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                   Autobiographies of HUMANISTs
                         Third Supplement
 
Following are 19 more entries to the collection of
autobiographical  statements by members of the HUMANIST
discussion group. Further  additions, corrections, and updates
are welcome, to MCCARTY at UTOREPAS.BITNET.
 
W.M. 11 October 1987
=========================================================================
*Bratley, Paul  <bratley@iro.udem.CDN>
 
Departement d'informatique et de r.o., Universite de Montreal,
C.P. 6128,  Succursale A, MONTREAL, Canada H3C 3J7, (514) 343 -
7478
 
I have been involved in computing in the humanities since the
early 1960s, when I worked at Edinburgh University on automated
mapping of Middle English dialects.  Since then I have been
involved in projects for syntax recognition by computer and a
number of lexicographical applications.  With Serge Lusignan I
ran for seven years at the University of Montreal a laboratory
which helped users with all aspects of computing in the
humanities.
     As a professor of computer science, it is perhaps not
surprising that my interests lie at the technical end of the
spectrum.  I designed, with a variety of graduate students, such
programs as Jeudemo (for producing concordances), Compo (for
computer typesetting), and Fatras (for fast on-line retrieval of
words and phrases), all of which were or are still used inter-
nationally in a variety of universities.
     My main current research interest involves the design of a
program for on-line searching of manuscript catalogues.  The idea
is to be able to retrieve incipits despite unstable spelling and
such-like other variants in medieval texts.  The project,
involving partners in Belgium, Morocco and Tunisia is intended to
work at least for Latin, Greek and Arabic manuscripts, and
possibly for others as well.
=========================================================================
*Carpenter, David <ST_JOSEPH@HVRFORD>
 
I am an assistant professor of theology at St. Joseph's University
in Philadelphia (excuse the typos!) with training primarily in
the history of religions.  I work on Indian traditions (Hinduism
and Buddhism) as well as some work on Western Medieval material.
I have recently been engaged in putting a Sanskrit test into
machine-readable form and would like to see what else has been
done.
=========================================================================
*Dixon, Gordon <GDIXON@UK.AC.UMIST.CN.PA or GDIXON@UK.AC.MAN.CS.CGU>
              Bitnet <gdixon@pa.cn.umist.ac.uk OR gdixon@cgu.cs.man.ac.uk>
 
Editor-in-Chief, Literary and Linguistic Computing, Institute of Advanced
Studies, Manchester Polytechnic, Oxford Road, Manchester, M15 6BH U.K.
 
In particular, my interest lies in the publication of good
quality papers in the areas of:
 
Computers applied to literature and language.
Computing techniques.
Reports on research projects.
Hardware and software.
CAL and CALL.
Word Processing for Humanities.
Teaching of computer techniques to language and literature students.
Survey papers and reviews.
 
=========================================================================
*Gilliland, Marshall <GILLILAND@SASK>
 
Department of English, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan,
Canada S7N 0W0  (306) 966-5501 campus, (306) 652-5970 home
 
I'm a professor of English whose literary specialty is American
literature, and I also teach expository prose, first-year
classes, and utopian  literature in English.  Thus far, I'm the
lone member of my department to  use a mainframe computer and to
teach writing using a computer.   Most immediately, I'm the
faculty member responsible for getting a large  computer lab for
humanities and social science students in the college,  and one
of the few faculty promoting using computers.  I maintain the
list ENGLISH on CANADA01.
=========================================================================
*Hamesse, Jacqueline <HAMESSE@BUCLLN11>
 
Universite Catholique de Louvain, Chemin d'Aristote, 1, B-1348
LOUVAIN-LA-NEUVE (Belgium)
 
Je suis membre du Comite d'ALLC et Co-ordinator de l'organisation
des Conferences annuelles de cette association. D'autre part, je
suis  Professeur a l'Universite Catholique de Louvain et
Presidente de  l'Institut d'Etudes Medievales. Je travaille
depuis vingt ans dans le domaine du traitement des textes
philosophiques du moyen age a l'aide de l'ordinateur. Pour le
moment,  j'etudie surtout les possibilites offertes par
l'ordinateur pour la  collation et le classement des manuscrits
medievaux. Je viens de lancer  avec Paul Bratley de l'Universite
de Montreal un projet international de  Constitution d'une base
de donnees pour les incipits de manuscrits  medievaux (latins,
grecs, hebreux et arabes).
=====================================================================
*Hubbard, Jamie <JHUBBARD@SMITH>
 
I teach in the area of Asian Religions at Smith College, focusing
on East Asian Buddhism.  I am also active in attempting (??!!) to
archive Chinese materials on CD-ROM and other sundry projects
(IndraNet, bulletin board/ conferencing for Buddhist Studies,
has been around for app. 2 yrs).
=========================================================================
*Hughes, John J. <XB.J24@STANFORD.BITNET>
                 (for other electronic addresses, see bottom of front
                  page of last issue of the "Bits & Bites Review")
 
623 Iowa Ave., Whitefish, MT 59937, (406) 862-7280
 
Background: Vanderbilt University, Westminster Theological
Seminary, Cambridge University. I taught in the Religious Studies
Department at Westmont College in Santa Barbara, California, from
1977-1982. I am now the Editor/Publisher of "Bits & Bytes
Review," the author of "Bits, Bytes, & Biblical Studies: A
Resource Guide for the Use of Computers in Biblical and Classical
Studies," and a contributing editor to Joe Raben's "The
Electronic Scholars Resource Guide." I am also a free-lance
editor and technical writer. I am a member of the ACH and ALLC.
=========================================================================
*James, Edward <EJ1@VAXA.YORK.AC.UK>
 
Dept of History, University of York, Heslington, YORK YO1 5DD, U.K.
 
