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Language Archiving at the MPI

  . Language Archiving at the MPI. Peter Wittenburg MPI for Psycholinguistics D O B E S Archive. NL. G. (DOkumentation BEdrohter Sprachen Documentation of Endangered Languages) (funded by VolkswagenFoundation). Rhein. Nijmegen. Language Archiving at the MPI.   .

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Language Archiving at the MPI

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  1.   Language Archiving at the MPI Peter Wittenburg MPI for Psycholinguistics DOBES Archive NL G (DOkumentation BEdrohter Sprachen Documentation of Endangered Languages) (funded by VolkswagenFoundation) Rhein Nijmegen Language Archiving at the MPI

  2.   Still a large variety of languages • currently 6500 languages world-wide • Distribution • Africa 1995 • S/SE Asia 1400 • Neuguinea 1109 • Southamerica 419 • North-Asia 380 • Central-America 300 • Pazific Area 250 • Australia 250 • North-America 209 • Europe 209 Language Archiving at the MPI

  3.   Language endangerment • 97 % of the people use 4% of the languages • 96% of the languages are being spoken by 3% of the people • approx 6000 of the languages are spoken by about 200 Mio • people • in average: 30.000 speaker per language • for 50% less than 10.000, for 25% less than 1000 • for 50% the number of speakers is decreasing dramatically • pessimistic view (according to Crystal): • 90 % of the languages will be extinct around 2100!! • i.e. every second week a language becomes extinct!! Language Archiving at the MPI

  4.   what can we do? • Documentation + Revitalization • 2000 DOBES Programme of the VolkswagenFoundation • many other initiatives and institutions – all to be complementary • VolkswagenFoundation is devoted to primarily support research • teams get funds for documentation (in general 3 years +) • had a very intensive pilot phase full of useful discussions • it was obvious that all teams felt the need to help the language • communities (including the archiving team) Language Archiving at the MPI

  5.   How to do a language documentation? • based on N. Himmelmann “Documentary and Descriptive Linguistics” • Documentation: primary focus is on collection, transcription and • translation of primary data (observations, elicitations, ...) • Description: primary focus is on linguistic analysis and special phenomena • the methods and the results are different Language Archiving at the MPI

  6.   How to do a language documentation? • there is an overlap between the two poles: documentation and description • no interlinear description without a morphological analysis • Documentation has to • deliver a comprehensive representation of the “linguistic habitudes and • traditions” • document spoken language in its communicative and cultural • background • observed linguistic habitudes and meta knowledge • holistic view of language is important • be interesting for other disciplines – in particular primary data • help the language community • therefore a natural focus on audio&video recordings Language Archiving at the MPI

  7.   DOBES language documentation • language on its cultural background • “theory-neutral” representation • lots of multimedia (audion, video) recordings as basis • where possible base everything on primary data • linguistic goals • annotations (orthographic transcription, translation, ...) • only for a small part a morphological/syntactical analysis • sketch grammar, limited topic-oriented lexicon • also ethnologists, musikologogists, ethnobiologists involved • in total about 3 years • idea: later generations should be able to reproduce the language • material could later be extended Language Archiving at the MPI

  8.   Traditional annotation Text Annotation

  9.   Modern annotation Multimedia Annotation

  10.   DOBES Map Svan/Udi/ Tsova-Tush Chintang/Puma Tofa Nenets Archiv Sami Hocank Beaver Wichita Mawe/Bakairi/ Katxuyana Salar/Monguor Chontal Totoli Lacandon Tsafiki Sri Lanka Malay Kuikuro Bora/Ocaina Semang Teop Trumai Saliba Waima’a Aweti Chipaya Akhoe Hai//om !Xoo Iwaidja Marquesan Chaco Languages Jaminjung • 30 documentation teams (at MPI also 30 expeditions per year) • 1 Archiving Team Language Archiving at the MPI

