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                   Autobiographies of HUMANISTs
                         Fifth Supplement
 
Following are 23 additional entries to the collection of
autobiographical statements by members of the HUMANIST discussion
group.
 
Further additions, corrections, and updates are welcome, to
mccarty@utorepas.bitnet.
 
W.M. 16 December 1987
=========================================================================
*Atwell, Eric Steven  <eric@ai.leeds.ac.uk>
 
Centre for Computer Analysis of Language and Speech, AI Division,
School of Computer Studies,  Leeds University, Leeds LS2 9JT;
+44 532 431751 ext 6
 
I am  in a Computer Studies School, but specialise in linguistic and
literary computing, and applications in Religious Education in
schools.  I would particularly like to liaise with other researchers
working in similar areas.
=========================================================================
*Benson, Tom  <T3B@PSUVM>
              {akgua,allegra,ihnp4,cbosgd}!psuvax1!psuvm.bitnet!t3b (UUCP)
              t3b%psuvm.bitnet@wiscvm.arpa (ARPA)
 
Department of Speech Communication, The Pennsylvania State University
227 Sparks Building, University Park, PA 16802; 814-238-5277
 
I am a Professor of Speech Communication at Penn State University,
currently serving as editor of THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF SPEECH.
In addition, I edit the electronic journal CRTNET (Communication
Research and Theory Network).
=========================================================================
*CETEDOC (CENTRE DE TRAITEMENT ELECTRONIQUE DES DOCUMENTS) <THOMDOC@BUCLLN11>
 
CETEDOC, LLN, BELGIUM
 
THE CETEDOC (CENTRE DE TRAITEMENT ELECTRONIQUE DES DOCUMENTS) IS AN
INSTITUTION OF THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF LOUVAIN AT LOUVAIN-LA-NEUVE,
BELGIUM. ITS DIRECTOR IS PROF. PAUL TOMBEUR.
=========================================================================
*Chadwick, Tony <chadant@mun>
 
Department of French & Spanish, Memorial University of Newfoundland
St. John's, A1B 3X9; (709)737-8572
 
At the moment I have two interests in computing: one is the use of
computers in composition classes for second language learners, the
socond in computerized bibliographies.  I have an M.A. in French from
McMaster and have been teaching at Memorial University since 1967.
Outside computers, my research interests lie in Twentieth Century
French Literature.
=========================================================================
*Coombs, James H.  <JAZBO@BROWNVM>
 
Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship, Brown University
Box 1946, Providence, RI 02912
 
I have a Ph.D. in English (Wordsworth and Milton:  Prophet-Poets)
and an M.A. in Linguistics, both from Brown University.  I have been Mellon
Postdoctoral Fellow in English and am about to become Software Engineer,
Research, Institute for Research in Information and Scholarship (IRIS).
 
I have co-edited an edition of letters (A Pre-Raphaelite Friendship, UMI
Research Press) and have written on allusion and implicature (Poetics, 1985;
Brown Working Papers in Linguistics).  Any day now, the November
Communications of the ACM will appear with an article on "Markup Systems
and the Future of Scholarly Text Processing," written with Allen H. Renear
and Steven J. DeRose.
 
I developed the English Disk on the Brown University mainframe, which provides
various utilities for humanists, primarily for word processing and for staying
sane in CMS.  I wrote a Bibliography Management System for Scholars (BMSS;
1985) and then an Information Management System for Scholars (IMSS; 1986).
Both are in PL/I and may best be considered "aberrant prototypes," used a
little more than necessary for research but never commercialized.  I am
currently working on a system with similar functionality for the IBM PC.
 
Last year, I developed a "comparative concordance" for the multiple editions
of Wordsworth's Prelude.  I am delayed in that by the lack of the final volume
of Cornell's fine editions.  A preliminary paper will appear in the working
papers of Brown's Computing in the Humanities User's Group (CHUG); a full
article will be submitted in January, probably to CHUM.
 
