“Echo from the Borders” is a science project, coordinated by the Greek Commission for South-East European Research and supported by the Ministry of Culture of Greece and the Bulgarian e-infrastructure CLaDa.BG.
At the beginning of March 2022 was published the Dictionary of the Associations of Native Bulgarian Speakers from the Village of Osmar Area, Shumen Region (DANBSO) authored by Velka Popova and Aneta Nedyalkova.
The project ParlaMint for creation and usage of parliamentary data during pandemic times, whose Phase 1 was completed in 2021, was approved for continuation until 2023. The project was financially supported by CLARIN-ERIC.
The first edition of the CLaDA-BG conference will be held on September 6 and 7, 2021 - Cherno More Hotel, Varna, Bulgaria in conjunction with RANLP 2021 and in a hybrid mode: face-to-face and online via Zoom.
A paper by our colleagues from Shoumen University was published in the Proceedings of Selected papers from CLARIN Annual Conference 2020.
https://ecp.ep.liu.se/index.php/clarin/article/view/22
Thе volume presents the highlights of the 9th CLARIN Annual Conference 2020. The conference was held in the virtual format on 5th —7th October 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemics.
On 11 May 2021 a scientific event will be held with CLaDA-BG participation.
At the end of 2020 the book "Open a GLAM Lab. Digital Cultural Heritage Innovation Labs", Book Sprint, Doha, Qatar, 23 - 27 September 2019, was published in a Bulgarian version.
On 28.11.2020 at 10:00 a.m. was held a “Student-Teacher Workshop of the Laboratory for Applied Linguistics - Results and Perspectives”.
Leading researchers from the Laboratory of Applied Linguistics „Aksela Lazarova“ at the University of Shumen Konstantin Preslavsky University of Shumen" (LABLING), participated in the international scientific conference Speech and Computer - SPECOM 2020, which was held in St. Petersburg, Russia from 7 to 9 October 2020.
The combined efforts of National Library “Ivan Vazov“ – Plovdiv and the Institute of Information and Communication Technology at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (IICT-BAS) led to promising advances in the improvement of the optical recognition of historical Bulgarian texts printed before the last orthographic reform in 1945.