  11. Labial (Post-) alveolar Velar Glottal    Stops voiceless unaspirated (p) t k ' voiceless aspirated (ph) th kh voiceless ejective p' t' k' voiced b d g Fricatives plain (f) s h ??? s' Nasals plain m n ??? mh nh ??? m' n' Laterals plain l ??? lh ??? l' Tap / trill r rr Glides plain w ??? wh ??? w' Waima’a (East Timor) MauricioBelo, Caisido village John Bowden, Australian National University John Hajek, University of Melbourne Nikolaus Himmelmann, Ruhr-Universität Bochum la enen i at before PTL Once upon a time bu taha k’omu ruo bu wai-dura loo ligasaun ini HON mud ball and HON cricket make closeness RCP A ball of mud and a cricket were friends sire ruo laka khuu rahmhutu busa 3p two go clean together garden The two of them went to clean the gardens together

  12.   Trumai (Amazonas) • Stephen Levinson, MPI Nijmegen  • Raquel Guirardello-Damian, Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi • about 100 people • about 51 speaking Trumai Language Archiving at the MPI

  13.   Salar/Monguor (China) • Shaman in Huzhu • Mongghul county • Drummers in the Nadun festival • Minhe county • Salar villages along the • Yellow River • Salar children above • Dashyinix village Painting the faces of possessed Wutu, Niandehu township Language Archiving at the MPI

  14.   Tofa, Tozhu, Tsengel Tuva, Tuha (Sibiria) • David Harrison (Yale) • Brian Donahoe (Manchester) • Sven Grawunder (Halle) • Language—its structure • and sounds. • Oral folklore—texts, • narratives and personal • stories, belief systems, • naming systems. • Music—singing and • sound mimesis. • Traditional ecology— • nomadsm, pastoralism, • hunting and reindeer • herding Shaman Ceremony Language Archiving at the MPI

  15.   Language documentation for whom? • for interested researchers • for students and schools • for journalists • for the interested public • for the language communities • for future generations Language Archiving at the MPI

  16.   For language communities • language maintenance or even revitalization • maintainenance of the language, identity, self-conciousness • creation of school and other educational material • support local/regional centers (create and dl complete copies) • improve access to archives • in communities big interest in recordings – in particular video Language Archiving at the MPI

  17.   For future generations • in a future world of mono cultures it will become important to know about earlier diversity • as now it will be important to know the own roots • it may be relevant to point to the different types of languages • let’s be honest: we don’t know what future generations will do with the • material Language Archiving at the MPI

  18.   Why archives? • many reasons • Dietrich Schüller: 80% of our recordings about culture and • languages are endangered! • storage inadequate (Meda, Formats, PC, ...) • selection of suitable technologies requires expert knowledge • creation of redundat storage and migration is important • requires discipine and has to be independent on persons • migration to new technologies can be very expensive • only centres can do this • AND: requires explicitness – at the end a viewable corpus • international trend: • DOBES, AILLA, ELAR, PARADISEC, LACITO, ... Language Archiving at the MPI

  19.   What is a “modern” digital archive? • traditional archives • focus on preserving physical content • access not permitted • digital archives • physical object is almost irrelevant (Tape, CDROM) • content has to be preserved • why this revolutionary change? • copies can be made lossless (let’s be careful with compression) • copies can be created with low costs • modern digital archive • long-term preservation fo the content (Migration, Distribution) • access to the content • enrichement without affecting the content • sensitive management of access • DOBES has to be a living archive (interactive, expandible) Language Archiving at the MPI

  20.   2000 years 1000 years 500 years 250 years 0 years Long-term preservation • can we guarantee survival of bit-streams? NO • we can increase the chances of survival? YES • our storage media are not adequate • how to do it • continuous migration (copies to new generation) • world-wide distribution (now within Germany/NL) • problem of interpretability not solvable • have to take care of ethical/legal aspects • crucial for survival are maintenance costs • all MPI material is available in 7 copies at different locations various e-media clay tablets Language Archiving at the MPI

  21.   domain of physical resources conceptual domain of resources Pillars of Digital Archives I • strict separation of physical and logical access layers • physical domain is for System Managers and Archive Managers • and changes • logical domain (created by linguists) remains and is stable • metadata is the glue – have to be maintained system manager corpus manager user creator Language Archiving at the MPI

  22.   Pillars of Digital Archives II Archive Organization Layer of Language Layer of Sessions Song Book Video Recording Intro Films Notes Sound Recording Lexicon Annotations Language Archiving at the MPI

