I attended a couple of Computer Assisted Research Group (CARG) presentations. Patrick Durusau talked about semantic integration. Basically we want to pack a lot of metadata into the background of documents (biblical or any scholarly work) but make it as easy as possible. The Open Document Format (ODF) will be helpful here, and apparently this will become the default for Microsoft Wordpad in the future.
James Libby of Decision Support Sciences had a presentaton entitled "Demonstrating An Advanced Computational Linguistics Software Tool Applied to the the Texts of the Greek New Testament." The company employs a research tool called PositionSolve to analyze all sorts of textual data. Libby took this tool and applied it to the Greek New Testament. Let's just say there's a lot of math involved, but basically it's analyzing all sorts of grammatical information and then determining relationship between groups of texts, e.g., books of the NT. These results are used to generate three dimensional models that indicate degrees of similarity. One such result is shown below. The further out, the more distinctive a text is. The groupings indicate similarities. There are any number of other ways that the data can be run through, but this particular display clearly indicates how genre can be distinguished by such an analysis.

I've blogged before about the virtualization of Sinaiticus project. A number of the people directly involved with the project (including Brother Justin from St. Catherines) had a special presentation discussing their work and some of the findings as a result of the transcription work they have been doing. Interesting stuff as they identify the characteristics of the scribes/correctors... They hope to have the work fully online by July of 2009.
I also got to hear Steve Runge's presentation on "Left-Dislocations and their Contribution to Information Structure." He is able to define more concisely the function of information that is placed at the beginning of a sentence before referenced again later in the sentence. I'm looking forward to his Discourse Grammar that will be forthcoming. In the meantime, check out the work he is doing on his NTDiscourse site.
I attended a few other non-technological sessions (the one discussing Dale Martin's book on Pedagogy of the Bible was particularly interesting), but a big part of SBL involves catching up with people, and also browsing the exhibition hall.

Thanks to the receptions sponsored by the Wabash Center and Fortress Press to end the day!
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