I learned computational linguistics from Prof. Henry Kucera, Nick DeRose, and
Andy Mackie.  Richard Ristow taught me software engineering management or,
more accurately, teaches me more every time I talk to him.  I worked on the
spelling corrector, tuning algorithms.  I worked on the design of the grammar
corrector, designed the rule structures, and developed the rules with Dr.
Carol Singley.  Then I started with Dr. Phil Shinn's Binary Parser and
developed a language independent N-ary Parser (NAP).  NAP reads phrase
structure rules as well as streams of tagged words (see DeRose's article in
Computational Linguistics for information on the disambiguation) and generates
a parse tree, suitable for generalized pattern matching.
 
Finally, at IRIS, I will be developing online dictionary access from our
hypermedia system:  Intermedia (affix stripping, unflection, definition,
parsing, etc.). In addition, we are working on a unified system for accessing
multiple databases, including CD-ROM as well as remote computers.
=========================================================================
*Dawson, John L. <JLD1@PHX.CAM.AC.UK>
 
University of Cambridge, Literary and Linguistic Computing Centre
Sidgwick Avenue, Cambridge  CB3 9DA England; (0223) 335029
 
I have been in charge of the Literary and Linguistic Computing Centre of
Cambridge University since 1974, and now hold the post of Assistant Director
of Research there.  The LLCC acts as a service bureau for all types of
humanities computing, including data preparation, and extends to the areas
of non-scientific computing done by members of science and social science
faculties.  Much of our work remains in the provision of concordances to
various texts in a huge range of languages, either prepared by our staff,
by the user, or by some external body (e.g. TLG, Toronto Corpus of Old
English, etc.)  Some statistical analysis is undertaken, as required by
the users.  Recently, we have begun preparing master pages for publication
using a LaserWriter, and several books have been printed by this means.
 
My background is that of a mathematics graduate with a Diploma in Computer
Science (both from Cambridge).  I am an Honorary Member of ALLC, having
been its Secretary for six years, and a member of the Association for History
and Computing.
 
My present research (though I don't have much time to do it) lies in the
comparison of novels with their translations in other languages. At the
moment I am working on Stendhal's "Le Rouge et le Noir" in French and English,
and on Jane Austen's "Northanger Abbey" in English and French.
 
I have contributed several papers at ALLC and ACH conferences, and published
in the ALLC Journal (now Literary & Linguistic Computing) and in CHum.
=========================================================================
*Giordano, Richard  <RICH@PUCC>
 
I am a new humanities specialist at Princeton University Computer Center
(Computing and Information Technology).  I come to Prinecton from Columbia
University where I was a Systems Analyst in the Libraries for about six
years.  I am just finishing my PhD dissertation in American history at
Columbia as well.
=========================================================================
*Johnson, Christopher <CJOHNSON@ARIZRVAX>
 
Language Research Center, Room 345 Modern Languages, University of Arizona
Tucson, Az   85702; (602) 621-1615
 
I am currently the Director of the Lnaguage Research
Center at the University of Arizona. Masters in Educational Media,
Univeristy of Arizona; Ph.D. in Secondary Education (Minor in
Instructional Technology), UA.
 
I have worked in the area of computer-based instruction since 1976.  I gained
most of my experience on the PLATO system here at the University and as a
consultant to Control Data Corp.  Two years ago I moved to the Faculty of
Humanities to create the Language Research Center, a support facility for
our graduate students, staff, and faculty.
 
My personnal research interests are in the area for individual learning
styles, critical thinking skills, Middle level education and testing
as they apply to computer-based education.  The research interests of my
faculty range from text analysis to word processing to research into the
use of the computer as an instructional tool.
=========================================================================
*Johansson, Stig  <h_johansson%use.uio.uninett@cernvax>
 
Dept of English, Univ of Oslo, P.O. Box 1003, Blindern, N-0315
Oslo 3, Norway. Tel: 456932 (Oslo).
 
