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CHR 2020: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Folgert Karsdorp, Barbara McGillivray, Adina Nerghes, Melvin Wevers:

Proceedings of the Workshop on Computational Humanities Research (CHR 2020), Amsterdam, The Netherlands, November 18-20, 2020. CEUR Workshop Proceedings 2723, CEUR-WS.org 2020
Presented Papers
- Federico Pianzola, Alberto Acerbi, Simone Rebora:

Cultural Accumulation and Improvement in Online Fan Fiction. 2-11 - Artjoms Sela, Boris Orekhov, Roman Leibov:

Weak Genres: Modeling Association Between Poetic Meter and Meaning in Russian Poetry. 12-31 - Stefan Veleski:

Weak Negative Correlation between the Present Day Popularity and the Mean Emotional Valence of Late Victorian Novels. 32-43 - Mike Kestemont, Folgert Karsdorp

:
Estimating the Loss of Medieval Literature with an Unseen Species Model from Ecodiversity. 44-55 - Inna Uglanova

, Evelyn Gius
:
The Order of Things. A Study on Topic Modelling of Literary Texts. 57-76 - Enrique Manjavacas, Folgert Karsdorp

, Mike Kestemont:
A Statistical Foray into Contextual Aspects of Intertextuality. 77-96 - Aniruddha Sharma, Yuerong Hu, Peizhen Wu, Wenyi Shang, Shubhangi Singhal, Ted Underwood:

The Rise and Fall of Genre Differentiation in English-Language Fiction. 97-114 - Maximilian Bryan, Manuel Burghardt, Johannes Molz:

A Computational Expedition into the Undiscovered Country - Evaluating Neural Networks for the Identification of Hamlet Text Reuse. 115-127 - Zachary K. Stine, James E. Deitrick, Nitin Agarwal:

Comparative Religion, Topic Models, and Conceptualization: Towards the Characterization of Structural Relationships between Online Religious Discourses. 128-148 - Marijn Koolen, Peter Boot, Joris J. van Zundert:

Online Book Reviews and the Computational Modelling of Reading Impact. 149-169 - Michael Piotrowski

, Mateusz Fafinski:
Nothing New Under the Sun? Computational Humanities and the Methodology of History. 171-181 - Ben Miller, Julie S. Park:

Computing Narrative. 182-190 - Jonathan Scott Enderle:

Toward a Thermodynamics of Meaning. 191-201 - Fabian Offert, Peter Bell:

Generative Digital Humanities. 202-212 - Joshua Ballance:

Pitch-Class Distributions in the Music of Anton Webern. 214-224 - Christopher Akiki, Manuel Burghardt:

Toward a Musical Sentiment (MuSe) Dataset for Affective Distant Hearing. 225-235 - Nilo Pedrazzini:

Exploiting Cross-Dialectal Gold Syntax for Low-Resource Historical Languages: Towards a Generic Parser for Pre-Modern Slavic. 237-247 - Leonard Konle, Fotis Jannidis:

Domain and Task Adaptive Pretraining for Language Models. 248-256 - Lauren Fonteyn:

What about Grammar? Using BERT Embeddings to Explore Functional-Semantic Shifts of Semi-Lexical and Grammatical Constructions. 257-268 - Charles Lam, Brian Leung, Cora Yip, Jason Yung:

A Linguistic Approach to Misinformation in Chinese. 269-278 - Leo Lahti, Eetu Mäkelä, Mikko Tolonen:

Quantifying Bias and Uncertainty in Historical Data Collections with Probabilistic Programming. 280-289 - Kristoffer L. Nielbo, Peter Bjerregaard Vahlstrup, Anja Bechmann, Jianbo Gao:

Trend Reservoir Detection: Minimal Persistence and Resonant Behavior of Trends in Social Media. 290-297 - Elena Fernández Fernández, Mirco Schönfeld, Jürgen Pfeffer:

Measuring the Acceleration of the Social Construction of Time using the BOE (Boletin Oficial del Estado). 298-308 - Konstantin Todorov, Giovanni Colavizza:

Transfer Learning for Historical Corpora: An Assessment on Post-OCR Correction and Named Entity Recognition. 310-339 - Elli Bleeker, Bram Buitendijk, Ronald Haentjens Dekker:

Between Flexibility and Universality: Combining TAGML and XML to Enhance the Modeling of Cultural Heritage Text. 340-350 - Bernhard Liebl, Manuel Burghardt:

From Historical Newspapers to Machine-Readable Data: The Origami OCR Pipeline. 351-373 - Thomas Smits, Ruben Ros:

Quantifying Iconicity in 940K Online Circulations of 26 Iconic Photographs. 375-384 - Yann Ryan, Sebastian Ahnert, Ruth Ahnert:

Networking Archives: Quantitative History and the Contingent Archive. 385-396 - Juri Opitz:

Automatic Creation of a Large-Scale Tempo-Spatial and Semantic Medieval European Information System. 397-419

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