New Explore Function!

Do you like colourful bubble charts? Then you’re in luck, because we are introducing a new feature to our site that involves exactly that! The feature will be rolled out in phases, and new aspects will be added to it in phases, but you can already use it now.

Introducing: our keyword function!

Our keyword function displays in a bubble chart which words in one part of Hansard compared to another part of Hansard. This is modelled on the keyword function often used in corpus linguistics, where keywords are often used in corpus linguistics to answer questions like: “What is the body of text mainly about?”, “What are the major themes or concerns of the text?” and “What makes a text distinct from another text?”. Keywords computed with this function are those words which occur relatively more frequently in one corpus compared to another corpus. To do this, we compare the corpus we are interested in knowing keywords for (the ‘target corpus’) with a ‘comparison’ corpus. The algorithm behind the comparison then calculates which words are key by carrying out a statistical test called ‘Log-likelihood’. The higher the log-likelihood score, the more confident we can be that the frequency difference between the two corpora is not just by chance. The keyword function on our site only shows the keywords of which we are 99.99% certain this difference is not by chance. The words you will find in the bubble chart are thus those that we are very certain that the difference in word frequency between the target and comparison corpora is is statistically significant.

You can either self-define the two sections of Hansard you want to compare or you can select pre-programmed time periods (such as decades and various wars). One of the ways in which we are planning to develop the keyword function is to add to the various pre-programmed sections of Hansard.

From your bubble chart you can select up to four items to search for them within your chosen target corpus. The four terms will be shown in concordance lines just as everywhere else on the site.

If you have any questions about this feature, please get in touch! We would love to explain more!

 

Workshop at the People’s History Museum in Manchester

We are looking forward to a workshop at the People’s History Museum in Manchester!

Details
Date: 6th March
Time: 12.30pm-2.30pm
For whom: Anyone interested in Hansard at Huddersfield for professional and personal reasons
Schedule:

  • 12.30pm: Arrival with refreshments
  • 12.45pm – 2.00pm: Hansard at Huddersfield interactive presentation using case studies
  • 2.00pm – 2.30pm: Opportunity to explore the site for your research interests with the Hansard at Huddersfield team’s advice

If you would like to join us, please sign up here.

Workshops!

We are now organising workshops to help you engage with the Hansard at Huddersfield site better.

These workshops will introduce attendees to the website and will use examples from various case studies to show the potential of the site to enhance research into parliamentary proceedings. Workshops will also provide an opportunity to explore the site for your research interests with advice from the Hansard at Huddersfield team.

Anyone with an interest in Hansard as a resource for their work (whether a journalist, MP, lobbyist, think tank researcher, librarian, academic, teacher, student or holding any other occupation) is welcome to attend.

We will be posting posters for the various workshops on this site!

We’ve launched!

Last week Wednesday March 6th, we launched the product of our project at our first launch event: our website! Find it on http://hansard.hud.ac.uk to check it out.

We have received considerable positive response so far and would love to hear what you think too!

Contact us on hansard.hud.ac.uk, tweet us @hansardhuds or find us on Facebook and Instagram using @hansardhud.

L-R: Fransina de Jager, Dr. Hugo Sanjurjo-González, Prof. Lesley Jeffries, Dr. Alexander von Lünen and John Vice (Editor Hansard Lords).