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7th DH 2012: Hamburg, Germany
- Jan Christoph Meister:
7th Annual International Conference of the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations, DH 2012, Hamburg, Germany, July 16-22, 2012, Conference Abstracts. Hamburg University Press 2012, ISBN 978-3-937816-99-9
Plenary Sessions
- Claudine Moulin:
Dynamics and Diversity: Exploring European and Transnational Perspectives on Digital Humanities Research Infrastructures. 9-10 - Masahiro Shimoda:
Embracing a Distant View of the Digital Humanities. 11-14
Pre-conference Workshops
- Christian Brockmann, Dorji Wangchuk:
Digital Methods in Manuscript Studies. 15 - Maciej Eder, Jan Rybicki:
Introduction to Stylomatic Analysis using R. 16-17 - Øyvind Eide, Christian-Emil Ore, Sebastian Rahtz:
NeDiMAH workshop on ontology based annotation. 18-19 - Erhard W. Hinrichs, Heike Neuroth, Peter Wittenburg:
Service-oriented Architectures (SOAs) for the Humanities: Solutions and Impacts. 20-21 - Leif Isaksen, Shawn Day, Jens Andresen, Eero Hyvönen, Eetu Mäkelä:
Here and There, Then and Now - Modelling Space and Time in the Humanities. 22-23 - Marco Petris, Evelyn Gius, Lena Schüch, Jan Christoph Meister:
Crowdsourcing meaning: a hands-on introduction to CLÉA, the Collaborative Literature Éxploration and Annotation Environment. 24 - Mia Ridge:
Learning to play like a programmer: web mash-ups and scripting for beginners. 25 - Stéfan Sinclair, Geoffrey Rockwell:
Introduction to Distant Reading Techniques with Voyant Tools, Multilingual Edition. 26 - Manfred Thaller:
Towards a reference curriculum for the Digital Humanities. 27 - Seth van Hooland, Ruben Verborgh, Max De Wilde:
Free your metadata: a practical approach towards metadata cleaning and vocabulary reconciliation. 28-32
Panels
- Syd Bauman, David L. Hoover, Karina van Dalen-Oskam, Wendell Piez:
Text Analysis Meets Text Encoding. 33-34 - Ann Blandford, Susan Brown, Teresa Dobson, Sarah Faisal, Carlos Fiorentino, Luciano Frizzera, Alejandro Giacometti, Brooke Heller, Mihaela Ilovan, Piotr Michura, Brent Nelson, Milena Radzikowska, Geoffrey Rockwell, Stan Ruecker, Stéfan Sinclair, Daniel Sondheim, Claire Warwick, Jennifer Windsor:
Designing Interactive Reading Environments for the Online Scholarly Edition. 35-40 - David J. Bodenhamer, Ian N. Gregory, Paul S. Ell, Julia Hallam, Trevor M. Harris, Robert M. Schwartz:
Developing the spatial humanities: Geo-spatial technologies as a platform for cross-disciplinary scholarship. 41-42 - Peter K. Bol, Jieh Hsiang, Grace Fong:
Prosopographical Databases, Text-Mining, GIS and System Interoperability for Chinese History and Literature. 43-51 - James Cummings, Sebastian Rahtz, Lou Burnard, Syd Bauman, Bertrand Gaiffe, Laurent Romary, Piotr Banski:
Future Developments for TEI ODD. 52-53 - Alexander Geyken, Thomas Gloning, Thomas Stäcker:
Compiling large historical reference corpora of German: Quality Assurance, Interoperability and Collaboration in the Process of Publication of Digitized Historical Prints. 54-56 - Benedikt Löwe, Bernhard Fisseni, Carlos León, Rens Bod:
Computational models of narrative structure. 57-60 - Kiyonori Nagasaki, Toru Tomabechi, Dorji Wangchuk, Koichi Takahashi, Jeff Wallman, A. Charles Muller:
