CLOC

CLOC (an acronym derived from CoLOCation) was a first generation general purpose text analyzer program. It was produced at the University of Birmingham and could produce concordances as well as word lists and collocational analysis of text. First-generation concordancers were typically held on a mainframe computer and used at a single site; individual research teams would build their own concordancer and use it on the data they had access to locally, any further analysis was done by separate programs.[1]

History

CLOC was written by Alan Reed in Algol 68-R which was available only on the ICT 1900 series of computer at that time. Perhaps because it was designed for use in a department of linguistics rather than by computer specialists it had the distinction of having a comparatively simple user interface,[2] it also has some useful features for studying collations or the co-occurrence of words. [3]

CLOC was used in the COBUILD project that was headed by Professor John Sinclair. [4][5]

Further reading

  • Alan Reed (1978). CLOC User Guide. University of Birmingham, Computer Centre.
  • Alan Reed (1977). CLOC: a colocation package. ALLC Bulletin 5, 168-73.
gollark: basically the box thing but the same !!!!
gollark: http://www.scp-wiki.net/scp-1968
gollark: Come to think of it, if you have a retrocausality torus, wouldn't it - over an arbitrarily large amount of iterations - eventually just create a universe where there is either *no* retrocausality torus or nobody uses it, and stop?
gollark: SCP-447-2 comes into contact with a dead body, SCP-3125 instantiates, SCP-579 [DATA EXPUNGED].
gollark: Or somehow keeps getting loaded onto helicopters/planes.

References

  1. Concordancing tools - Lancs University website
  2. Susan Hockey, 1979. Computing in the Humanities - ICL Technical Journal Vol 1 Issue 3 pp 289
  3. http://www.chilton-computing.org.uk/acl/associates/permanent/hockey.htm
  4. Laurence Anthony (2013), A critical look at software tools in corpus linguistics, Linguistic Research 30(2), 141-161
  5. review CLOC by Lou Burnard Computers and the humanities 14 (1980) 259-260


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