From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
|
|
|||
| Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
|
{{student table row|Elisa Arl||}} |
{{student table row|Elisa Arl||}} |
||
|
{{student table row|YLu66||}} |
{{student table row|YLu66||}} |
||
|
{{student table row|Marissa6146||}} |
|||
|
{{end of students table}} |
{{end of students table}} |
||
Latest revision as of 03:55, 21 January 2026
| This course page is an automatically-updated version of the main course page at dashboard.wikiedu.org. Please do not edit this page directly; any changes will be overwritten the next time the main course page gets updated. |
- Course name
- Linguistics in the digital age
- Institution
- University of Arizona
- Instructor
- AmyFou
- Wikipedia Expert
- Brianda (Wiki Ed)
- Subject
- Linguistics
- Course dates
- 2026-01-14 00:00:00 UTC – 2026-05-06 23:59:59 UTC
- Approximate number of student editors
- 100
Language is increasingly being produced and interpreted by machines and this fact ripples through humans’ lives in an increasing variety of linguistic interactions. This course asks students to explore the applications of linguistic analysis to the problems posed and opportunities created by the creation and dissemination of language in digital world. Students will learn about corpus-based and machine-learning approaches, including machine translation, to the production and understanding of language, and the ways these may interact to magnify or diminish some problematic properties of public speech, and reveal or conceal its authorship, especially in the digital world. In collaboration with the WikiEducation initiative, students will actively engage in the critical review of Wikipedia resources to assist in the identification and remediation of problematic language.
