diff --git a/P5/Source/Guidelines/en/BIB-Bibliography.xml b/P5/Source/Guidelines/en/BIB-Bibliography.xml index 6613c571b6..64f65aa811 100644 --- a/P5/Source/Guidelines/en/BIB-Bibliography.xml +++ b/P5/Source/Guidelines/en/BIB-Bibliography.xml @@ -1566,18 +1566,12 @@ $Id$
Works Cited Elsewhere in the Text of these Guidelines - - - - Scott E. Fahlman - - The Birth, Spread, and Evolution of the Smiley Emoticon - - - - - - + + Scott E. Fahlman + "Joke" Conversation Thread in which the :-) Was Invented + + + diff --git a/P5/Source/Guidelines/en/CMC-ComputerMediatedCommunication.xml b/P5/Source/Guidelines/en/CMC-ComputerMediatedCommunication.xml index 3e7fae63b4..246a28ac83 100644 --- a/P5/Source/Guidelines/en/CMC-ComputerMediatedCommunication.xml +++ b/P5/Source/Guidelines/en/CMC-ComputerMediatedCommunication.xml @@ -786,18 +786,10 @@ See the file COPYING.txt for details. - - - - -

A list of suggested values for generatedBy follows: +

A list of suggested values for generatedBy follows: when then content of the respective element was naturally typed or spoken by a human user (cf. the chat posts in Example when the content of the respective element was generated after a human user activated a template for its insertion (cf. signed and time i.e. the signature in wiki talk in the second example below. - - when the content of the respective element was generated by the system, i.e. the CMC environment (cf. the system message in an IRC chat in the fourth example below. @@ -1182,39 +1168,47 @@ See the file COPYING.txt for details. different subcategories of names as described in . In the following chat example (adapted from ), nicknames are linked to a person entry as shown in Section via the - corresp attribute. - - - Konstanze - - versucht - - nasenloch - - den - wunsch - zu - erfüllen - - - + ref attribute. + + + + + Konstanze + + versucht + + nasenloch + + den + wunsch + zu + erfüllen + + +

In the the following version of the same chat snippet, the text strings with the nicknames have been replaced by category label strings for the purpose of anonymization. The category string and the name encoding offer some information about what has - been removed. + been removed. + + - - [_FEMALE-PARTICIPANT-A04_] + type="standard" who="#f2213001.A04" xml:id="f2213001.m27.eg36"> + + + + + + + versucht - + [_PARTICIPANT-A03_] - + den wunsch zu @@ -1229,13 +1223,16 @@ See the file COPYING.txt for details. Multimodal CMC -

As explained in Section the elements post, u, - kinesic, and incident are available to to encode textual transcriptions - of written posts, spoken turns, bodily activity of avatars, and onscreen activity by users - that occur in CMC data, and in Section we gave recommendations on how to encode - graphics or other media data within posts with modality="written". When two or more of these - features occur in a CMC interaction, we can speak of multimodal - CMC.

+

As explained in Section the + elements post, u, kinesic, and + incident are available to to encode textual + transcriptions of written posts, spoken turns, bodily activity + of avatars, and onscreen activity by users that occur in CMC + data, and in Section we gave recommendations on how to + encode graphics or other media data within posts with + modality set to written. When two or more + of these features occur in a CMC interaction, we can speak of + multimodal CMC.

Some basic multimodality is available in private chat such as WhatsApp, where spoken and written posts and media posts containing images or video clips, can alternate. The following diff --git a/P5/Source/Specs/att.cmc.xml b/P5/Source/Specs/att.cmc.xml index 39b26f3547..0784fad43d 100644 --- a/P5/Source/Specs/att.cmc.xml +++ b/P5/Source/Specs/att.cmc.xml @@ -31,7 +31,10 @@ See the file COPYING.txt for details. - + + + the content was naturally typed or spoken by a human user