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Perseus: Announcing the Arethusa Annotation Framework
Announcing the Arethusa Annotation Framework
Developers Gernot Höflechner, Robert Lichtensteiner and
Christof Sirk, in collaboration with the Perseus Digital Library at
Tufts (via the Libraries and the Transformation of the Humanities and Perseids projects) and the University of Leipzig’s Open Philology Project, have released Arethusa, a framework for linguistic annotation and curation. Arethusa was inspired by and extends the goals of the Alpheios Project,
to provide a highly configurable, language-independent, extensible
infrastructure for close-reading, annotation, curation and exploration
of open-access digitized texts. While the initial release highlights
support for morpho-syntactic annotation, Arethusa is designed to allow
users to switch seamlessly between a variety of annotation and
close-reading activities, facilitating the creation of sharable,
reusable linguistic data in collaborative research and pedagogical
environments.
Arethusa is built on the angular.js
javascript web application framework and provides a back-end
independent infrastructure for accessing texts, annotations and
linguistic services from a variety of sources. Extensibility is a
guiding design goal — Arethusa includes tools for automatic generation
of skeleton code for new features as plugins; detailed development
guides are also currently in progress. We hope others will be able to
reuse and build upon the platform to add support for other annotation
types, languages and back-end repositories and workflow engines.
Arethusa is already deployed as a component of the Perseids
platform, where it provides an annotation interface for
morpho-syntactic analyses and will soon also act as a broker between the
Perseids back-end (the Son of SUDA Online
application) and various other front-end annotating and editing
activities, including translation alignments, entity identification and
text editing.
Screencasts
are available that show how the Arethusa application can be used for
syntactic diagram (treebank) and morphological analysis annotations on
Perseids. Additional demos and slides will be made available soon which
highlight additional features along with the architecture and design.
This project has been made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (Award LG0611032611), the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the European Social Fund.
We also are indebted to Robert Gorman and Vanessa Gorman of the
University of Nebrask and Giuseppe G. A. Celano of the University of
Leipzig for their invaluable contributions to the design and testing of
the platform.
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