My interests are in the field of early medieval history, specifically
Frankish history, and with a special interest in Merovingian cemeteries.
=========================================================================
*Jones, Randall L. <JONES@BYUHRC.BITNET>
 
Humanities Research Center, 3060 JKHB, Brigham Young University
Provo, Utah 84602, (Tel.) 8013783513
 
I am a Professor of German and the Director of the Humanities
Research Center at Brigham Young University.  I have been
involved with using the computer in language research and
instruction since my graduate student days at Princeton, 1964-68.
My activities have included the development of language CAI,
diagnostic testing with the computer, interactive video (I worked
on the German VELVET program), computer assisted analysis of
modern German and English and the development and use of
electronic language corpora.  I have worked closely with the
developers of WordCruncher (aka BYU Concordance) to make certain
that the needs of humanists are properly met (e.g. foreign
character sets, substring searches, etc.).
 
In 1985 I organized (with the good assistance of my colleagues in
the HRC) the 7th International Conference on Computers and the
Humanities, which was held at BYU.  I am a member of the
Executive Council of the Association for Computers and the
Humanities, the Chairman of the Educational Software Evaluation
Committee of the Modern Language Association, a member of the
Committee on Information and Communication Technology of the
Linguistic Society of America, and a member of the Editorial
Board of "SYSTEM".  I have written articles and given lectures on
many aspects of the computer and language research and
instruction.
=========================================================================
*Lane, Simon <CPI047@IBM.SOUTHAMPTON.AC.UK>
 
Computing Service, University of Southampton, Highfield, Southampton,
England.
 
I am currently employed as a Programmer in the Computing Service
at Southampton University, England, and have special
responsibility for liaison with the Humanities departments within
the University, and support of their computing needs.
=========================================================================
*Lessard, Greg <LESSARDG@QUCDN>
 
I am a linguist (Ph.D. 1983, Laval, in differential linguistics,
for a study of formal mechanisms of antonymy in English and
French).  I have been teaching in the Department of French
Studies at Queen's since 1978 and have been involved in
humanities computing for several years now, in a variety of
areas:
 
1) computer-aided analysis of literary texts.  In 1986 Agnes Whitfield
   and I gave a paper at the annual meeting of the "Association canadienne-
   francaise pour l'avancement des sciences" where we used a computer
   analysis to compare two novels by Michel Tremblay and Victor-Levy
   Beaulieu, respectively.  Agnes is also in French Studies.
 
2) production of computer-readable texts.  For the past year or so, I
   have participated in a group project in the Department of French
   Studies at Queen's which involves the entry into the mainframe of
   computer-readable texts by means of a Kurzweil data entry machine.
 
3) concordance production.  J.-J. Hamm (of Queen's) and I are working
   on a concordance of the novel "Armance" by Stendhal.
 
4) linguistic analysis.  I make heavy use of the computer in my work
   analysing errors in student texts produced in French.
 
5) annotation.  Diego Bastianutti (of Queen's) and I are working in the
   area of annotation as a teaching tool in the humanities.  We gave
   a paper at this year's Learned Societies where we outlined our research
   and presented a prototype of an annotation facility based on the word
   processing program "PC-Write".
 
6) computer-aided instruction.  With a group of colleagues in the languages
   and in computer science at Queen's, I am working on an intelligent
   computer-aided instruction system for French, other Romance languages,
   and eventually a variety of other languages as well.  We are in the
   second year of this multi-year project, funded in part by the Ministry
   of Colleges and Universities of Ontario.
=========================================================================
*Logan, George M. <logang@QUCDN.BITNET>
 
Professor and Head, Department of English, Queen's University, Kingston,
Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6; 613-545-2154
 
My area of literary specialization is the English Renaissance.
For my research interests in computer applications to literary
studies, see the biography of my colleague David Barnard. For
1986-87, I have been chairman of the Steering Group for
Humanities Computing of five Ontario universities: McMaster,
Queen's, Toronto, Waterloo, and Western Ontario. I am also a
member of the steering group of the Ontario Consortium for
Computing and the Humanities.
=========================================================================
*Ravin, Yael YAEL(YKTVMH2)
 
I have an M.A. in Teaching English as a Second Language from
Columbia University and a Ph.D in Linguistics from the City
University of New York. My Ph.D thesis is about the semantics of
event verbs.
 