Professor of English Language, Univ of Oslo. Relevant research
interest: computers in English language research. Coordinating
secretary of the International Computer Archive of Modern English
(ICAME) and editor of the ICAME Journal. Member of the ALLC.
=========================================================================
*Kalinoski, Ron <ACDRLK@SUVM>
 
Academic Computing Services, 215 Machinery Hall, Syracuse University
Syracuse, New York 13244; 315/423-3998
 
I am Associate Director for Research Computing at Syracuse University
and am interested in sponsoring a seminar series next spring focusing
on computing issues in the humanities. I hope that this will lead to
hiring a full-time staff person to provide user support services
for humanities computing.
========================================================================
*Langendoen, D. Terence  <TERGC@CUNYVM>
 
Linguistics Program, CUNY Graduate Center, 33 West 42nd Street,
New York, NY 10036-8099 USA; 212-790-4574 (soon to change)
 
I am a theoretical linguist, interested in parsing and in computational
linguistics generally.  I have also worked on the problem of making
sophisticated text-editing tools available for the teaching of writing.
 
I am currently Secretary-Treasurer of the Linguistic Society of America,
and will continue to serve until the end of calendar year 1988.  I
have also agreed to serve on two working committees on the ACH/ALLC/ACL
project on standards for text encoding, as a result of the conference
held at Vassar in mid-November 1987.
=========================================================================
*Molyneaux, Brian <AYI004@IBM.SOUTHAMPTON.AC.UK>
 
Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton, England.
 
I am at present conducting postgraduate research
in art and ideology and its relation to material culture.  I am also a
Field Associate at the Royal Ontario Museum, Department of New World
Archaeology, specialising in rock art research.  I obtained a BA (Hons)
in English Literature, a BA (Hon) in Anthropology, and an MA in Art and
Archaeology at Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario.  My research
interest in computing in the Humanities includes the analysis of texts
and art works within the context of social relations.
=========================================================================
*Olofsson, Ake <AAKE@SEUMDC51.BITNET>
 
I am at the Department of Psychology, University of Umea, in the north
of Sweden.  Part of my work at the department is helping people to
learn how to use our computer (VAX and the Swedish university Decnet)
and International mail (Bitnet). We are four system-managers at the
department and have about 40 ordinary users, running word-processing,
statistics and Mail programs.
========================================================================
*ORVIK, TONE <ORVIKT@QUCDN>
 
POST OFFICE BOX 1822, KINGSTON, ON K7L 5J6; 613 - 389 - 6092
 
WORKING ON BIBLE RESEARCH WITH AFFILIATION TO QUEEN'S UNIVERSITY'S
DEPT. OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES; CREATING CONCORDANCE OF SYMBOLOGY.
HAVE WORKED AS A RESEARCHER, TEACHER, AND WRITER, IN EUROPE AND CANADA;
ESPECIALLY ON VARIOUS ASPECTS OF BIBLE AND COMPARATIVE RELIGION.
 
INTERESTED IN CONTACT WITH NETWORK USERS WITH SAME/SIMILAR INTEREST OF
RESEARCH.
=========================================================================
*Potter, Rosanne G. <S1.RGP@ISUMVS or GG.BIB@ISUMVS>
 
Department of English, Iowa State University, Ross Hall 203,
(515) 294-2180 (Main Office); (515) 294-4617 (My office)
 
I am a literary critic; I use the mainframe computer for the analysis
of literary texts.  I have also designed a major formatting bibliographic
package, BIBOUT, in wide use at Iowa State University, also installed
at Princeton and Harvard.  I do not program, rather I work with very
high level programming specialists, statisticians, and systems analysts
here to design the applications that I want for my literary critical
purposes.
 
