Historical Named-Entity Recognition
Historical named-entity recognition adapts a core natural-language-processing task, identifying and classifying the names of persons, places, organizations, and dates in text, to the distinctive difficulties of historical sources. Modern NER systems are trained on clean contemporary text, but historical documents arrive full of archaic and inconsistent spelling, obsolete place-names, OCR or handwriting-transcription errors, and entities that have since changed names or vanished. Work surveyed by Seaward and colleagues addresses these obstacles, combining machine-learning sequence models with historical gazetteers and authority files to recognize entities reliably in noisy diachronic text. The payoff is large: once persons, places, and dates are extracted and linked to standard identifiers, historians can build prosopographies of who appears with whom, populate historical GIS with mapped place-names, and structure vast textual archives for search and analysis. Historical NER thus serves as a crucial bridge, turning the unstructured output of digitization and text mining into structured, linkable data about the actors and settings of the past.
Zapis źródłowy
Cytaty skopiowane dosłownie z zapisu źródłowego metody. Nie należy z nich wywnioskować weryfikacji na poziomie twierdzenia.
- Muehlberger, G., Seaward, L., Terras, M., et al. (2019). Transforming scholarship in the archives through handwritten text recognition: Transkribus as a case study. Journal of Documentation, 75(5), 954-976. · DOI 10.1108/JD-07-2018-0114
- Moretti, F. (2013). Distant Reading. Verso. · ISBN 9781781680841
Wyselekcjonowane twierdzenia
Twierdzenia utrwalone w rejestrze dowodowym, każde z własną oceną.
Ten widok nie tworzy oceny twierdzenia, jeśli rejestr jej nie zawiera.
Powiązane metody
Wygenerowane z grafu metod i pokazane jako sugerowane przez maszynę powiązania — nie należy z nich wywnioskować twierdzenia dowodowego.