In 1991, Aristar-Dry joined Anthony Aristar as the co-moderator of The LINGUIST List, a major online resource for the field of Linguistics. She served as the co-moderator of the LINGUIST List until her retirement in 2013. In 2006, Aristar-Dry became the co-director of the Institute for Language and Information Technology (ILIT), an autonomous research center at Eastern Michigan University, which consolidated the LINGUIST List and various research projects under one roof[9] until the LINGUIST List moved to Indiana University in 2014.[10]
During her time at LINGUIST List and ILIT, Aristar-Dry oversaw many research projects to improve digital infrastructure for linguistics, including the Electronic Metastructure for Endangered Languages Data (E-MELD) project; the Dena'ina Archiving, Training & Access (DATA) project; Multi-Tree; LL-Map; and the Rendering Endangered Languages Lexicons Interoperable Through Standards Harmonization (RELISH) project. She also mentored many linguistics graduate students.[citation needed]
Aristar-Dry has served as the Principal Investigator or co-Principal Investigator of numerous federal grants. Some of these include:
National Science Foundation grant: AARDVARC: Automatically Annotated Repository of Digital Video and Audio Recordings Community (BCS1244713: $84,182). 2012–2014.[12]
National Science Foundation grant: MultiTree: A Digital Library of Language Relationships. (BCS 0445714: $242,607). 2005–2009.[13]
National Science Foundation grant: Collaborative Research: Endangered Languages Catalog (ELCat). (BCS 1057725: $151,455). Collaborators: University of Hawaii at Manoa, Google Foundation. 2011–2014.[14]
National Science Foundation grant: ICE: Integrating Cartographic Elements: Creating Resources Emphasizing Arctic Materials (OPP-0952335: $322,923). 2009–2012.[15]
National Endowment for the Humanities grant: RELISH: Rendering Endangered Languages Lexicons Interoperable Through Standards Harmonization (DFG/NEH Joint Digitization Program: HG50010: $160,793), 2009–2012.[16]
National Science Foundation grant: ELIIP: Endangered Languages Information and Infrastructure Project (DEL-0924127: $39,566), 2009–11.[17]
National Science Foundation grant: Collaborative Research: LEGO: Lexicon Enhancement via the GOLD Ontology (BCS-0753321: $636,443), 2008–2013.[18]
National Science Foundation grant: Collaborative Research: Implementing the GOLD Community of Practice: Laying the Foundations for a Linguistics Cyberinfrastructure (BCS 0720122: $87,140.00), 2007–2011.[19]
National Science Foundation grant: Workshop: Towards the Interoperability of Language Resources (BCS 0709680:, $13,334.00). 2007–2008.[20]
National Science Foundation grant: LL-MAP: Language and Location, a Map Annotation Project (HSD 0527512, $633,024). 2006–2011.[21]
National Science Foundation grant: DATA: Dena'ina Archiving, Training, and Access. (OPP-0326805: $342,942) 2003–2008.[23]
National Science Foundation grant: E-MELD: Electronic Metastructure for Endangered Languages Data (SES-0094934: $2,142,913.00), 2001–2007.[24]
National Science Foundation grant: Database Design for Endangered Languages Data (BCS-0003197: $55,000) 2000–2002.[25]
National Science Foundation grant: The LINGUIST List Multi-List Support Project (SBR-9975299: $173,025), 1999–2001.[26]
National Science Foundation grant: Software Development for The LINGUIST List (SBR-9601352: $114,962), 1996–98.[27]
National Science Foundation grant: LINGUIST Software Development (SBR-9311748: $4000), 1993–94.[28]
Publications
Books
Text, Time, and Context: Selected Papers by Carlota S. Smith. (Ed. with Richard Meier & Emily Destruel). Springer Press. 2010.[29]
Using Computers in Linguistics: A Practical Guide. (Ed. with John Lawler). Routledge, 1998.[30]
Selected articles
Creating a serialization of LMF: the experience of the RELISH project (with Windhouwer, M.A., J. Petro, I. Nevskaya, S. Drude, and J. Gippert). LMF: Lexical Markup Framework, theory and practice, ed. by Gil Francopoulo. 2013. Wiley Publishers.[31]
Rendering Endangered Lexicons Interoperable through Standards Harmonization": The RELISH Project (with Drude, S., Windhouwer, M., Gippert, J., & Nevskaya, I. ). In N. Calzolari (Ed.), Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2012), Istanbul, May 23–25, 2012 (pp. 766–770). European Language Resources Association (ELRA).[32]
Language and Location: Map Annotation Project – A GIS-Based Infrastructure for Linguistics Information Management (with Yichun Xie, Anthony Aristar, Hunter Lockwood). Proceedings of the International Multiconference on Computer Science and Information Technology. Vol 4, 2009: 305–311.[33]
The E-MELD School of Best Practices: A Community-Driven Resource (with Jessica Boynton and Steve Moran). In Language Documentation: Practice and Values (ed. Lenore Grenoble and Louanna Furbee). Benjamins. 2010. 133–46.[34]