I worked with Marie Bizais-Lillig (Strasbourg University, USIAS, Distam, France) on the CHI-KNOW-PO project. This project aimed to study the distribution of knowledge and intertextuality across multiple genres in Medieval China. During my involvement, together with Tilman Schalmey I created a set of tools that detect intertextuality independent of text genre, and take into account synonymity and linguistic changes, with the help of data from traditional dictionaries and leishu 類書 florilegia. One of the more practical outcomes of my involvement was a tool created on the basis of my dissertation research, which was able to filter a poetic corpus based on predefined concepts.

This is the official repository of the project. Below is a very short presentation of my work, use arrows to navigate between slides (right) and sub-slides (down). The last slide is scrollable.