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Posts by Andreas

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Natural Language Processing How do you build Large Language Models? How do humans experience Natural Language Processing (NLP) applications in their daily lives? And how can we...

👀 Look what 🎅 has broght just before Christmas 🎁: a brand new Research Master in Natural Language Processing at @facultyofartsug.bsky.social @rug.nl

Program: www.rug.nl/masters/natu...

Applications (2026/2027) are open! Come and study with us (you will also learn why we have a 🐮 in our logo)

4 months ago 25 15 0 0
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Event Detection between Literary Studies and NLP. A Survey, a Narratological Reflection, and a Case Study Narrative structure in fiction relies on the strategic presentation of events, where the ordering and disclosure of information (syuzhet) shape reader engagement and tension. This study outlines a com...

New article in #JCLS 4(1)! 🎉
Visser Solissa, van Cranenburgh & @fpianz.bsky.social present a model for detecting syuzhet—the ordering and disclosure of events that shape a narrative—and formalize event annotation in fiction across multiple languages.
#CCLS25 #ComputationalNarratology

4 months ago 8 4 1 0

Please add @gronlp.bsky.social

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

Work in progress -- suggestions for NLP-ers based in the EU/Europe & already on Bluesky very welcome!

go.bsky.app/NZDc31B

1 year ago 70 20 51 0
Journal of Computational Literary Studies | Issue: Issue: 1(3) (2024)

This week, we announce the seventh article from JCLS 3 (1): Agapitos and van Cranenburgh "A Stylometric Analysis of Seneca's Disputed Plays" (10.48694/jcls.3919). Check it out at: jcls.io/issue/109/in... #ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities #CCLS24

1 year ago 6 6 1 0
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A Stylometric Analysis of Seneca's disputed plays. Authorship Verification of <em>Octavia</em> and <em>Hercules Oetaeus</em> Seneca's authorship of Octavia and Hercules Oetaeus is disputed. This study employs established computational stylometry methods based on character n-gram frequencies to investigate this case. Based o...

Seneca's authorship of Octavia and Hercules Oetaeus has long been disputed. We show that based on computational stylometry, the disputed plays can be attributed to Seneca, except for certain segments where there may be mixed authorship.
jcls.io/article/id/3...

1 year ago 1 0 0 0