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Terminologiearbeit im wirtschaftlichen Kontext geht von zwei Arbeitsphasen aus: einer umfassenden deskriptiven Phase, in der die Begriffsstruktur und der aktuelle Terminologiegebrauch erfasst, aber noch nicht bewertet werden, sowie einer präskriptiven Phase, in der der eigentliche Standardisierungseingriff erfolgt. In der Praxis wird die deskriptive Phase oft reduziert und der Schwerpunkt unmittelbar auf die Präskription gelegt. In unserem Beitrag diskutieren wir das Potenzial, das eine ausführliche deskriptive Terminologiearbeit zur Verbesserung der Wissenskommunikation im Rahmen des Wissensmanagements birgt. Am Beispiel eines wissenschaftlichen Projektes im Bereich Grammatik des Deutschen zeigen wir, wie diese eng an der Theorie orientierte Ausgestaltung der Deskription in der Praxis aussieht, welche Herausforderungen sie mit sich bringt und wie ihre Ergebnisse das Wissensmanagement unterstützen können.
Grammis is a web-based information system on German grammar, hosted by the Institute for the German Language (IDS). It is human-oriented and features different theoretical perspectives on grammar. Currently, the terminology component of grammis is being redesigned for this theoretical diversity to play a more prominent role in the data model. This also opens opportunities for implementing some machine-oriented features. In this paper, we present the re-design of both data model and knowledge base. We explore how the addition of machine-oriented features to the data model impacts the knowledge base; in particular, how this addition shifts some of the textual complexity into the data model. We show that our resource can easily be ported to a SKOS-XL representation, which makes it available for data science, knowledge-based NLP applications, and LOD in the context of digital humanities.
The compilation of terminological vocabularies plays a central role in the organization and retrieval of scientific texts. Both simple keyword lists as well as sophisticated modellings of relationships between terminological concepts can make a most valuable contribution to the analysis, classification, and finding of appropriate digital documents, either on the Web or within local repositories. This seems especially true for long-established scientific fields with various theoretical and historical branches, such as linguistics, where the use of terminology within documents from different origins is sometimes far from being consistent. In this short paper, we report on the early stages of a project that aims at the re-design of an existing domain-specific KOS for grammatical content grammis. In particular, we deal with the terminological part of grammis and present the state-of-the-art of this online resource as well as the key re-design principles. Further, we propose questions regarding ramifications of the Linked Open Data and Semantic Web approaches for our re-design decisions.