Johd Research Paper Template
Johd Research Paper Template
Johd Research Paper Template
∗
Corresponding author: first name, initials, surname; email.address
Abstract
A short (up to 250 words) summary of the main contributions of the paper and the context of
the research. Full length papers discuss and illustrate methods, challenges, and limitations in the
creation, collection, management, access, processing, or analysis of data in humanities research,
including standards and formats. This template provides a general outline for full length papers and
authors can adapt the headings and include subheadings as they find appropriate.
Keywords: keyword 1; keyword 2; lower case except names, max 6
Author roles: For determining author roles, please use following taxonomy: https://casrai.org/credit/.
Please list the roles for each author.
Table 1: A caption.
1 2 3 4
a b c d
e f g h
1
Please refer to your table using: Table 1.1.1.
To add a figure, upload the figure into the images folder, and then embed it:
2 Method
Describe the methods used in the study.
4 Implications/Applications
Provide information about the implications of this research and/or how it can be applied.
Acknowledgements
Please add any relevant acknowledgements to anyone else that assisted with the project in which the data was
created but did not work directly on the data itself.
Funding Statement
If the research resulted from funded research please list the funder and grant number here.
2
Competing interests
If any of the authors have any competing interests then these must be declared. If there are no competing interests
to declare then the following statement should be present: The author(s) has/have no competing interests to
declare.
Notes
1 This is a footnote
References
Eckhoff, H. M., Bech, K., Bouma, G., Eide, K., Haug, D., Haugen, O. E., & Jøhndal, M. (2018). The
PROIEL treebank family: A standard for early attestations of Indo-European languages. Language
Resources and Evaluation, 52 (1), 29–65. DOI: 10.1007/s10579-017-9388-5
Fabricius-Hansen, C., & Haug, D. T. T. (2012). Co-eventive adjuncts: Main issues and clarifications. In
C. Fabricius-Hansen & D. T. T. Haug (Eds.), Big events, small clauses (pp. 21–54). Berlin-Boston:
De Gruyter.
Jenset, G., & McGillivray, B. (2017). Quantitative historical linguistics: A corpus framework. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Shree, J., Liu, E., Gordon, A., & Hobbs, J. (2019). Deep natural language understanding of news text. In
Proceedings of the first workshop on narrative understanding (pp. 19–27). Minneapolis, Minnesota:
Association for Computational Linguistics. DOI: 10.18653/v1/W19-2403