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      Building the British Sign Language Corpus

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          Abstract

          This paper presents an overview of the British Sign Language Corpus Project—the first endeavor to create a machine-readable digital corpus of British Sign Language (BSL) collected from deaf signers across the United Kingdom. In the field of sign language studies, it represents a unique combination of methodology from variationist sociolinguistics and corpus linguistics. Unlike previous large-scale sign language sociolinguistic projects, the dataset is being annotated and tagged using ELAN software, given metadata descriptions, and the video data has been made accessible, with long-term efforts to make the dataset searchable on-line. This means, however, that participants must consent to having the video data of their sign language use made public. This puts at risk the authenticity of the linguistic data collected, as signers may monitor their production more carefully than usual. We discuss our attempt to minimize this problem by creating a dual-access archive.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          University of Hawaii Press
          1934-5275
          October 2013
          Article
          10125/4592
          aeee87d9-21d0-4e07-bdcc-7264ed7cc6c5

          Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 United States

          Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported

          History
          Funding
          National Foreign Language Resource Center

          British Sign Language,Corpus linguistics,Sociolinguistics,ELAN software,Digital archive

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