Digital Humanities 2007

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Session Overview
 
This draft schedule, generated from Conftool on Tuesday, 05/06/2007, may not contain the most current abstracts.
 
 
Date: Monday, 04/06/2007
8:30 am - 5:00 pmSpringfield Excursion
includes lunch voucher at Café Brio
Dana Thomas House & Lincoln Museum 
6:00 - 8:00 pmOpening Plenary and Reception
Franco Moretti, speaker
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 
Date: Tuesday, 05/06/2007
09:00 - 10:30Session 1: Data-Mining
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Mark Olsen
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Discourse, power and écriture féminine: Text mining gender difference in 18th and 19th century French literature.

Shlomo Argamon*, Jean-Baptiste Goulain*, Russell Horton~, Mark Olsen+ 

* Linguistic Cognition Lab, Dept. of Computer Science, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL 60616, USA + ARTFL Project, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 60637, USA ~Digital Library Development Center, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 60637, USA


Gender, Race, and Nationality in Black Drama, 1850-2000: Mining Differences in Language Use in Authors and their Characters

Shlomo Argamon*, Russell Horton~, Mark Olsen+, Sterling Stein* 

* Linguistic Cognition Lab, Dept. of Computer Science, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL 60616, USA + ARTFL Project, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 60637, USA ~Digital Library Development Center, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 60637, USA


Mining Eighteenth Century Ontologies: Machine Learning and Knowledge Classification in the Encyclopédie.

Russell Horton, Mark Olsen, Glenn Roe, Robert Voyer 

The ARTFL Project, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 60637, USA Digital Library Development Center, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, 60637


Understanding the Linguistic Construction of Gender in Shakespeare via Text Mining

Sobhan Raj Hota 1, Shlomo Argamon1, Rebecca Chung2 

1: Laboratory of Linguistic Cognition, Computer Science Department, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, 60616, USA 2: Lewis Department of Humanities, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL, 60616, USA

09:00 - 10:30Session 11: Digital Text Resources for the Humanities: Legal Issues
Session Chair: Dr. Georg Rehm
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

Digital Text Resources for the Humanities: Legal Issues

Georg Rehm1, Andreas Witt1, Erhard Hinrichs1, Timm Lehmberg2, Christian Chiarcos3, Felix Zimmermann4 

1: SFB 441 ("Linguistic Data Structures"), Tübingen University, Tübingen, Germany 2: SFB 538 ("Multilingualism"), Hamburg University 3: SFB 632 ("Information Structure"), Potsdam University 4: Institute for Legal Informatics, Hannover University

09:00 - 10:30Session 12: Interoperability of Metadata for Thematic Research Collections: A Model Based on The Walt Whitman Archive
Session Chair: Katherine L. Walter
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

Interoperability of Metadata for Thematic Research Collections: A Model Based on the Walt Whitman Archive

Katherine L. Walter1, Brett Barney1, Julia Flanders2, Terence Catapano3, Daniel Pitti4 

1: Center for Digital Research in the Humanities, University of Nebraska-Lincoln 2: Women Writers' Project, Brown University 3: Columbia University 4: Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, University of Virginia

10:30 - 11:00Break 1: Poster / Demo 1
NCSA Atrium (Posters & Breaks) 
 

A Statistical Study of Superlatives in Dickens and Smollett: A case study in corpus stylistics

Tomoji Tabata 

The University of Osaka, Japan


Digital Humanties! The Musical

Doug Reside 

Maryland Institute of Technology in the Humanities (MITH)


From bibliography to timeline: flexible infrastructure bears fruit

Ian Johnson 

University of Sydney


From TEI to a CIDOC-CRM conforming model. Towards a better integration between text collections and museum documentation in general

Øyvind Eide, Christian-Emil Ore 

Unit for Digital Documentation, University of Oslo


Geographical Information Systems and the Exploration of French Culture and Society

Joel Goldfield 

Fairfield University


Making a contribution: modularity, integration and collaboration between tools in Pliny

John Bradley 

Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London, UK


Reading Tools, or Text Analysis Tools as Objects of Interpretation

Stéfan Sinclair, Geoffrey Rockwell 

McMaster University


RiverWeb

Vernon Burton, et al 

UIUC

11:00 - 12:30Session 2: Coalition of Digital Humanities Centers
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Neil R. Fraistat
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Coalition of Digital Humanities Centers

Neil R. Fraistat 

University of Maryland

11:00 - 12:30Session 15: Understanding Research Archives
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Susan Hockey
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

Bits and pieces of text: Appraisal of a natural electronic archive

Maria Esteva 

School of Information, University of Texas at Austin


Rushdie's Computers: Born-Digital Archives and Humanites Research

Erika Leigh Farr 

Emory University


The Master Builders: LAIRAH research on good practice in the construction of digital humanities projects.

