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11th DH 2016: Krakow, Poland
- Maciej Eder, Jan Rybicki:
11th Annual International Conference of the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations, DH 2016, Krakow, Poland, July 11-16, 2016, Conference Abstracts. Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO) 2016, ISBN 978-83-942760-3-4
Plenary lectures
- Agnieszka Zalewska:
Can CERN serve as a model for Digital Humanities? DH 2016: 35 - Helen Agüera:
Early Funding of Humanities Computing: A Personal History. DH 2016: 35 - Claire Warwick:
Touching the interface: Bishop Cosin and unsolved problems in (digital) information design. DH 2016: 35-38
Panels / Multiple Paper Session
- Katarzyna Bazarnik, Kathi Inman Berens, Zenon Fajfer, Susan Garfinkel:
Playable Books at Electronic Literature's Interface. 39-42 - Joel Berkowitz, Debra Caplan, Agnieszka Legutko, Aaron Rubinstein:
Institutionalizing and implementing the Digital Yiddish Theatre Project. 42-43 - Gabriel Bodard, Tom Gheldof, K. Faith Lawrence, Simona Stoyanova, Charlotte Tupman, Leif Isaksen, Rainer Simon, Elton T. E. Barker, Pau de Soto Cañamares, Hugh Cayless:
Linked Ancient World Data: Relating the Past. 43-47 - Susan Brown, Tanya E. Clement, Laura Mandell, Deb Verhoeven, Jacque Wernimont:
Creating Feminist Infrastructure in the Digital Humanities. 47-50 - Susan Brown, Kenneth M. Price, Raymond G. Siemens, Hans-Walter Gabler, Fatiha Idmhand, Thomas Lebarbé, Elena Pierazzo:
The Scholarly Digital Edition: Best Practices, Guidelines, and Peer Evaluation. 51-52 - Vittore Casarosa, Seamus Ross, Anna Maria Tammaro:
Are the Digital Humanists Prepared for Open Access to Research Data? 53 - Brennan Collins, Joe Hurley, Sarah Melton, Pete Rorabaugh, Marni Davis, Michael C. Page, Ruth Dusseault, Jay Varner, Ben Miller, Robert Bryant, Jeffery B. Glover, Robin Wharton:
Developing Local Digital Humanities Communities: The Atlanta Studies Network. 54-56 - Christopher Donaldson, Matthew Sangster, Joanna E. Taylor:
Digitally Mapping Romantic Literature and Culture. 56-61 - Amy Earhart, Alex Gil, Roopika Risam, Barbara Bordalejo, Isabel Galina, Lorna M. Hughes, Melissa Terras:
Quality Matters: Diversity and the Digital Humanities in 2016. 61-63 - Maciej Eder, Fotis Jannidis, Jan Rybicki, Christof Schöch, Karina van Dalen:
Literary Concepts: The Past and the Future. 63-65 - Katherine M. Faull, Diane Jakacki, James O'Sullivan, Amy Earhart, Micki Kaufman:
Access, Ownership, Protection: The Ethics of Digital Scholarship. 66-68 - Natalie Harrower, Rebecca Grant:
Digital Data Sharing: Opportunities and Challenges of Opening Research. 68-69 - Gregory Heyworth, Michael Phelps, Adrian S. Wisnicki, Kenneth Boydston, Roger L. Easton Jr., Chet Van Duzer:
Recovering Shared Heritage via Spectral Imaging: Problems, Solutions, Interpretations. 69-72 - Nirmala Menon, Alex Gil, Rahul K. Gairola:
Diverse Digitalities: Targeted Models for Postcolonial Challenges in the Digital Discourse. 72-74 - Federico Nanni, Anat Ben-David, Niels Brügger, Meghan Dougherty, Ian Milligan, Jane Winters:
Web Historiography - A New Challenge for Digital Humanities? 74-76 - Daniel Paul O'Donnell, Barbara Bordalejo, Padmini Ray Murray, Gimena del Rio, Elena González-Blanco:
Boundary Land: Diversity as a defining feature of the Digital Humanities. 76-82 - Elika Ortega, James O'Sullivan, Dene Grigar:
Intersectional Scholarship in Electronic Literature and Digital Humanities. 82-85 - Geoffrey Rockwell, Laura Mandell, Stéfan Sinclair, Matthew Wilkens, Boris Capitanu, J. Stephen Downie:
The Trace of Theory: Extracting Subsets from Large Collections. 85-92 - Mari Sarv, Liisi Laineste, Greta Franzini, Emily Franzini, Kati Kallio, Risto Järv:
Digital Folkloristics: the Use of Computational Methods in Revealing the Characteristics of Folkloric Communication. 92-93 - Toma Tasovac, Adrien Barbaresi, Thibault Clérice, Jennifer Edmond, Natalia Ermolaev, Vicky Garnett, Clifford E. Wulfman:
APIs in Digital Humanities: The Infrastructural Turn. 93-96 - Kathryn Tomasek, Georg Vogeler, Kathrin Pindl, Clifford B. Anderson, Anna Paulina Orlowska, Øyvind Eide:
MEDEA (Modeling Semantically Enriched Digital Editions of Accounts). 96-98 - Mara R. Wade, Myung-Ja K. Han, Thomas Stäcker:
"A Model for International Cooperation: Emblematica Online and Linked Data in Research and Pedagogy". 98-104 - Andreas Witt, Pawel Kamocki:
When DH Meets Law: Problems, Solutions, Perspectives. 104-108
Long Papers
- Mark Andrew Algee-Hewitt, J. D. Porter, Hannah Walser:
Representations Of Race: Mining Identity In American Fiction, 1789-1964. 111-112 - Patricia Alkhoven, Ronald Stenvert, Sophie Elpers:
Comparing Architectural Floor Plans: New Strategies. 113-115 - Daniel Alves:
Geocoding Thousands of Fiscal Records: Methodological Approach for a Study on Urban Retail Trade in the Belle Époque. 116-118 - Deborah Anderson, Carlos Pallan Gayol:
Unlocking The Mayan Script With Unicode. 119-121 - Smiljana Antonijevic:
Developing Competencies in Digital Scholarship Among Humanities Scholars. 121-123 - Florentina Armaselu, Roberto Rosselli Del Turco, Catherine Emma Jones, Lars Wieneke, Chiara Alzetta, Chiara Di Pietro:
Prototypes as Thinking through Making. Decision Points and Evaluation in Prototyping a Visualisation Framework for Historical Documents. 123-127 - Paul Atkinson, Ian N. Gregory, Catherine Porter:
Combining Corpora and Statistics using Geographical Technologies: New Evidence on Nineteenth Century Infant Mortality Decline in England and Wales. 127-130 - Neal Audenaert, Matthew Barry, Paul Bilnoski:
vWise: Visual Workspace for Information Seeking and Exploration. 130-132 - Francesco Beretta:
From Index Cards to a Digital Information System: Teaching Data Modeling to Master's Students in History. 132-135 - Monica Berti, Mary Daniels, Samantha Strickland, Kimbell Vincent-Dobbins:
Modelling Taxonomies of Text Reuse in the Deipnosophists of Athenaeus of Naucratis: Declarative Digital Scholarship. 135-137 - Anastasia Bonch-Osmolovskaya:
Two Centuries of Russian Roads - Diachronic Study of Polysemy in the Context of Cultural Change. 137-139 - Gulcan Can, Jean-Marc Odobez, Carlos Pallan Gayol, Daniel Gatica-Perez:
Ancient Maya Writings as High-Dimensional Data: a Visualization Approach. 139-143 - Bryan W. Carter:
The Evolution of Virtual Harlem: Bringing the Jazz Age to Life. 143-147 - Michal Choinski, Jan Rybicki:
Jonathan Edwards and Thomas Foxcroft: In Pursuit of Stylometric Traces of the Editor. 147-149 - Fabio Ciotti:
What's in a Topic Model. 149-151 - Fabio Ciotti, Silvio Peroni, Francesca Tomasi, Fabio Vitali:
An OWL 2 Formal Ontology for the Text Encoding Initiative. 151-153 - Arianna Ciula:
Digital Palaeography: What is digital about it? 153-158 - Tanya E. Clement, Steve McLaughlin, David Tcheng, Loretta Auvil, Tony Borries:
ARLO (Adaptive Recognition with Layered Optimization): a Prototype for High Performance Analysis of Sound Collections in the Humanities. 158-161 - Panos Constantopoulos, Lorna M. Hughes, Costis J. Dallas, Vayianos Pertsas, Leonidas Papachristopoulos, Timoleon Christodoulou:
Contextualized Integration of Digital Humanities Research: Using the NeMO Ontology of Digital Humanities Methods. 161-163 - Hugh Craig:
Frequency and Meaning. 163-165 - James Cummings, Jonathan Prag, James Chartrand:
Creating An EpiDoc Corpus for Ancient Sicily. 165-167 - Alexander Czmiel:
Sustainable publishing - Standardization possibilities for Digital Scholarly Edition technology. 167-168 - Isabella di Lenardo, Benoit Seguin, Frédéric Kaplan:
Visual Patterns Discovery in Large Databases of Paintings. 169-172 - Thomas Dick, Sarah Doyle:
Urban Youth and Community Media: A Digital Place-Making Process in Vanuatu. 172-173 - Wout Dillen:
Sequentiality in Genetic Digital Scholarly Editions. Models for Encoding the Dynamics of the Writing Process. 174-175 - Stefan Dumont:
correspSearch - A Web Service to Connect Diverse Scholarly Editions of Letters. 175-178 - Alexander Dunst, Rita Hartel, Sven Hohenstein, Jochen Laubrock:
Corpus Analyses of Multimodal Narrative: The Example of Graphic Novels. 178-180 - Michael Eberle-Sinatra, Marcello Vitali Rosati:
Déchiffrer Le Mythe De l'Amour. 180-181 - Maciej Eder, Rafal L. Górski:
Historical Linguistics' New Toys, or Stylometry Applied to the Study of Language Change. 182-184 - Maciej Eder, Jan Rybicki:
Go Set A Watchman while we Kill the Mockingbird in Cold Blood, with Cats and Other People. 184-186 - Bill Endres, Matthew Cook, Will Kurlinkus:
OVAL: A Virtual Ecosystem for Immersive Scholarship and Teaching. 186-188 - Stefan Evert, Fotis Jannidis, Thomas Proisl, Thorsten Vitt, Christof Schöch, Steffen Pielström, Isabella Reger:
Outliers or Key Profiles? Understanding Distance Measures for Authorship Attribution. 188-191 - Peter R. Fornaro, Lothar Schmitt, Andrea Bianco, Heidrun Feldmann:
Die digitale Modellierung experimenteller Druckgrafiken des 15. Jahrhunderts. Anforderungen und Chancen computerbasierter Dokumentationsverfahren. 192-193 - Francesca Frontini, Carmen Brando, Jean-Gabriel Ganascia:
REDEN ONLINE: Disambiguation, Linking and Visualisation of References in TEI Digital Editions. 193-197 - Isabel Galina Russell, Ernesto Priani Saisó:
New DH Publishing Models and Geopolitical Diversity. 197-198 - Jean-Gabriel Ganascia, Chiara Mainardi:
Crossed Semantic Analysis of Literary Texts with DeSeRT. 199-201 - Elizabeth Winfree Garbee:
Pulp Science Fiction's Legacy to Women in Science. 202-203 - Marissa Gemma, Ryan James Heuser:
Building Blocks of Fiction: Lexical Bundles in Nineteenth-Century Novels. 203-206 - Gabriella Giannachi:
Performance, the Document, and the Digital: the Case of Lynn Hershman Leeson's 'Robertas'. 206-208 - Paul Girard, Béatrice Dedinger, Donato Ricci, Benjamin Ooghe-Tabanou, Mathieu Jacomy, Guillaume Plique, Grégory Tible:
RICardo Project : Exploring 19th Century International Trade. 208-210 - Tamar Gordon, Lori C. Walters, Rob Michlowitz:
An Augmented Reality Mobile Application for Intergenerational Learning and Critical Connection. 210-213 - Ronald Haentjens Dekker, Rik Hoekstra, Marijke van Faassen:
Bringing Migration Data Into Context Using Digital Computational Methods. 213-215 - Andrew Hankinson, Reiner Krämer, Julie Cumming, Ichiro Fujinaga:
Cross-Institutional Music Document Search. 215-217 - Lena Hettinger, Fotis Jannidis, Isabella Reger, Andreas Hotho:
Significance Testing for the Classification of Literary Subgenres. 218-220 - David L. Hoover:
Microanalyzing Parts of Texts. 220-222 - David L. Hoover:
Textual Variation, Text-Randomization, and Microanalysis. 223-225 - Rui Hu, Jean-Marc Odobez, Daniel Gatica-Perez:
Assessing a Shape Descriptor for Analysis of Mesoamerican Hieroglyphics: A View Towards Practice in Digital Humanities. 225-229 - Stefan Jänicke, David Joseph Wrisley:
Visualizing Mouvance: Towards an Alignment of Medieval Vernacular Text Traditions. 230-233 - Kim Jautze, Andreas van Cranenburgh, Corina Koolen:
Topic Modeling Literary Quality. 233-237 - Andrew Jewell, Elizabeth Lorang:
Teaching Digital Humanities Through a Community-Engaged, Team-Based Pedagogy. 237-239 - Catherine Emma Jones:
Exploring and Evaluating Cartographic (miss)Representation in a Sample of Web-based Geohumanities Projects. 239-241 - Patrick Juola, George K. Mikros:
Authorship Attribution Using Different Languages. 241-243 - Akihiro Kawase:
Regional Classification of Traditional Japanese Folk Songs from the Chugoku District. 243-246 - Mike Kestemont, Justin Anthony Stover, Moshe Koppel, Folgert Karsdorp, Walter Daelemans:
Authorship Verification with the Ruzicka Metric. 246-249 - Marion Lamé:
GLAMorous! Edizione Digitale Di Beni Culturali Con Contenuto Testuale, Multidisciplinarietà Ed Epigrafia Digitale. 249-250 - Marion Lamé, Blandine Nouvel:
Du Texte Antique À La Publication Scientifique : Outils D'Analyse Numériques Des Contenus Et Ponts Conceptuels. 250-253 - Connie Lee Lester:
Harvesting History: Democratizing The Past Through The Digitization Of Community History. 254-256 - Matthew Lincoln:
If Paintings were Plants: Measuring Genre Diversity in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Painting and Printmaking. 256-259 - Chao-Lin Liu:
Quantitative Analyses of Chinese Poetry of Tang and Song Dynasties: Using Changing Colors and Innovative Terms as Examples. 260-262 - Jyi-Shane Liu, Ching-Ying Lee, Ke-Chih Ning:
Evaluating Modal Use in News Corpus for Constructing Rhetorical Context of Historical Event. 262-266 - Eetu Mäkelä, Thea Lindquist, Eero Hyvönen:
CORE - A Contextual Reader based on Linked Data. 267-269 - Eetu Mäkelä, Tanja Säily, Terttu Nevalainen:
Khepri - a Modular View-Based Tool for Exploring (Historical Sociolinguistic) Data. 269-272 - Maciej Maryl, Maciej Piasecki, Ksenia Mlynarczyk:
Where Close and Distant Readings Meet: Text Clustering Methods in Literary Analysis of Weblog Genres. 273-276 - Alexander Mehler, Benno Wagner, Rüdiger Gleim:
Wikidition: Towards A Multi-layer Network Model of Intertextuality. 276-279 - Estelle Tieberghien, Pablo Ruiz Fabo, Frédérique Mélanie-Bécquet, Thierry Poibeau, Tim Causer, Melissa Terras:
Mapping the Bentham Corpus. 279-282 - Ben Miller, Cindy Berger, Sayan Bhattcharyya, Tommaso Caselli, David Kelman, Jennifer Olive, Jay Rajiva:
Contextualizing Receptions of World Literature by Mining Multilingual Wikipedias. 282-285 - Ian Milligan, Jimmy Lin, Jeremy Wiebe, Alice Zhou:
Exploring and Discovering Archive-It Collections with Warcbase. 285-288 - Ernesto Miranda:
Representación De Otras Literaturas Mexicanas En Medios Digitales. 288-291 - Francesca Morselli, Jennifer Edmond:
Toward A Use-Value Paradigm For The Sustainability Of Digital Research. 291-294 - Simon Musgrave, Nick Thieberger:
If You Build It Will They Come? Digital Infrastructure And Disciplinary Practice In Language Documentation. 294-296 - Grace Muzny, Mark Algee-Hewitt, Dan Jurafsky:
The Dialogic Turn and the Performance of Gender: the English Canon 1782-2011. 296-299 - Kiyonori Nagasaki, Toru Tomabechi, A. Charles Muller, Masahiro Shimoda:
Digital Humanities in Cultural Areas Using Texts That Lack Word Spacing. 300-303 - James O'Sullivan, Michelle Shade, Ben Rowles:
Player-Driven Content: Analysing Textual Communications in Online Roleplay. 303-306 - Kevin R. Page, Terhi Nurmikko-Fuller, Carolin Rindfleisch, David M. Weigl:
Digital Annotation Tooling for Opera Performance Studies. 306-309 - Mylène Pardoen:
Bretez : Conjugaison du passé au futur. 309-310 - Adam Tomasz Pawlowski:
Chronological corpora: Challenges and opportunities of sequential analysis. The example of ChronoPress corpus of Polish. 311-313 - Daniel Pitti, Worthy Martin:
Social Networks and Archival Context: People and Cultural Heritage. 313-315 - Daniel James Powell:
Early English Books in Context: Towards a History of the Technological Humanities. 315-317 - Marianne Reboul, Yuri Bizzoni:
Projet Odysseus, Outil d'Etudes Comparatives Du Traductologue. 317-320 - Dean Rehberger, Ibrahima Thiaw, Deborah Mack, Candace Keller, Catherine Foley:
The Lifecycle of a Digital African Studies Projects: Creating Sustainable, Equitable, and Ethical Projects. 320-322 - Scott Rettberg, Roderick Coover:
Addressing Torture in Iraq through Critical Digital Media Art - Hearts and Minds: The Interrogations Project. 322-324 - Heather Richards-Rissetto:
An Iterative 3DGIS Analysis of the Role of Visibility in Ancient Landscapes. 324-328 - Alexandre Rigal, Dario Rodighiero, Loup Cellard:
The Trajectories Tool: Amplifying Network Visualization Complexity. 328-330 - Marine Riguet, Suzanne Mpouli:
À la Croisée des Discours Littéraire et Scientifique : La Comparaison comme Haute Figure Dialogique. 330-333 - Carolin Rindfleisch:
Modelling Music Reception: An Ontology For Representing Interpretations of Richard Wagner's Leitmotifs. 333-336 - Glenn Roe, Clovis Gladstone, Robert Morrissey, Mark Olsen:
Digging into ECCO: Identifying Commonplaces and other Forms of Text Reuse at Scale. 336-339 - Lukas Rosenthaler, Beat Immenhauser, Peter Fornaro:
Implementation of a National Data Center for the Humanities (DaSCH). 339-341 - Enrica Salvatori:
Digicraft and 'Systemic' Thinking in Digital Humanities. 341-344 - Jentery Sayers, Tiffany Chan:
Using Computer Numerical Control Techniques to Prototype Media History. 344-346 - Christof Schöch, Daniel Schlör, Stefanie Popp, Annelen Brunner, Ulrike Henny, José Calvo Tello:
Straight Talk! Automatic Recognition of Direct Speech in Nineteenth-Century French Novels. 346-353 - Susan Schreibman, Agiatis Benardou, Claire Clivaz, Matej Durco, Marianne Ping Huang, Eliza Papaki, Stef Scagliola, Toma Tasovac, Tanja Wissik:
#dariahTeach: online teaching, MOOCs and beyond. 354-356 - Susan Schreibman, John Buckley, Brian Hughes, Constantinos Papadopoulos:
The Computer Graphic Simulation of the Battle at Mount Street Bridge. Problems, Perspectives, and Challenges. 356-358 - Mehdy Sedaghat Payam:
The Mutual Relationship of Linguistic and Non-linguistic Elements in Breaking Down the Hierarchy of Language in Digital Narrative. 358-360 - David Lawrence Shepard, Takako Hashimoto, Tetsuji Kuboyama, Kilho Shin:
What Do Boy Bands Tell Us About Disasters? The Social Media Response to the Nepal Earthquake. 361-364 - James Smithies:
Full Stack DH: Building a Virtual Research Environment on a Raspberry PI. 364-365 - Rombert J. Stapel:
Reconstruction of Labour Relations in the North Sea Region in the Late Middle Ages: Spatio-Temporal Analysis Using Historical GIS, Taxation Sources, and Coin Finds. 366-369 - Pelle Snickars:
SpotiBot-Turing testing Spotify. 366 - Todd Suomela, Geoffrey Rockwell, Ryan Chartier:
Curating Just-In-Time Datasets from the Web. 369-371 - Joanna Swafford:
Read, Play, Build: Teaching Sherlock Holmes through Digital Humanities. 371-372 - Victoria Szabo:
The North Carolina Jukebox Project: Archives Alive and the Making of Digital Cultural Heritage. 372-374 - Doris Tausendfreund:
The Online Archive "Forced Labor 1939-1945. Memory and History". 375-376 - Melissa Terras, James Baker, James Hetherington, David Beavan, Anne Welsh, Helen O'Neill, Will Finley, Oliver Duke-Williams, Adam Farquhar:
Enabling Complex Analysis of Large-Scale Digital Collections: Humanities Research, High Performance Computing, and transforming access to British Library Digital Collections. 376-379 - Thomas Bögel, Evelyn Gius, Janina Jacke, Jannik Strötgen:
From Order to Order Switch. Mediating between Complexity and Reproducibility in the Context of Automated Literary Annotation. 379-382 - Mikko Tolonen, Niko Ilomäki, Hege Roivainen, Leo Lahti:
Printing in a Periphery: a Quantitative Study of Finnish Knowledge Production, 1640-1828. 383-385