  23.   Pillars of Digital Archives III • separation between object and instance • need Unique Resource IDs • and robust “Resolving” mechanism MPI Repository mapping MPI Portal Metadata mapping GWDG Repository mapping XYZ Portal Metadata URID Resolver Language Archiving at the MPI

  24.   Pillar of Digital Archives IV • need Versioning • nothing may be deleted, but annotations will be changed! • research world is dynamic – we want enrichment/extension userx=read usery=read etc userx=write usery=read etc URID Resolver Language Archiving at the MPI

  25.   Principles V – Authentication&Authorization • authentication and authorization has to be separated • URIDs are central link to authorization information • need to have space for policies, procedures, declarations etc • but administrative effort has to be minimized!!! userx=read usery=read etc userx=write usery=read etc URID Resolver Language Archiving at the MPI

  26.   Principles VI – Formats • only open, well-documented and widely used formats (encoding standards) should be used in the archive • where possible generic schemas should be the basis • in DOBES strong recommendations for a few archival formats • JPEG/TIFF/PNG, MPEG2, Linear PCM, UNICODE, XML • Plain Text, HTML, (PDF) possible • at MPI less restrictive (therefore great danger with some types) • for presentation purposes also MPEG1/4, MP3, HTML • as import formats large variety (Shoebox, CHAT, WORD, ...) • conversion as much as possible towards generic files (LMF, EAF, ?) • archived objects have to be stored in a neutral way and accessible as individual objects • no encapsulation for primary objects • nevertheless: MPI archive takes almost all data (even 16mm films) • but conversion can be very costly Language Archiving at the MPI

  27.   MPI Archive – state • more than 150.000 Objects (in online archive - ~1/3 of the data) • in total more than 15 TB • per year about 4 TB in addition • several sub-archives (EL, SL, ESF, CGN, ...) • MPI archive ingest is open for other people !!! • completely structured by open XML files based on IMDI schema • a complete machinery available • are working on URIDs & Versioning at this moment Language Archiving at the MPI

  28.   Archive Utility Layer Ontological Knowledge User Authentication Access Rights Metadata Tools Archive Access Annotation Exploitation Lexicon Exploitation Text Exploitation Data Ingestion& Management Archive Enrichment Lexical Encoding Web Commentary Media Annotation MPI Archive – Access The Archive Domain of Registered Primary and Secondary Resources User Domain of Descriptive Metadata Primary Resources: Texts Images Sound Movies

  29.   MPI Archive – Metadata and Simple Access • metadata is open! • what is minimal metadata? – ongoing discussion • IMDI Editor • BatchModifier (to change lots of IMDI files) • IMDI XML Browser (operates in distributed XML domain) • IMDI HTML Browsing (on the fly transformation of XML) • structured search in XML and HTML domain • unstructured search in XML and HTML domain • searchable via Google • geographic browsing via Google Earth (work in progress) • DC/OLAC bridge via OAI port (all IMDI stuff can be harvested) • manuals and training courses • direct access to simple objects via plug-ins • complete sub-tree download Language Archiving at the MPI

  30.   Geographic Browsing

  31.   Geographic Browsing

  32.   Geographic Browsing

  33.   MPI Archive – Upload Access • two options • manual integration exceptions are easy  • too many teams (~60) • LAMUS controlled integration exceptions are difficult • users do it themselves (?) • LAMUS features • - web-based operation • - request of a work space • - specification of an accepted upload node (archive anchor) • - extend and manipulate the corpus structure • - upload metadata descriptions • - upload any type of resources (configurable format control) • - create a linked sub-archive in the workspace and integrate this into the archive • - checks to guarantee consistency and format compliance Language Archiving at the MPI

  34.   MPI Archive – Utilization Access tool is ANNEX Language Archiving at the MPI

  35.   MPI Archive – Utilization Access tool is LEXUS Language Archiving at the MPI

  36.   MPI Archive – Utilization Access • Problem • different structures and formats • different terminologies tools are ANNEX/LEXUS Language Archiving at the MPI

