DH Benelux Journal 1. Integrating Digital Humanities (original) (raw)
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The Classical Review, 2009
In the modern, networked, information environment, many scholars-including those in the arts and humanities-are turning to computational technologies to assist and facilitate them in their varied research tasks. A Companion to Digital Humanities is the newly released (2008) paperback edition of the 2004 hardback A Companion to Digital Humanities, which aims to provide an overview of the emerging application of computational methods to humanities research problems. Published as one of Blackwell‟ s Companions to Literature and ...
2018
Fabio Cusimano A 'cloud' full of digitized manuscripts. The Veneranda Biblioteca Ambrosiana, from the Custos Catalogi to the Data Curator. Keywords (ENG.): Veneranda Biblioteca Ambrosiana, digital library, digitization, cooperation, free access, 'cloud', data curation, International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF). Abstract (ENG.): Digital libraries and digitization projects have developed from their inception as a temporary phenomenon to become a real opportunity. Today the dissemination of knowledge can make use of new web-based technologies, while also benefiting from the improved quality of digital objects, more mature metadata standards, more capable retrieval technologies, etc. But the roots of libraries are older than the so-called digital revolution, as can be seen from the case of the Veneranda Biblioteca Ambrosiana in Milan. Since the first years of the 17th century, this prestigious conservation library has managed and curated a special and unique collection of precious manuscripts, and, now as then, it makes those masterpieces freely available for users from all over the world, both at its reading room and, today, through its new digital initiative. Many librarians (also known as custodes catalogi) have succeeded each other over the centuries, always pursuing preservation and conservation targets, and always enriching and curating the catalogs. Today we are still inspired by those masters of the past, but we are also engaged in making these precious sources available for an ever-increasing audience thanks to our new freely accessible digital library.
New trends in digital humanities
Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Technological Ecosystems for Enhancing Multiculturality, 2016
The field of research in digital humanities is undergoing a rapid transformation in recent years. A deep reflection on the current needs of the agents involved that takes into account key issues such as the inclusion of citizens in the creation and consumption of the cultural resources offered, the volume and complexity of datasets, available infrastructures, etcetera, is necessary. Present technologies make it possible to achieve projects that were impossible until recently, but the field is currently facing the challenge of proposing frameworks and systems to generalize and reproduce these proposals in other knowledge domains with similar but heterogeneous data sets. The track "New trends in digital humanities" of the Fourth International Conference on Technological Ecosystems for Enhancing Multiculturality (TEEM 2016), tries to set the basis of good practice in digital humanities by reflecting on models, technologies and methods to carry the transformation out.
Digital Humanities and Natural Language Processing: Je t’aime... Moi non plus
Digital Humanities Quarterly, 2020
In spite of the increasingly large textual datasets humanities researchers are confronted with, and the need for automatic tools to extract information from them, we observe a lack of communication and diverging goals between the communities of Natural Language Processing (NLP) and Digital Humanities (DH). This contrasts with the wealth of potential opportunities that could arise from closer collaborations. We argue that more efforts are needed to make NLP tools work for DH datasets so that that NLP research applied to humanities data receives more attention, leading to the development of evaluation approaches tailored towards relevant research questions. This has the potential to bring methodological advances to NLP, while at the same time confronting DH datasets with powerful state-of-the-art techniques.
Textual and Bibliographic Data Resources for Digital Humanities Research
This paper presents the current status, ongoing work, and future plans for making available to Digital Humanities research a wide range of resources originating from European libraries. These resources include national bibliographies, digital objects and full text materials. By the end of 2012, it is expected that The European Library will hold some 200 million bibliographic records, 7 million digital objects and 24 million pages of full-text content. These are being made generally available in The European Library portal, and also as exportable datasets for research. We also describe the possibilities for research that the centralisation of European bibliographic data in The European Library is creating, and some of the ongoing activities in this area. By following this development path, The European Library plans to become a major part of the Digital Humanities research workflow in the coming years.