Approaches to the Treatment of Primary Materials in Digital Lexicons: Examples of the New Generation of Digital Lexicons for Buddhist Studies. 61-63 - Robert K. Nelson, David Mimno, Travis Brown:
Topic Modeling the Past. 64-69 - Daniel Pitti, Agnès Simon, Stefano Vitali, Kerstin Arnold:
Facilitating Research through Social-Document Networks. 70-71 - Manfred Thaller, Patrick Sahle, Florence Clavaud, Tanya E. Clement, Domenico Fiormonte, Elena Pierazzo, Malte Rehbein, Geoffrey Rockwell, Susan Schreibman, Stéfan Sinclair:
Digital Humanities as a university degree: The status quo and beyond. 72-78
Papers
- Alkim Almila Akdag Salah, Albert Ali Salah, Jeremy Douglass, Lev Manovich:
Exploring Originality in User-Generated Content with Network and Image Analysis Tools. 79-81 - Marc Alexander:
Patchworks and Field-Boundaries: Visualizing the History of English. 82-83 - Nuria Alonso García, Alison Caplan:
Developing Transcultural Competence in the Study of World Literatures: Golden Age Literature Glossary Online (GALGO). 84 - Tara L. Andrews, Caroline Macé:
Trees of Texts - Models and methods for an updated theory of medieval text stemmatology. 85-87 - Ofer Arazy, Stan Ruecker, Omar Rodriguez-Arenas, Alejandro Giacometti, Lu Zhang, Su Chun:
Mapping the Information Science Domain. 88-90 - Florentina Armaselu:
Words made Image. Towards a Language-Based Segmentation of Digitized Art Collections. 91-93 - Micheal Baechler, Andreas Fischer, Nada Naji, Rolf Ingold, Horst Bunke, Jacques Savoy:
HisDoc: Historical Document Analysis, Recognition, and Retrieval. 94-96 - Maja Bärenfänger, Frank Binder:
Research infrastructures for Digital Humanities: The local perspective. 97-98 - Elton T. E. Barker, Rainer Simon, Leif Isaksen:
Pelagios: An Information Superhighway for the Ancient World. 99-101 - Michael Barner-Rasmussen:
Putting TEI Tite to use - generating a database resource from a printed dictionary or reference type publication. 102-104 - Marie-Claire Beaulieu, Bridget Almas:
Digital Humanities in the Classroom: Introducing a New Editing Platform for Source Documents in Classics. 105-106 - David Beavan:
DiaView: Visualise Cultural Change in Diachronic Corpora. 107-108 - Ruth Beer:
Catch + Release: Research and Creation of a Digital New Media Exhibition in the Context of a Cultural and Heritage Museum. 109-110 - Craig Bellamy:
Opportunity and accountability in the 'eResearch push'. 111-112 - Jenny Bergenmar, Leif-Jöran Olsson:
Connecting European Women Writers. The Selma Lagerlöf Archive and Women Writers Database. 113-114 - Marcus Bingenheimer, Jen-Jou Hung, Cheng-En Hsieh:
Stylometric Analysis of Chinese Buddhist texts: Do different Chinese translations of the 'Gandhavyūha' reflect stylistic features that are typical for their age? 115-116 - Tobias Blanke, Michael Bryant, Reto Speck, Conny Kristel:
Information Extraction on Noisy Texts for Historical Research. 117-118 - Katherine Bode:
Modeling Gender: The 'Rise and Rise' of the Australian Woman Novelist. 119-120 - Peter Boot:
Contextual factors in literary quality judgments: A quantitative analysis of an online writing community. 121-122 - Adam James Bradley:
Violence and the Digital Humanities Text as Pharmakon. 123 - John Bradley, Stephen Pigney:
Towards a bibliographic model of illustrations in the early modern illustrated book. 124-125 - Anne Brock, Verena Henrich, Erhard W. Hinrichs, Yannick Versley:
Automatic Mining of Valence Compounds for German: A Corpus-Based Approach. 126-128 - Tom Brughmans:
Networks of networks: a critical review of formal network methods in archaeology through citation network analysis and close reading. 129-130 - Gerrit Brüning, Katrin Henzel, Dietmar Pravida:
On the dual nature of written texts and its implications for the encoding of genetic manuscripts. 131-134 - Annelen Brunner:
Automatic recognition of speech, thought and writing representation in German narrative texts. 135-136 - Marco Büchler, Sebastian Kruse, Thomas Eckart:
Bringing Modern Spell Checking Approaches to Ancient Texts - Automated Suggestions for Incomplete Words. 137-138 - Toby Burrows:
Designing a national 'Virtual Laboratory' for the humanities: the Australian HuNI project. 139-141 - Dino Buzzetti, Manfred Thaller:
Beyond Embedded Markup. 142-147 - Manish Chaturvedi, Gerald C. Gannod, Laura Mandell, Helen Armstrong, Eric Hodgson:
Myopia: A Visualization Tool in Support of Close Reading. 148-150 - Tom Cheesman, Stephan Thiel, Kevin Flanagan, Zhao Geng, Alison Ehrmann, Robert S. Laramee, Jonathan Hope, David M. Berry:
Translation Arrays: Exploring Cultural Heritage Texts Across Languages. 151-153 - Howard Chen:
Constructing a Chinese as Second Language Learner Corpus for Language Learning and Research. 154 - Dazhi Chong, Samuel Coppage, Xiangyi Gu, Kurt Maly, Harris Wu, Mohammad Zubair:
Social Curation of large multimedia collections on the cloud. 155-157 - Tanya E. Clement, Loretta Auvil, David Tcheng, Boris Capitanu, Megan Monroe, Ankita Goel:
Sounding for Meaning: Analyzing Aural Patterns Across Large Digital Collections. 158-161 - Adam Crymble, Alan MacEachern, William J. Turkel:
The Programming Historian 2: A Participatory Textbook. 162 - Thierry Declerck, Piroska Lendvai, Sándor Darányi:
Multilingual and Semantic Extension of Folk Tale Catalogues. 163-166 - Lise M. Dobrin:
Digital Language Archives and Less-Networked Speaker Communities. 167-168 - Sebastian Drude, Paul Trilsbeek, Daan Broeder:
Language Documentation and Digital Humanities: The (DoBeS) Language Archive. 169-172 - Oliver Duke-Williams:
The potential of using crowd-sourced data to re-explore the demography of Victorian Britain. 173-175 - Stuart E. Dunn, Mark Hedges, Anna Jordanous, Faith Lawrence, Charlotte Roueché, Charlotte Tupman, Elvira Wakelnig:
Sharing Ancient Wisdoms: developing structures for tracking cultural dynamics by linking moral and philosophical anthologies with their source and recipient texts. 176-178 - Amy Earhart:
Recovering the Recovered Text: Diversity, Canon Building, and Digital Studies. 179-180 - Maciej Eder:
Mind your corpus: systematic errors in authorship attribution. 181-184 - Øyvind Eide:
Underspecified, Ambiguous or Formal. Problems in Creating Maps Based on Texts. 185-187 - Orhan Elmaz:
A Frequency Dictionary of Modern Written and Oral Media Arabic. 188-189 - Kurt Fendt, Wyn Kelley, Jia Zhang, Dave Della Costa:
Texts in Motion - Rethinking Reader Annotations in Online Literary Texts. 190-191 - Stefano Franchi:
May Humanists Learn from Artists a New Way to Interact with Digital Technology? 192-194 - Joaquín Gayoso-Cabada, Cesar Ruiz, Luis Pablo-Nuñez, Antonio Sarasa Cabezuelo, María Goicoechea-de-Jorge, Amelia Sanz-Cabrerizo, José Luis Sierra-Rodríguez:
