Paper Machines is a plugin for the Zotero bibliographic management software that makes cutting-edge topic-modeling analysis in Computer Science accessible to humanities researchers without requiring extensive computational resources or technical knowledge. It synthesizes several approaches to visualization within a highly accessible user interface.
Paper Machines is an open-source extension for the Zotero bibliographic management software. Its purpose is to allow individual researchers to generate analyses and visualizations of user-provided corpora, without requiring extensive computational resources or technical knowledge.
PBOS (Processed Book Operating System, or Processed Book Open Source, depending on the lunar phase) is an implementation of some of the ideas in the original essay "The Processed Book". PBOS provides a very rich context for adding value to a Web-based book through multi-user comments, various kinds of connections, and analytical and visualization tools. The results can range from a few, formal review notes for an author, to a crayonesque markup by mobs of postmodern deconstructors, with the visibility of each controlled by the viewer.
The Penn Treebank Project annotates naturally-occuring text for linguistic structure. Most notably, we produce skeletal parses showing rough syntactic and semantic information -- a bank of linguistic trees. We also annotate text with part-of-speech tags, and for the Switchboard corpus of telephone conversations, dysfluency annotation. We are located in the LINC Laboratory of the Computer and Information Science Department at the University of Pennsylvania. All data produced by the Treebank is released through the Linguistic Data Consortium.