Claire Warwick, Melissa Terras, Paul Huntington, Nikoleta Pappa, Isabel Galina 

School of Library, Archive and Information Studies, University College London

11:00 - 12:30Session 17: Visualities
Session Chair: Dr. Arianna Ciula
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

Relationship Mapping for Art Education and Research

Unmil Karadkar, Neal Audenaert, Adam Mikeal, Scott Phillips, Alexey Maslov, Enrique Mallen, Richard Furuta, and Marlo Nordt 

Texas A&M University


The Abbey Inside the Machine: The MonArch Project

Clifford Edward Wulfman1, Elli Mylonas1, Anne Loyer2, Sheila Bonde1, Clark Maines2 

1: Brown University 2: Wesleyan University


Viewing Texts: An Art-Centered Representation of Picasso’s Writings

Neal Audenaert, Unmil Karadkar, Enrique Mallen, Richard Furuta, and Sarah Tonner 

Texas A&M University

02:00 - 03:30Session 3: SDH/SEMI Panel: Explorations in a variety of interfaces for the reading of a database
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Christian Vandendorpe
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Society Panel (ACH)

ACH 

ACH

02:00 - 03:30Session 16: Knowledge Communities
Session Chair: Jean Gilmour Anderson
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

Researching e-Science Analysis of Census Holdings: The ReACH project

Melissa Terras 

School of Library, Archive and Information Studies, University College London


The anthropology of knowledge: from basic to complex virtual communities in the arts and humanities

Stuart Dunn 1, Tobias Blanke 2 

King's College London


TV-Tag: Tagging Across Time and Space

Doug Reside 

Maryland Institute of Technology in the Humanities (MITH)

02:00 - 03:30Session 18: Visualities 2
Session Chair: Dr. Clifford Edward Wulfman
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

Examples of Images in Text Editing

Dorothy Carr Porter 

University of Kentucky


Re-imag[en]ing Cervantes’ Don Quixote: a Multilayered Approach to Editing Visual Materials in a Hypertextual Archive

Eduardo Urbina, Fernando González Moreno, Richard Furuta, Steven E. Smith, Jie Deng, Stephanie Elmquist, and Sarah Tonner 

Texas A&M University


[tba]

Daniel O'Donnell 

U Lethbridge

03:30 - 04:00Break 2: Poster / Demo 2
NCSA Atrium (Posters & Breaks) 
 

Ancient Technical Manuscripts: the Case of 17th-century Portuguese Shipbuilding Treatises

Carlos Monroy, Richard Furuta, and Filipe Castro 

Texas A&M University


How Rhythmical is Hexameter: A Statistical Approach to Ancient Epic Poetry

Maciej Eder 

Polish Academy of Sciences, Cracow, Poland


MusicXML: an XML based approach to automatic musicological analysis

Raffaele Viglianti 

University of Pisa, Italy


RolandHT and Reconceiving the Notion of Corpus

Vika Zafrin 

Brown University


Semantic Clustering in the Wild

Aaron Krowne, Alice Hickcox, Stephen Ingram 

Emory University, University of British Columbia


The KWIC-step: a dance for 2 or more

Susan L. Wiesner 

University of Surrey, Surrey, UK


Why Take Games Seriously? Digital Humanities and the Study of Games

Jason C. Rhody 

University of Maryland at College Park

04:00 - 05:30Session 4: ADHO Panel [TBA]
Session Chair: John Unsworth
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Society Panel (ADHO)

ADHO 

ADHO

04:00 - 05:30Session 19: Text Analysis
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Geoffrey Rockwell
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

Assumptions, Statistical Tests, and Non-Traditional Authorship Attribution -- Part II

