ISLRN
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This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2017) |
The ISLRN or International Standard Language Resource Number is Persistent Unique Identifier for Language Resources[1].
Context
On November 18, 2013[2], 12 major organisations (see list below) from the fields Language Resources and Technologies, Computational Linguistics, and Digital Humanities held a cooperation meeting in Paris (France) and agreed to announce the establishment of the International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN), to be assigned to each Language Resource.
- ADHO
- ACL
- Asian Federation of Natural Language Processing
- COCOSDA, International Committee for the Coordination & Standardisation of Speech Databases and Assessment Techniques
- ICCL (COLING)
- European Data Forum
- ELRA
- IAMT, International Association for Machine Translation
- ISCA
- LDC
- Oriental COCOSDA
- RMA, Language Resource Management Agency
Size and Content
2500 resources and tools have already been allocated an ISLRN. These resources include written data (Annotated corpus, Annotated text, List of misspelled word, Terminological database, Treebank, Wordnet, etc.) and speech corpora (Synthesised Speech, Transcripts and Audiovisual Recordings, Conversational Speech, Folk Sayings, etc.)
Objectives
Providing Language Resources with unique names and identifiers using a standardized nomenclature ensures the identification of each Language Resources and streamlines the citation with proper references in activities within Human Language Technology as well as in documents and scientific publications. Such unique identifier also enhances the reproducibility[3], an essential feature of scientific work.
References
- ^ Khalid Choukri, Jungyeul Park, Olivier Hamon, Victoria Arranz, Proposal for the International Standard Language Resource Number. Proceedings of Workshop on Language Resources, Technology and Services in the Sharing Paradigm, Chiang Mai, Thailand, November 12, 2011.
- ^ NLP12 Paris Declaration
- ^ 4REAL Workshop on Research Results Reproducibility, and Resources Citation in Science and Technology of Language