User:Jcgood
From Digital Humanities Wiki
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{{InfoboxMemberProfile | {{InfoboxMemberProfile | ||
|image = [[Image:Good.jpg|left|150px|Jeff Good]] | |image = [[Image:Good.jpg|left|150px|Jeff Good]] | ||
| - | | | + | |member_name = Jeff Good |
|title = Assistant Professor | |title = Assistant Professor | ||
| - | | | + | |departmental_affiliation = Linguistics |
| - | | | + | |institutional_affiliation = University at Buffalo |
| - | | | + | |office_location = 609 Baldy Hall |
|email = jcgood@buffalo.edu | |email = jcgood@buffalo.edu | ||
|URI = http://buffalo.edu/~jcgood/ | |URI = http://buffalo.edu/~jcgood/ | ||
| - | | | + | |membership_status = full member |
| - | | | + | |research_interests = test |
| - | | | + | |digital_projects =Northeastern North American Indigenous Languages Archive (NNAILA) |
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 19:31, 4 December 2008
| Jeff Good | |
|---|---|
| Assistant Professor | |
| {{{image_link}}} | |
| {{{description}}} | |
| Research interests: | test |
| Institutional affiliation: | University at Buffalo |
| Departmental affiliation: | Linguistics |
| Office location: | 609 Baldy Hall |
| E-mail: | jcgood@buffalo.edu |
| URI: | http://buffalo.edu/~jcgood/ |
| Membership status: | full member |
| Digital projects: | Northeastern North American Indigenous Languages Archive (NNAILA) |
Jeff Good
A title of my own making?
What goes here?
Why would I want to customize this title?
I am a faculty member of the UB Linguistics Department with interests in morphology, syntax, African languages, and digital linguistics. In particular, I am active in the emerging area of digital methods for language documentation and description and archiving. More specifically, I am interested in the development of new database models to facilitate comparative, typological, and descriptive linguistic work. As part of this research, I oversaw the transition of the Rosetta Project's language database to one built primarily on RDF data structures, a key component of the Semantic Web, and I now have a more general interest in anticipating and planning for the transition of linguistic research from traditional modes of publication to new models based on insights from the development of the web.
