Reproducibility in language documentation and description means that the analysis given in descriptive publication is presented in a way that allows the reader to access the data on which the claims are based, to verify the analysis for themself. Linguists, including Himmelmann, have long pointed to the centrality of documentation data to linguistic description. Over the twenty years since Himmelmann’s 1998 paper we have seen a growth in digital archiving, and the rise of the Open Access movement. Although there is good infrastructure in place to make reproducible research possible, few descriptive publications clearly link to underlying data, and very little documentation data is publicly accessible. We discuss some of the institutional roadblocks to reproducibility, including a lack of support for the development of published primary data. We also look at what work on language documentation and description can learn from the recent replication crisis in psychology.
History
Publication Date
2018-12-31
Book Title
Reflections on Language Documentation: 20 Years after Himmelmann 1998
Editors
McDonnell B
Berez-Kroker AL
Holton G
Publisher
University of Hawai'i Press
Place of publication
Hawai'i, USA
Series
Language Documentation and Conservation Special Publication