The Programming Historian has received the following tutorial on 'Exploratory Data Analysis with Natural Language Processing (NLP), Part 2: Modeling and Exploring a Text Corpus ' by @zoews. This lesson is now under review and can be read at:
Please feel free to use the line numbers provided on the preview if that helps with anchoring your comments, although you can structure your review as you see fit.
I will act as editor for the review process. My role is to solicit two reviews from the community and to manage the discussions, which should be held here on this forum. I will first read through the lesson and provide feedback, to which the author will respond.
Members of the wider community are also invited to offer constructive feedback which should post to this message thread, but they are asked to first read our Reviewer Guidelines (http://programminghistorian.org/reviewer-guidelines) and to adhere to our anti-harassment policy (below). We ask that all reviews stop after the second formal review has been submitted so that the author can focus on any revisions. I will make an announcement on this thread when that has occurred.
I will endeavor to keep the conversation open here on Github. If anyone feels the need to discuss anything privately, you are welcome to email me. You can always turn to @ianmilligan1 or @amandavisconti if you feel there's a need for an ombudsperson to step in.
Anti-Harassment Policy
This is a statement of the Programming Historian's principles and sets expectations for the tone and style of all correspondence between reviewers, authors, editors, and contributors to our public forums.
The Programming Historian is dedicated to providing an open scholarly environment that offers community participants the freedom to thoroughly scrutinize ideas, to ask questions, make suggestions, or to requests for clarification, but also provides a harassment-free space for all contributors to the project, regardless of gender, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, age or religion, or technical experience. We do not tolerate harassment or ad hominem attacks of community participants in any form. Participants violating these rules may be expelled from the community at the discretion of the editorial board. If anyone witnesses or feels they have been the victim of the above described activity, please contact our ombudspeople (Ian Milligan and Amanda Visconti - http://programminghistorian.org/project-team). Thank you for helping us to create a safe space.
The Programming Historian has received the following tutorial on 'Exploratory Data Analysis with Natural Language Processing (NLP), Part 2: Modeling and Exploring a Text Corpus ' by @zoews. This lesson is now under review and can be read at:
http://programminghistorian.github.io/ph-submissions/lessons/exploratory-part-2-modeling-text-corpus
Please feel free to use the line numbers provided on the preview if that helps with anchoring your comments, although you can structure your review as you see fit.
I will act as editor for the review process. My role is to solicit two reviews from the community and to manage the discussions, which should be held here on this forum. I will first read through the lesson and provide feedback, to which the author will respond.
Members of the wider community are also invited to offer constructive feedback which should post to this message thread, but they are asked to first read our Reviewer Guidelines (http://programminghistorian.org/reviewer-guidelines) and to adhere to our anti-harassment policy (below). We ask that all reviews stop after the second formal review has been submitted so that the author can focus on any revisions. I will make an announcement on this thread when that has occurred.
I will endeavor to keep the conversation open here on Github. If anyone feels the need to discuss anything privately, you are welcome to email me. You can always turn to @ianmilligan1 or @amandavisconti if you feel there's a need for an ombudsperson to step in.
Anti-Harassment Policy
This is a statement of the Programming Historian's principles and sets expectations for the tone and style of all correspondence between reviewers, authors, editors, and contributors to our public forums.