I am editing a book on Literary Computing and Literary Criticism containing
essays by Richard Bailey, Don Ross, Jr., John Smith, Paul Fortier, C.
Nancy Ide, Ruth Sabol, myself and others.  I've been on the board of ACH,
have been invited to serve on the CHum editorial board.
=========================================================================
*Renear, Allen H.  <ALLEN@BROWNVM>
 
My original academic discipline is philosophy (logic, epistemology, history),
and though I try to keep that up (and expect my Ph.D. this coming June)
I've spent much of the last 7 years in academic computing, particularly
humanities support.  I am currently on the Computer Center staff here at
Brown as a specialist in text processing, typesetting and humanities computing.
 
I've had quite a bit of practical experience designing, managing, and
consulting on large scholarly publication projects and my major research
interests are similarly in the general theory of text representation
and strategies for text based computing.   I am a strong advocate of the
importance of SGML for all computing that involves text; my views on this are
presented in the Coombs, Renear, DeRose article on Markup Systems in the
November 1987 *Communications of the ACM*.  Other topics of interest to me are
structure oriented editing, hypertext, manuscript criticism, and specialized
tools for analytic philosophers.  My research in philosophy is mostly in
epistemic logic (similar to what AI folks call "knowledge representation");
it has some surprising connections with emerging theories of text structure.
I am a contact person for Brown's very active Computing in the Humanities
User's Group (CHUG).
=========================================================================
*Richardson, John <IBQ1JVR@UCLAMVS>
 
Associate Professor, University of California (Ls Angeles), GSLIS;
(213) 825-4352
 
One of my interests is analytical bibliography,
the desription of printed books.  At present I am intrigued
with the idea that we can describe various component parts
of books, notably title pages, paper, and typefaces, but
the major psycho-physical element, ink, is not described.
Obviously this problem involves humanistic work but also
a far degree of sophistication with ink technology.
 
I would be interested in talking with or corresponding
with anyone on this topic...
=========================================================================
*Taylor, Philip <CHAA006@VAXA.RHBNC.AC.UK>
 
Royal Holloway & Bedford New College;  University of London; U.K;
(+44) 0784 34455 Ext: 3172
 
Although not primarily concerned with the humanities (I am
principal systems programmer at RHBNC), I am freqently involved in humanties
projects, particularly in the areas of type-setting (TeX), multi-lingual text
processing, and natural language analysis, among others.
=========================================================================
*Whitelam, Keith W. <WWSRS@VAXA.STIR.AC.UK>
 
Dept. of Religious Studies, University of Stirling, Stirling FK9 4LA
Scotland; Tel. 0786 3171 ext. 2491
 
I have been lecturer in Religious Studies at Stirling since 1978 with
prime responsibility for Hebrew Bible/Old Testament. My research interests
are mainly aimed at exploring new approaches to the study of early Israelite/
Palestinian history in an interdisciplinary context, i.e. drawing upon
social history, anthropology, archaeology, historical demography, etc.
I have been constructing a database of Palestinian archaeological sites,
using software written by the Computing Science department, in order to
analyse settlement patterns, site hierarchies, demography, etc.
The department of Environmental Science has recently purchased Laser Scan
an offered me access to the facilities. This will enable me to display
settlement patterns, sites, etc in map form for analysis and comparison.
I am particularly interested in corresponding/discussing with others working
on similar problems, particularly in Near Eastern archaeology.
 
I have also been involved in exploring the possibilities of setting up
campus-wide text processing laser printing facilities. It looks as though we
shall be able to offer a LaTeX service in the New Year. We are also planning
to offer a WYSIWYG service, such as Ventura on IBM or a combination with
Macs for the production of academic papers. Again I have a particular interest
in the use of foreign fonts, e.g. Hebrew, Akkadian, Ugaritic, Greek, etc.
 
