2012
DOI: 10.1007/s11061-012-9315-3
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Gamelyn’s Place among the Early Exemplars for Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales

Abstract: Application of standard techniques from natural language processing on N-gram models of spelling enables quantification of the similarity between Middle English texts despite their lexical differences. Three studies employing similarity metrics confirm that a scribe's spelling always is biased in the direction of his exemplars. This bias opens up a window on the number of scribes behind the exemplars for a text executed in a single hand, when other variables such as authorship and poetic form are held constant… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…By contrast, a variable for which a case can be made is spatiality. A need to cram the text into a preset space may, perhaps unsurprisingly, lead a scribe to select shorter orthographic forms among the alternatives available to him, while a perceived need to fill a generous such space may have the opposite effect (Peikola 2011;Thaisen 2011Thaisen , 2013. This variable could explain the perplexity distribution in the three textual items copied by Scribe 2 of the Auchinleck manuscript (Speculum Guy of Warwick; The Sayings of the Four Philosophers;…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By contrast, a variable for which a case can be made is spatiality. A need to cram the text into a preset space may, perhaps unsurprisingly, lead a scribe to select shorter orthographic forms among the alternatives available to him, while a perceived need to fill a generous such space may have the opposite effect (Peikola 2011;Thaisen 2011Thaisen , 2013. This variable could explain the perplexity distribution in the three textual items copied by Scribe 2 of the Auchinleck manuscript (Speculum Guy of Warwick; The Sayings of the Four Philosophers;…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%