diff --git a/content/resources/introduction-to-diachronic-dynamics-of-lexical-networks/index.mdx b/content/resources/introduction-to-diachronic-dynamics-of-lexical-networks/index.mdx
index 6b45eea4a..cd9e9296b 100644
--- a/content/resources/introduction-to-diachronic-dynamics-of-lexical-networks/index.mdx
+++ b/content/resources/introduction-to-diachronic-dynamics-of-lexical-networks/index.mdx
@@ -1,55 +1,61 @@
---
+title: 'DYLEN: Diachronic Dynamics of Lexical Networks'
+summary: A quick reference guide to the DYLEN tool.
+locale: en
authors:
- koenigshofer-elisabeth
- wuensche-katharina
editors:
- zotou-elena
-license: cc-by-4-0
-locale: en
publicationDate: 2023-02-17
-summary: A quick reference guide to the DYLEN tool.
+version: 1.0.0
tags:
- data-management
-title: "DYLEN: Diachronic Dynamics of Lexical Networks"
+license: cc-by-4-0
toc: false
-version: 1.0.0
---
## Learning outcomes
After completing this resource, you will
-- understand the purpose of DYLEN
-- be able to read a visualisation that was created in DYLEN
-- know how to undertake an ego network analysis with DYLEN
-- generate a general network analysis
+* understand the purpose of DYLEN
+
+* be able to read a visualisation that was created in DYLEN
+
+* know how to undertake an ego network analysis with DYLEN
+
+* generate a general network analysis
## Introduction
-[DYLEN](https://dylen-tool.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/) is the acronym of the **Diachronic Dynamics of Lexical Networks.** It is an interactive visualisation tool that the Diachronic Dynamics of Lexical Networks project team created to provide insights into the dynamic lexical changes of Austrian German during the 21st century. It helps lexicographers and linguists to analyse the development of Austrian German lexemes over the course of time. It is an open source tool that can be used free of charge.
+[DYLEN](https://dylen-tool.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/) is the acronym of the **Diachronic Dynamics of Lexical Networks** (Baumann et al. 2019)**.** It is an interactive visualisation tool (Yim et al. 2022) that the Diachronic Dynamics of Lexical Networks project team created to provide insights into the dynamic lexical changes of Austrian German during the 21st century. It helps lexicographers and linguists to analyse the development of Austrian German lexemes over the course of time. It is an open source tool that can be used free of charge.
-[DYLEN](https://dylen-tool.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/) enables lexical network research on large-scale authentic language data that are taken from two Austrian Geman corpora, the [Austria Media Corpus (amc)](https://amc.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/) and [Corpus of Austrian Parliamentary Records (ParlAT)](https://www.oeaw.ac.at/acdh/tools/parlat).
+[DYLEN](https://dylen-tool.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/) enables lexical network research on large-scale authentic language data that are taken from two Austrian Geman corpora, the [Austria Media Corpus (amc)](https://amc.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/), (Ransmayr et al. 2017) and [Corpus of Austrian Parliamentary Records (ParlAT)](https://www.oeaw.ac.at/acdh/tools/parlat).
DYLEN provides three options:
-- Ego network,
-- General network (party),
-- General network (speaker),
+* Ego network,
+
+* General network (party),
+
+* General network (speaker),
and 2 additional components:
-- Node metrics comparison,
-- Time series analysis.
+* Node metrics comparison,
+
+* Time series analysis.
-Both corpora provide large-scale language data on Austrian German from the 21st century.
+ Both corpora provide large-scale language data on Austrian German from the 21st century.
-The amc is one of the largest German language corpora and reflects the Austrian media landscape almost in its entirety (newspapers, magazines, press releases and some news reel transcripts). It contains about 12 billion tokens and is updated every year. It reflects the Austrian media landscape. You can register for access for linguistic analysis [here](https://amc.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/) and learn more about it in this HowTo.
+ The amc is one of the largest German language corpora and reflects the Austrian media landscape almost in its entirety (newspapers, magazines, press releases and some news reel transcripts). It contains about 12 billion tokens and is updated every year. It reflects the Austrian media landscape. You can register for access for linguistic analysis [here](https://amc.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/) and learn more about it in this HowTo.
-The [ParlAT corpus](https://www.oeaw.ac.at/acdh/tools/parlat) comprises the Austrian parliamentary records and contains around 75 million tokens. This corpus is expanded over time, too. It is also part of the CLARIN [ParlaMINT project](https://www.clarin.eu/parlamint).
+ The [ParlAT corpus](https://www.oeaw.ac.at/acdh/tools/parlat) comprises the Austrian parliamentary records and contains around 75 million tokens (Wissik and Pirker 2018). This corpus is expanded over time, too. It is also part of the CLARIN [ParlaMINT project](https://www.clarin.eu/parlamint).
The following [comic](https://comic.acdh-dev.oeaw.ac.at/howto/comic) provides a visual summary of this article and illustrates the key features of the DYLEN tool.
@@ -64,29 +70,32 @@ The user interface is very intuitive but every search starts with deciding on ei
Connected words are **semantic neighbours** that share some aspects of the **target word**. Some can even substitute the target word in a particular context. The ego network visualises the **50** most closely related semantic neighbours of a target word. Note that it does not show the target word itself because it would render the visualisation impossible to read. The semantic neighbours are classified as parts of speech (POS), e.g. noun, proper nouns and verbs.
-