A flexible model for the collaborative annotation of digitized literary works. 195-197 - Séverine Gedzelman, Jean-Claude Zancarini:
HyperMachiavel: a translation comparison tool. 198-201 - Frédéric Glorieux, Vincent Jolivet:
Discrimination sémantique par la traduction automatique, expériences sur le dictionnaire français de Littré. 202-203 - Paul Matthew Gooding, Claire Warwick, Melissa Terras:
The Myth of the New: Mass Digitization, Distant Reading and the Future of the Book. 204-205 - Wilko Graf von Hardenberg, Kimberly Coulter:
Designing Navigation Tools for an Environmental Humanities Portal: Considerations and Critical Assessments. 206-207 - Sudheendra Hangal, Peter Chan, Monica S. Lam, Jeffrey Heer:
Processing Email Archives in Special Collections. 208-211 - Magda Heydel, Jan Rybicki:
The Stylometry of Collaborative Translation. 212-214 - Ville Hirvonen, Heli Kautonen:
Focus on Users in the Open Development of the National Digital Library of Finland. 215-217 - David L. Hoover:
The Rarer They Are, the More There Are, the Less They Matter. 218-220 - Herbert Hrachovec, Annamaria Carusi, Raphael Huentelmann, Alois Pichler, Antonio Lamarra, Cristina Marras, Alessio Piccioli, Lou Burnard:
Experiments in Digital Philosophy - Putting new paradigms to the test in the Agora project. 221-223 - Jieh Hsiang, Jung-Wei Kong, Allan Sung:
Information Discovery in the Chinese Recorder Index. 224-227 - Jiajia Hu, Ning Wang:
Complex Network Perspective on Graphic Form System of Hanzi. 228-229 - Jen-Jou Hung, Marcus Bingenheimer, Jieli Kwok:
A Computer-Based Approach for Predicting the Translation Time Period of Early Chinese Buddhism Translation. 230-231 - Perla Innocenti, John Richards, Sabine Wieber:
Bridging Multicultural Communities: Developing a Framework for a European Network of Museum, Libraries and Public Cultural Institutions. 232-235 - Leif Isaksen:
Ptolemy's Geography and the Birth of GIS. 236-238 - Yoshimi Iwata:
Tracing the history of Noh texts by mathematical methods. Validitating the application of phylogenetic methods to Noh texts. 239-241 - Matthew L. Jockers:
Computing and Visualizing the 19th-Century Literary Genome. 242-244 - Patrick Juola:
Using the Google Ngram Corpus to Measure Cultural Complexity. 245-246 - Joel Katelnikoff:
'All Rights Worth Recombination': Post-Hacker Culture and ASCII Literature (1983-1993). 247-248 - Mike Kestemont, Kim Luyckx, Walter Daelemans, Thomas Crombez:
Evaluating Unmasking for Cross-Genre Authorship Verification. 249-251 - Erik Ketzan:
Literary Wikis: Crowd-sourcing the Analysis and Annotation of Pynchon, Eco and Others. 252-253 - Lauren F. Klein:
Social Network Analysis and Visualization in 'The Papers of Thomas Jefferson'. 254-255 - Marie Hélène Lay:
VariaLog: how to locate words in a French Renaissance Virtual Library. 256-258 - Lothar Lemnitzer, Michael Beißwenger, Maria Ermakova, Alexander Geyken, Angelika Storrer:
DeRiK: A German Reference Corpus of Computer-Mediated Communication. 259-263 - Noga Levy, Lior Wolf, Nachum Dershowitz, Peter A. Stokes:
Estimating the Distinctiveness of Graphemes and Allographs in Palaeographic Classification. 264-267 - Richard Littauer, James Winters, Sean Roberts, Hannah Little, Michael Pleyer, Bill Benzon:
Academic Research in the Blogosphere: Adapting to New Opportunities and Risks on the Internet. 268-269 - Jyi-Shane Liu, Sheng-Yang Peng:
Feeling the View: Reading Affective Orientation of Tagged Images. 270-272 - Ana Lucic, Catherine Blake:
Characterizing Authorship Style Using Linguistic Features. 273-275 - Steven Moran, Jelena Prokic:
Investigating the genealogical relatedness of the endagered Dagon languages. 276-277 - Michal Mechura:
Landscapes, languages and data structures: Issues in building the Placenames Database of Ireland. 278-279 - Alexander Nakhimovsky, Jeff Good, Tom Myers:
Interoperability of Language Documentation Tools and Materials for Local Communities. 280-282 - Alexander Nakhimovsky, Tom Myers:
Content Creation by Domain Experts in a Semantic GIS System. 283-285 - David John Nathan:
From Preserving Language Resources to Serving Language Speakers: New Prospects for Endangered Languages Archives. 286-287 - Bernd Neumann, Rainer Herzog, Arved Solth, Oliver Bestmann, Julian Scheel:
Retrieving Writing Patterns From Historical Manuscripts Using Local Descriptors. 288-291 - John Noecker Jr., Michael Ryan:
Distractorless Authorship Verification. 292-295 - Sebastian Nordhoff, Harald Hammarström:
Cataloguing linguistic diversity: Glottolog/Langdoc. 296-298 - Bethany Nowviskie, Wayne Graham, David McClure, Jeremy Boggs, Eric Rochester:
Geo-Temporal Interpretation of Archival Collections Using Neatline. 299-302 - Michele Nucci, Marco Grassi, Christian Morbidoni, Francesco Piazza:
Enriching Digital Libraries Contents with SemLib Semantic Annotation System. 303-305 - Camelia Gianina Nuñez, Antonio Jiménez-Mavillard:
The VL3: A Project at the Crossroads between Linguistics and Computer Science. 306-307 - Lisa Lena Opas-Hänninen, Jacqueline Hettel, Tuomo Toljamo, Tapio Seppänen:
'Eric, you do not humble well': The Image of the Modern Vampire in Text and on Screen. 308-309 - Kieran O'Halloran:
Electronic Deconstruction of an argument using corpus linguistic analysis of its on-line discussion forum supplement. 310-312 - Tae Hong Park, Ben Miller, Ayush Shrestha, Sangmi Lee, Jonathan Turner, Alex Marse:
Citygram One: Visualizing Urban Acoustic Ecology. 313-317 - Alois Pichler, Amélie Zöllner-Weber:
Towards Wittgenstein on the Semantic Web. 318-321 - Debbie L. Rabina, Anthony Cocciolo:
Uncovering lost histories through GeoStoryteller: A digital GeoHumanities project. 322-323 - Milena Radzikowska, Stan Ruecker, Geoffrey Rockwell, Susan Brown, Luciano Frizzera, INKE Research Group:
Workflows as Structured Surfaces. 324-326 - Stephen Ramsay, Brian L. Pytlik Zillig:
Code-Generation Techniques for XML Collections Interoperability. 327-328 - Gethin Powell Rees:
Uncertain Date, Uncertain Place: Interpreting the History of Jewish Communities in the Byzantine Empire using GIS. 329-330 - Doug Reside, Neil Fraistat, Ben Vershbow, Joris J. van Zundert:
Code sprints and Infrastructure. 331-332 - Doug Reside:
Digital Genetic Criticism of RENT. 333-334 - Mia Ridge:
On the Internet, nobody knows you're a historian: exploring resistance to crowdsourced resources among historians. 335 - Marianne Petra Ritsema van Eck, Lambert Schomaker:
Formal Semantic Modeling for Human and Machine-based Decoding of Medieval Manuscripts. 336-338 - Geoffrey Rockwell, Stéfan Sinclair:
The Swallow Flies Swiftly Through: An Analysis of Humanist. 339-341 - Nuria Rodríguez, Murtha Baca, Francesca Albrezzi, Rachel Longaker:
The Digital Mellini Project: Exploring New Tools & Methods for Art-historical Research & Publication. 342-344 - Glenn H. Roe, The ARTFL Project:
Intertextuality and Influence in the Age of Enlightenment: Sequence Alignment Applications for Humanities Research. 345-347 - Claire Ross, Steven Gray, Claire Warwick, Andrew Hudson-Smith, Melissa Terras:
Engaging the Museum Space: Mobilising Visitor Engagement with Digital Content Creation. 348-350 - Henriette Roued-Cunliffe:
Aiding the Interpretation of Ancient Documents. 351-352 - Joseph Rudman:
The Twelve Disputed 'Federalist' Papers: A Case for Collaboration. 353-356 - Jentery Sayers:
Writing with Sound: Composing Multimodal, Long-Form Scholarship. 357-358 - Christoph Schindler, Basil Ell, Marc Rittberger:
Intra-linking the Research Corpus: Using Semantic MediaWiki as a lightweight Virtual Research Environment. 359-361 - Markus Schnöpf:
Corpus Coranicum: A digital landscape for the study of the Qu'ran. 362-364 - Jennifer von Schwerin, Heather Richards-Rissetto, Giorgio Agugiaro, Fabio Remondino, Gabrio Girardi:
The MayaArch3D Project: A 3D GIS Web System for Querying Ancient Architecture and Landscapes. 365-367 - Narayan Sharma:
Multi-dimensional audio-visual technology: Evidence from the endangered language documentation. 368-369 - Ryan Shaw:
Contours of the Past: Computationally Exploring Civil Rights Histories. 370-372 - Lynne Siemens, Raymond Siemens:
Notes from the Collaboratory: An Informal Study of an Academic DH Lab in Transition. 373-374 - Martin Sievers, Thomas Burch, Marc Wilhelm Küster, Claudine Moulin, Andrea Rapp, Roland Schwarz, Yu Gan:
XML-Print: an Ergonomic Typesetting System for Complex Text Structures. 375-379 - James Smithies:
Federated Digital Archives and Disaster Recovery: The Role of the Digital Humanities in Post-earthquake Christchurch. 380-381 - Peter A. Stokes:
Modeling Medieval Handwriting: A New Approach to Digital Palaeography. 382-384 - Juan-Luis Suárez, Fernando Sancho-Caparrini:
A Digital Geography of Hispanic Baroque Art. 385-387 - Tomoji Tabata:
Approaching Dickens' Style through Random Forests. 388-391 - Toma Tasovac, Natalia Ermolaev:
Interfacing Diachrony: Visualizing Linguistic Change on the Basis of Digital Editions of Serbian 18th-Century Texts. 392-393 - Clifford Tatum, Nicholas W. Jankowski, Andrea Scharnhorst:
Promise and Practice of Enhanced Publications to Complement ConventionallyPublished Scholarly Monographs. 394-395 - Jukka Jyrki Juhani Tyrkkö, Carla Maria Suhr, Ville Marttila:
Culpeper's legacy: How title pages sold books in the 17th century. 396 - Ted Underwood, Jordan Sellers, Loretta Auvil, Boris Capitanu:
The Differentiation of Genres in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century English Literature. 397-399 - Karina van Dalen-Oskam, Joris J. van Zundert:
Digital editions with eLaborate: from practice to theory. 400-401 - Joris J. van Zundert, Karina van Dalen-Oskam:
Delta in 3D: Copyists Distinction by Scaling Burrows's Delta. 402-404 - Aleksey G. Varfolomeyev, Aleksandrs Ivanovs:
Wiki Technologies for Semantic Publication of Old Russian Charters. 405-406 - Corinne Welger-Barboza:
L'histoire de l'art à l'ère numérique - Pour une historiographie médiologique. 407-410 - Claudia Wenzel:
Benefits of tools and applications for a digitized analysis of Chinese Buddhist inscriptions. 411-412 - Susan L. Wiesner, Bradford C. Bennett, Rommie L. Stalnaker:
