Abstract
Close collaboration between community members and visiting researchers offers mutual benefits, including opportunities for new re- search insights and an expanded scope for supporting language maintenance and developing practical materials. We discuss a collabo- ration in Erakor, Vanuatu aiming to build the capacity of community-based researchers to undertake and sustain language and cultural documentation projects. We focus on the technical and procedural skills required to collect, manage, and work with audio and video data, and give an overview of the outcomes of a community-led project after initial training. We discuss the benefits and challenges of this type of project from the perspective of the community researchers and the external linguists. We show that the community-led project in Erakor, in which data management and archiving are incorporated into the documentation process, has crucial benefits for both the community and the linguists. Two most salient benefits are: a) long-term documentation of linguistic and cultural practices calibrated towards communitys needs, and b) collections of large quantities of data of good phonetic quality, which, besides being readily available for research, have a great potential for training and testing emerging language technologies based on machine learning.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | THIS IS A PLACEHOLDER DO NOT EDIT |
Place of Publication | DO NOT EDIT |
Publisher | ABC Books |
Pages | 185–189 |
ISBN (Print) | 12345678 |
Publication status | Published - 2019 |
Event | SCOPUS Conference Not Found - Duration: 1 Jan 1980 → … |
Conference
Conference | SCOPUS Conference Not Found |
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Period | 1/01/80 → … |