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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.
Der vorliegende Beitrag widmet sich einem etwas stiefmütterlich behandelten Aspekt im ansonsten durchaus lebhaft geführten Diskurs um die didaktische Grammatik: dem grammatischen Wissen der Lehrenden. Auf diesem Gebiet besteht m.E. eine Diskrepanz zwischen Anforderungen an die Lehrerrolle im Gefolge veränderter Forschungsparadigmen und konkreter Gegebenheiten einerseits und einer Realität andererseits, die durch quantitativ wie qualitativ sehr heterogene und teilweise defizitäre Wissensbestände gekennzeichnet ist. Diese Behauptung soll im ersten Teil des Beitrags argumentativ untermauert werden. Im zweiten Teil soll mit dem multimedialen grammatischen Informationssystem GRAMMIS eine mögliche Quelle für grammatisches Wissen vorgestellt werden, die den Bedürfnissen von DaF-Lehrenden entgegenkommt.
The evolution of computer technologies and the introduction of the World Wide Web (WWW) have substantially changed the way scientific articles and books are published today. Besides writing for "traditional" print media, more and more authors decide to reach a larger audience and to decrease distribution time by offering their works on the internet. The electronic medium not only facilitates the spread of information, it also adds new value by extending the possibilities of knowledge retrieval. Of course the same is true for structured data collections like scientific glossaries, dictionaries or bibliographies. They particularly profit from the web when being accessible via user-friendly and effective frontends. The following chapters deal with the transformation of the Bibliography of German Grammar (“Bibliografie zur deutschen Grammatik”) from a data pool primarly used for print publishing to a relational database application offering a basis for media-independent distribution. Starting with a short description of the beginnings of the bibliography, the focus of this article lies on the explanation of our current database design as well as on the presentation of the web-based user interface.