The ARTeFACT Movement Thesaurus: toward an open-source tool to mine movement-derived data. 413-414 - David-Antoine Williams:
The electronic 'Oxford English Dictionary', poetry, and intertextuality. 415-417 - Moritz Wissenbach, Dietmar Pravida, Gregor Middell:
Reasoning about Genesis or The Mechanical Philologist. 418-421 - Christian Wittern:
The Digital Daozang Jiyao - How to get the edition into the Scholar's labs. 422-426
Posters
- Marc Alexander, Christian Kay:
A Digital Approach to Sound Symbolism in English: Evidence from the Historical Thesaurus. 427-428 - Matthias Arnold, Cornelia Knab, Eric Decker:
Collaborative Video and Image Annotation. 429-430 - Francesco Beretta, Pierre Vernus, Bernard Hours:
Le Système modulaire de gestion de l'information historique (SyMoGIH): une plateforme collaborative et cumulative de stockage et d'exploitation de l'information géo-historique. 431-432 - Jeremy Boggs, Bethany Nowviskie, Alexander Gil, Eric Johnson, Brooke Lestock, Sarah Storti, Joanna Swafford, Praxis Program Collaborators:
Realigning Digital Humanities Training: The Praxis Program at the Scholars' Lab. 433-434 - Benjamin W. Bohl, Daniel Röwenstrunk, Raffaele Viglianti:
Supporting the emerging community of MEI: the current landscape of tools for note entry and digital editing. 435-437 - Ashley M. Clark, Steven W. Holloway:
'The Past Is Never Dead. It's Not Even Past': The Challenge of Data Provenance in the e-Humanities. 438-440 - Constance Crompton, Raymond Siemens, The Devonshire M. S. Editorial Group:
The Social Edition: Scholarly Editing Across Communities. 441-442 - Brian Croxall:
Courting 'The World's Wife': Original Digital Humanities Research in the Undergraduate Classroom. 443-444 - Alexander Czmiel, Marco Jürgens:
The Academy's Digital Store of Knowledge. 445-447 - Julia Flanders, Scott Hamlin, Rafael Alvarado, Elli Mylonas:
Building a TEI Archiving, Publishing, and Access Service: The TAPAS Project. 448-449 - Nuno Freire:
Author Consolidation across European National Bibliographies. 450-452 - Yu Fujimoto:
Historical Events Versus Information Contents - A Preliminary Analysis of the National Geographic Magazine. 453-455 - Isabel Galina, Ernesto Priani, José López, Eduardo Rivera, Alejandro Cruz:
'Tejiendo la Red HD' - A case study of building a DH network in Mexico. 456-457 - Binyam Gebrekidan Gebre, Peter Wittenburg:
Adaptive Automatic Gesture Stroke Detection. 458-461 - Alexander Gil:
Towards a Transnational Multilingual Caribbean Digital Humanities Lab. 462 - Ann-Barbara Graff, Kristin Lucas, James Blustein, Robin Gibson, Sharon Woods:
NUScholar: Digital Methods for Educating New Humanities Scholars. 463-464 - Wallace Edd Hooper, Will Cowan, David Jiao, John A. Walsh:
Latent Semantic Analysis Tools Available for All Digital Humanities Projects in Project Bamboo. 465-466 - Young-Min Kim, Patrice Bellot, Elodie Faath, Marin Dacos:
Machine Learning for Automatic Annotation of References in DH scholarly papers. 467-469 - Nikolina Koleva, Thierry Declerck, Hans-Ulrich Krieger:
An Ontology-Based Iterative Text Processing Strategy for Detecting and Recognizing Characters in Folktales. 470-472 - Takeo Kuyama, Biligsaikhan Batjargal, Fuminori Kimura, Akira Maeda:
Integrated multilingual access to diverse Japanese humanities digital archives by dynamically linking data. 473-476 - Anna Lenkiewicz, Magdalena Lis, Przemyslaw Lenkiewicz:
Linguistic concepts described with Media Query Language for automated annotation. 477-479 - Liang Li, Woong Choi, Takanobu Nishiura, Keiji Yano, Kozaburo Hachimura:
Virtual Reproduction of Gion Festival Yamahoko Parade. 480-482 - Eleonora Litta, Jamie Norrish, Miguel Vieira:
Complex entity management through EATS: the case of the Gascon Rolls Project. 483-485 - Felix Lohmeier, Ubbo Veentjer, Kathleen Marie Smith, Sibylle Söring:
TextGrid Repository - Supporting the Data Curation Needs of Humanities Researchers. 486-487 - Lukas Loos, Alexander Zipf:
RIgeo.net - A Lab for Spatial Exploration of Historical Data. 488-490 - Miguel Vieira, Gerhard Brey:
Automatic Topic Hierarchy Generation Using Wordnet. 491-493 - Frédérique Muscinesi:
Hypotheses.org, une infrastructure pour les Digital Humanities. 494-496 - Wilhelm Ott, Tobias Ott, Oliver Gasperlin:
TXSTEP - an integrated XML-based scripting language for scholarly text data processing. 497-498 - Michele Pasin:
Exploring Prosopographical Resources Through Novel Tools and Visualizations: a Preliminary Investigation. 499-501 - Christoph Plutte:
Heterogeneity and Multilingualism vs. Usability - Challenges of the Database User Interface 'Archiv-Editor'. 502-504 - Dot Porter:
Medievalists' Use of Digital Resources, 2002 and 2012. 505 - Jason Rhody, Christoph Kümmel, Maria Effinger, Richard Freedman, David Magier, Reinhard Förtsch:
Cross-cultural Approaches to Digital Humanities - Funding and Implementation. 506-507 - Geoffrey Rockwell, Susan Brown, James Chartrand, Susan Hesemeier:
CWRC-Writer: An In-Browser XML Editor. 508-510 - Torsten Roeder, Christoph Plutte:
The Musici Database. 511-513 - Christof Schöch, Stefan Achler:
The TEICHI Framework: Bringing TEI Lite to Drupal. 514-515 - Susan Schreibman, Katiet Theresa McCadden, Barry Coyle:
What Has Digital Curation Got to Do With Digital Humanities? 516-517 - Kilian Peter Schultes, Stefan Geissler:
Orbis Latinus Online (OLO). 518-519 - Thomas Selig, Marc Wilhelm Küster, Eric Sean Conner:
Semantically connecting text fragments - Text-Text-Link-Editor. 520-521 - Kate Singer:
The Melesina Trench Project: Markup Vocabularies, Poetics, and Undergraduate Pedagogy. 522-524 - Peter Stadler:
Digital Edition of Carl Maria von Weber's Collected Works. 525-526 - Suzan van Dijk, Hilde M. Hoogenboom, Amelia Sanz, Jenny Bergenmar, Leif-Jöran Olsson:
Data sharing, virtual collaboration, and textual analysis: Working on 'Women Writers In History'. 527-528 - Philipp Vanscheidt, Andrea Rapp, Danah Tonne:
Storage Infrastructure of the Virtual Scriptorium St. Matthias. 529-531 - Mara R. Wade, Thomas Stäcker, Regine Stein, Hans Brandhorst, David Graham:
Digital Emblematics - Enabling Humanities Research of a Popular Early Modern Genre. 532-534 - Frank Wiegand:
DTAQ - Quality Assurance in a Large Corpus of Historical Texts. 535-536 - Florian Willems, Mattias Gärtner:
The Digital Averroes Research Environment - Semantic Relations in the Editorial Sciences. 537 - Peter Wittenburg, Przemyslaw Lenkiewicz, Erik Auer, Anna Lenkiewicz, Binyam Gebrekidan Gebre, Sebastian Drude:
AV Processing in eHumanities - a paradigm shift. 538
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