  37.   MPI Archive – State of Access • at this moment almost anything from DOBES is closed • lots of requests by journalists • first 15 teams have to finish these months • working hard • changing a lot until last minute of course • expect some stuff to become open • but much to be handled on requests Language Archiving at the MPI

  38.   End Mark Abley (Canadian) Each time we lose a language the ghosts who made use of it cast a new bell. The voices magnify. Soon, listen, they’ll outpeal the tongues of earth. Thanks for your attention. Language Archiving at the MPI

  39.   Lots of differences • Differences at all linguistic layers • Phonemic • Prosody • Phonology • Morphology • Syntax • Semantics • Pragmatics • Reduced Languages • Whistling of Gomera fishermen • Sign Language of Plains-Indians • “Computer” Languages • ... Language Archiving at the MPI

  40.   Sound Systems Vocal – Distribution (28 languages) Spectra and Formants F2 F1 F2 F3 F4 F5 F1 Formants over time F5 • Rotoka (Papua-Neuguinea) • Vokals a/e/i/o/u • 6 Consonants p/t/k/v/r/g • !Xoo (South-Africa) • 141 Sounds incl. click-sounds F4 F3 F2 F1

  41.   i Zeug i vermuten i Stuhl/Sessel i Bedeutung Tone Systems • modulation of segmental information • by Prosody • stretches across phrases and sentences • Tones: meaning of words • Swedish: 2 Tones (anden – ándén) • German: aufbäumen – aufBäumen • Mandarin Chinese: 4 tones • Kantonese: 9 tones • Vietnamese: 8 tones • some so-aisan languages: up to 15 tones Intonation dr ai st Mandarin Chin. 4 Language Archiving at the MPI

  42.   verb stem Morphosyntax • Rules for the generation of words and grammatical structures • strictly isolating languages: one morpheme – one word • Chinese is an isolating language • another extreme are the polysynthetic languages • example of the Yup’ik inuit • tuntussurqatarniksaitengqiggtuq • tuntu ssur qatar ni ksaite ngqiggt uq • Renntier jagen FUT sagen NEG wieder 3SG:IND • er hatte noch nicht gesagt dass er Renntiere jagen wolle • basic principle: stem is inflected by many affixes • for us unusual: isolated core morphemes cannot be interpreted • “ssur” uttered in isolation does not make sense Language Archiving at the MPI

  43.   Dialog style • norms to express things/activities is different • example from Kilivila (Trobriand Islands – Neuguinea) • Person:Ambeya • Where do you go to? • Gunter:(wants to say: I will wash myself) • Bala bakakaya • I will go I will take a bath • Host: • Bila bikakaya bike’ita bisisu bipaisewa • 3.Fut-gehen 3.Fut-baden 3.Fut-zurückkommen 3.Fut-sein 3.Fut-arbeiten • He will go – he will take a bath - he will come back – he will stay - • he will work. • He will take a bath, come back again and work with us Language Archiving at the MPI

  44.   Pronoms • in Kilivila • the inclusive and exclusiveDual • we two – myself and the others except you • in Paamese (Vanuatu - Archipel) • in addition thePaukal • “a few” Language Archiving at the MPI

  45.   Spatial orientation absolute system above above behind north egocentric system east right west south below • Herberger would use the egocentric system to describe the scene • Aborigines would chose the absolute system – for us hardly possible: • “the ball lies east of the player” Language Archiving at the MPI

  46.   Awareness • since 1866 efforts to preserve diversity in nature • 1991 problem in focus of American Linguistic Society • 1992 discussion at the Intern. Conference of Linguistics • 1992 AG for endangered languages in German linguistic society • 1993 UNESCO project to create the red list • 2000 DOBES programme of the VolkswagenFoundation • within 2 decades broad awareness amongst linguists • David Crystals amongst first semester students: • 75% don’t know anything about the problem • most don’t see a problem • how does this come: • attention for tigers etc but not for languages? Language Archiving at the MPI

  47.   Factors are known • external factors • military suppression • religious conversion • economic dominance • cultural dominance • educational suppression • internal faktors • negative attitude towards own language • avoidance of discrimination • hope to earn (more) money • improvement of mobility • youngsters are trend followers • ... Language Archiving at the MPI

  48.   MPI Archive – Content Overview

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