I am a member of the Natural Language Processing Group at the
Watson Research Center of IBM. My work consists of writing rules
in a computer language called PLNLP for the detection of
stylistic weaknesses in written documents. I am now beginning
research in semantics. This research consists of developing PLNLP
rules to investigate the semantic content of word definitions in
an online dictionary, in order to resolve syntactic ambiguity.
=========================================================================
*Reimer, Stephen <SREIMER@UALTAVM>
 
I am an assistant professor of English, using computers
extensively both in research and in teaching.  My introduction to
computer use in the humanities came in the late 70s when I was
beginning my dissertation and was faced with an authorship
question in a set of medieval texts--I thought that the problem
might be resolvable through quantitative stylistics with the help
of the computer.  Through John Hurd at the Univ. of Toronto, I
learned the rudiments of programming in SNOBOL and learned much
about concordancing algorithms; on this basis, I wrote a rather
large and sloppy program to "read" any natural language text and
to generate a substantial number of statistics.  Producing the
dissertation itself involved me with micro-computers and laser
printers. And when I began teaching after graduation, I was
involved in an experiment using Writers' Workbench as an aid in
teaching composition.
 
I have, this fall, moved from the U of T to the University of
Alberta.  Here I have been asked to act as something of a
consultant for other English professors who are starting to make
use of computers, and I have been assigned to a team with a
mandate to establish a small computing centre to be shared by
four humanities departments (English, Religious Studies,
Philosophy and Classics).
 
Finally, I am embarking on a long term project which is again
concerned with authorship disputes: over the coming years I
expect to consume huge numbers of cycles in an effort to sort out
the tangled mess of the canon of John Lydgate.
=========================================================================
*Salotti, Paul <DBPAUL@VAX.OXFORD.AC.UK>
 
Oxford University Computing Service, 13, Banbury Road, OXFORD OX2
6NN U.K. Tel. 0865-273249
 
I work in the Oxford University Computing Service and provide
support and consultancy for the application and use of databases
(Ingres, IDMS, dBase etc) in academic research.
=========================================================================
*Smith, Tony <MFFGKTS@CMS.UMRCC.AC.UK>
 
I have recently started work as research assistant to Gordon Neal
in the Department of Greek at Manchester University.
 
Our project has a number of aims.  Ultimately we hope to program
a computer to perform as far as possible the automatic syntactic
parsing of Classical Greek.  Texts with syntactic tagging (which
in the early stages can be performed manually) can then be used
for pedagogic purposes, by allowing a student on a computer to
ask for help with the morphology and syntax of selected words and
sentences.  The tagged texts would also be very useful for
research purposes, allowing various kinds of statistical analysis
to be carried out.  The texts will be drawn from the Thesaurus
Linguae Graecae database on CD-ROM, which will be accessed by a
network of IBM-compatibles.  The system will also offer
facilities for searching through the Greek texts similar to those
found on the Ibycus Scholarly Computer.
=========================================================================
*Tov, Emmanuel <HUET@HUJIPRMB>
 
Prof. in the Dept of Bible, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel,
Tel. (02)883514 (o), 815714 (h).
 
Together with R.A. Kraft of the U. of Penn. I am the director of
the  CATSS Project - computer assisted tools for Septuagint
studies (for a  description of the work, see CATSS volumes 1 and
2).
=========================================================================
*Wolffe, John <JRW2@VAXA.YORK.AC.UK>
 
Temporary Lecturer in History, University of York, England.
 
AT the moment my use of computers in my own research is confined
largely to humble word-processing, but I have plans during the
next academic year to develop some computer-based analysis of the
1851 England and Wales Census of Religious Worship. I am also
very interested in wider questions about the use of computers in
the humanities, especially as these relate to the development of
coherent defense of the humanities in general and of history in
particular in the face of the current political and social
climate in the UK.
=========================================================================
*Wyman, John C. <LIBJCW@SUVM>
 
Library Systems Office, Bird Library, Room B106F, Syracuse Univ.
Syracuse, New York 13244-1260 USA, (315) 423-4300/2573
 
I am the Systems Officer for the Syracuse University Library,
called Bird Library, and am in charge of all of our computer and
system support for the library.  This includes our on-line
catalog (SULIRS);  access to OCLC for shared bibliographic
cataloging information; and our increasing use of microcomputers
for staff support.
 
Also I'm involved in our on-line access to remote data bases,
such as Dialog or BRS, for our users and staff.  Finally we have
a growing effort of  acquiring and providing access to
collections of research data for  people in the social sciences,
called the Research Data System of the  Libraries.
 
My interests revolve around providing access to, and usage of
computers for, non-computer type people.  Even, and especially,
at the expense of extra programming and systems effort.  Too many
computer systems today are hard for e for the casual user to use.
 
My background is Electrical Engineering, Numerical Analysis,
Computer User Service, Library User Service, with many systems
designed and programmed by me or my staff.  The human interface
is the most important aspect of this work.
=========================================================================
