@_akpiper@LauraK_Nelson I just get a top 10 of ['philosophy', 'religion', 'theology', 'science', 'psychology', 'mysticism', 'idealism', 'metaphysics', 'teachings', 'sociology'], but that's with a model trained on U.S. periodicals 1900-1930. Choice of model matters w/ these constructs.
@scott_bot@Ted_Underwood @dtracy2 @ryancordell@unsworth Work by @pruett_jordan should be acknowledged if no one else has done already; he merged NYT bestsellers from 1931-2020 with references to matching volumes in HathiTrust. https://t.co/G3r0ISNBOs
Happy to announce that my NYT bestselling fiction dataset has been published by the Post45 Data Collective! It lists the author and title for every NYT bestseller from 1931-2020, with references to ~4,900 matching volumes in HathiTrust:
https://t.co/AAUtSszPyK
@DLib24 I try to sort rejections into three buckets: 1. Revise as soon as possible. 2. Abandon or use in some other way (such as a lesson plan or class assignment). 3. Let it sit for a few months and see how I feel. All 3s should eventually become 1s or 2s.
@joncgoodwin I would say there's no great analog because statisticians may not be known by name even when their methods are used very widely, whereas literary scholars tend to be named even when (sometimes especially when) their ideas are seen as bad or out of date.
@scott_bot A did a quick search and found that https://t.co/WC1f9dG55b can decent looking generate drive-time maps. I don't know of one that mixes this capability with faceting by neighborhood data, but it sounds like a great idea if it doesn't exist.
@sarahebull How about @tanyaclement 's "‘A thing not beginning and not ending’: using digital tools to distant-read Gertrude Stein's The Making of Americans"? https://t.co/lhohnTtLn7
@GrubStreetWomen I wonder about this too. One question is how you'd feel if something awful went up in its place, which might be especially salient if a lot of people look at your site. In that case, you could take it down and pay for another year to display a closure message at that URL.
@scott_bot Are you looking for the smallest possible lidded vessel that you can pour boiling chicken broth into without cracking it? Call today to see if schmaltz jar is right for you.
@benmschmidt @jeduardogonz Sounds right to me. This graph could easily suggest a mix of unrealistic expectations and bad work experiences. Some students might create those expectations on their own but profs still need to be good mentors on this front.
@jdicaglio Saw this through a mutual follow. I recommend searching the periodical ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment if you haven't already done that. https://t.co/CuHPqh76fM
Maîtrisez les bases du traitement automatique des langues et comment utiliser tf-idf avec des données SHS grâce à cette leçon de @HumanitiesData - https://t.co/MWYkbUumwq