative and quantitative linguistic methods by Associate Professor Dorothee Beermann, NTNU.

It features two sections:

Multilingual text processing, interlinear annotation and formalisation of Indic languages

Using natural language processing tools and linguistic web-technology developed at University at Hyderabad and at NTNU, we will create small research corpora which we will annotate for salient linguistic properties with the goal of deriving Attribute Value Matrix Notations from these annotations.


List of Workshop Languages
Language name Language Family Script
Banglā (Bengali) Indo-Aryan Banglā
Hindi Indo-Aryan Devanāgarī
Punjabi Indo-Aryan Gurmukhi
Malayālam Dravidian Malayālī
Khasi Austro-Asiatic Roman
Angami Tibeto-Burman Roman





Grammatical construction types across Indian languages

Using methods of formal linguistic representation such as 'attribute value matrices' (AVMs), a systematic comparison of representatives of each of the major language families spoken in India will be conducted, focusing on a limited set of sentential construction types. The languages and their families are TBA.

References

  1. Lewis, M. Paul (ed.), 2009. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Sixteenth edition. Dallas, Tex.: SIL International. Online version: http://www.ethnologue.com/.