My teaching and research on the Hebrew Bible leads to a concern with
developing computer-aided text analysis, although I have had little time
to explore this area. We have OCP available on our mainframe VAX but my
use of this has been very limited. I see this as an important area of
future development in teaching and research along with Hebrew teaching.
=========================================================================
*Wilson, Noel <QGHU21@UJVAX.ULSTER.AC.UK>
 
Head of Academic Services, University of Ulster, Shore Road
Newtownabbey, Co. Antrim, N. Ireland BT37 0QB;  (0232)365131 Ext. 2449
 
My post has overall responsibility for the central academic
computing service, offered by the Computer Centre, to the
University academic community. Within this brief, my Section
is responsible for the acquisition/development and documentation
of CAL and proprietary software. We currently provide a program
library in support of courses and research which contains approx.
400 programs; of these approx. 80 are in-house developments,
50 proprietary systems and the remainder obtained from a variety
of sources incl. program libraries (eg CONDUIT - Univ. of Iowa).
 
We have only very recently addressed computing within the Faculty
of Humanities; academic staff in the Faculty have used computers in
a research capacity and are now turning towards the various u'grad.
courses. Presently we hold a grant of 79,000 pounds from the United
Kingdom Computer Board for Universities and Research Councils, for
the development of CAL software in support of Linguistics and
Lexicostatistics. Within this project we are attempting to develop
courseware to support grammar teaching in French, German, Spanish
and Irish (details of existing materials appropriate to u'grad.
teaching would be most welcome!). We also are investigating the
creation of software to support an analysis of text (comparative
studies) - in this area we are looking at frequency counts assoc.
with words/expressions/words within registers etc. - again help
would be appreciated.
 
I am happy to provide further details on any of the above points
and wish to keep informed of useful Humanities-related CAL work
elsewhere. We currently use the Acorn BBC micro. but are also
moving in the direction of PC clones.
=========================================================================
*Wood, Max <BS83@SYSA.SALFORD.AC.UK>
 
Computing Officer, 403 Maxwell Building, The University of Salford
The Crescent, Salford, G.M.C. ENGLAND;  061-736-5843 Extension 7399
 
We are  involved in  a project to introduce the use of  computing
in teaching here in the Business  and Management Department of
Salford University and I am  keen to extend links to other
Business schools both here  in  the  U.K.   and  indeed
in the U.S.A. Obviously therefore I  would like to join
your forum so as  to possibly exchange  ideas news  etc.
 
My  background  is essentially  in computing  and  I  mainly supervise
the  computing  resources available to our  Department, and have
formulated  much of the teaching systems we  currently use.
=========================================================================
*Wujastyk, Dominik <dow@husc6.BITNET>
 
I am a Sanskritist with some knowledge of computing.  Once upon a time
(1977-78) I learned Snobol4 from Susan Hockey at Oxford, where I did
undergraduate and later doctoral Sanskrit.  More recently, I have been
using TeX on my PC AT (actually a Compaq III), and in the middle of this
summer I published a book _Studies on Indian Medical History_, which was
done in TeX and printed out on an HP LJ II, and sent to the publisher as
camera ready.  It all went very well.
 
I have received the MS DOS Icon implementation from Griswold at Arizona,
but have not spent time on it.  I am trying to teach myself at the moment,
just to learn enough to knock out ocassional routines to convert files from
wordprocessor formats to TeX, and that sort of thing.  (Probably
reinventing the wheel.)
 
At the present time I am editing a Sanskrit text on medieval alchemy, and
doing all the formatting of the edition in LaTeX.
Before I ever started Sanskrit, I did a degree in Physics at Imperial
College in London, but that is so long ago that I don't like to think about
it!
=========================================================================
*Young, Charles M. <YOUNGC@CLARGRAD>
 
Dept. of Philosophy, The Claremont Graduate School
 
I am a member of the American Philosophical Association's committee on
Computer Use in Philosophy. One of my pet projects is to find some way
of making the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae database (all of classical
Greek through the 7th century C.E.) more readily available to working
scholars.
=========================================================================
