Visualisation and graphical techniques to help writers write more idiomatically
Research output: Contribution to conference › Poster › peer-review
Standard Standard
2017. Poster session presented at IEEE Conference on Visualization, Phoenix, Arizona, United States.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Poster › peer-review
HarvardHarvard
APA
CBE
MLA
VancouverVancouver
Author
RIS
TY - CONF
T1 - Visualisation and graphical techniques to help writers write more idiomatically
AU - Roberts, Jonathan C.
AU - Frankenberg-Garcia, Ana
AU - Lew, Robert
AU - Rees, Geraint
AU - Pereda, Javier
N1 - Conference code: 2017
PY - 2017/10/1
Y1 - 2017/10/1
N2 - Text visualisation is gaining popularity. Researchers have investi- gated methods that display the structure of documents, show how books have evolved over many editions, how words are distributed in text. But few researchers have investigated how visualisation techniques could help someone write better text documents. The goal of the writer is to create texts that are not just grammatically correct, but also idiomatic, and fluent to read. Our focus is to in- vestigate collocations, i.e., words that have become conventional to use together (fast food vs. *quick food, collect data vs. *pick data, strong tea vs. *powerful tea, etc.) While researchers are starting to use visualisation techniques to help users write better computer programs, musicians create music, or artists be more creative, there is less research in writing. In this short paper we not only make a call for action, but we look at related work, and discuss some the main challenges and opportunities for research in this area.
AB - Text visualisation is gaining popularity. Researchers have investi- gated methods that display the structure of documents, show how books have evolved over many editions, how words are distributed in text. But few researchers have investigated how visualisation techniques could help someone write better text documents. The goal of the writer is to create texts that are not just grammatically correct, but also idiomatic, and fluent to read. Our focus is to in- vestigate collocations, i.e., words that have become conventional to use together (fast food vs. *quick food, collect data vs. *pick data, strong tea vs. *powerful tea, etc.) While researchers are starting to use visualisation techniques to help users write better computer programs, musicians create music, or artists be more creative, there is less research in writing. In this short paper we not only make a call for action, but we look at related work, and discuss some the main challenges and opportunities for research in this area.
KW - Information visualisation
KW - digital humanities
KW - writing
KW - EDUCATION
M3 - Poster
T2 - IEEE Conference on Visualization
Y2 - 1 October 2017 through 6 October 2017
ER -