Joseph Rudman 

Carnegie Mellon University


Macro-Analysis (2.0)

Matthew Jockers 

Stanford University


Zeta and Iota and Twentieth-Century American Poetry

David L. Hoover 

New York University

04:00 - 05:30Session 20: Transcriptions, Editions, and Encoding
Session Chair: Dr. John Lavagnino
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

A Descriptive Classification Generator for Electronic Editions

Edward Vanhoutte, Ron Van den Branden 

Centre for Scholarly Editing and Document Studies Royal Academy of Dutch Language and Literature, Gent, Belgium


The encoding of time in manuscript transcription: toward genetic digital editions

Elena Pierazzo 

Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London, London, UK


What is transcription?

Michael Sperberg-McQueen1, Claus Huitfeldt2 

1: World Wide Web Consortium / MIT Computer Science and AI Laboratory 2: University of Bergen

5:30 - 7:00 pmReception and Busa Award Lecture
Wilhelm Ott, speaker
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 
Date: Wednesday, 06/06/2007
09:00 - 10:30Session 5: ALLC Panel [TBA]
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Harold Short
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Society Panel (ALLC)

ALLC 

ALLC

09:00 - 10:30Session 21: Research and Analysis
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Stephen Ramsay
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

A Flexible System for Text Analysis with Semantic Network

Loretta Auvil, Eugene Grois, Xavier Llorà, Greg Pape, Vered Goren, Barry Sanders, Bernie Acs, Robert McGrath 

National Center for Supercomputing Applications, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign


Scholarly (r)evolution: roles of e-texts in the research process in the humanities

Suzana Sukovic 

University of Technology, Sydney


‘Something that is interesting is interesting them’: Using text mining and visualizations to aid interpreting repetition in Gertrude Stein’s The Making of Americans

Tanya Clement1, Loretta Auvi2, Catherine Plaisant3, Greg Pape2, and Vered Goren2 

1: University of Maryland, College Park 2: Automated Learning Group (ALG) at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 3: Human Comuter Interaction Lab (HCIL), University of Maryland, College Park

09:00 - 10:30Session 22: Markup and Encoding
Session Chair: Syd Bauman
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

Distributed Multivalent Encoding

Paul Caton 

Brown University Women Writers Project


Form and Format: Towards a Semiotics of Digital Text Encoding

Wendell Piez 

Mulberry Technologies, Inc


Markup and the digital paratext

Julia Flanders[1], Domenico Fiormonte[2] 

1: . Brown University 2: . University of Rome

10:30 - 11:00Break 3: Poster / Demo 3
NCSA Atrium (Posters & Breaks) 
 

A Network Structure of the Synoptic Gospels Employing Clustering Coefficients

Maki Miyake 

Osaka University


Automatic techniques for generating and correcting cultural heritage collection metadata

Antal van den Bosch, Caroline Sporleder, Marieke van Erp, Stephen Hunt 

ILK / Department of Language and Information Sciences, Tilburg University, The Netherlands


BFM Old French Text Corpus: Current State and Prospective Developments

Alexei Lavrentiev 

Ecole Normale Supérieure Lettres et Sciences humaines


Bringing the Digital Revolution to Judaic Music: The Judaica Sound Archives (JSA)

Salwa Ismail Patel 

Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, US


Digital Editing, Infrastructure Obstacles, and the world of Virtual Appliances

Jarom Lyle McDonald 

Brigham Young University


Distinguishing Editorial and Customer Critiques of Cultural Objects Using Text Mining

Xiao Hu, J. Stephen Downie, Andreas Ehmann 

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign


Extending PhiloLogic

Charles M. Cooney1, Russell Horton2, Mark Olsen1, Glenn Roe1, Robert Voyer1 

1: . ARTFL Project, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL US 2: . Digital Library Development Center, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL US


GRADE: a GRAmmar Development Engine

Harry Schmidt 1, Helma Dik 2 

1: Department of Classics, Princeton University 2: Department of Classics, University of Chicago


UP-TO-DATE MEANS OF ACCESS TO FULL-TEXT DATABASES

Roman M. Gnutikov1, Victor A. Baranov2 

1: Udmurtia State University, Izhevsk, Russia 2: Izhevsk State Technical University, Izhevsk, Russia

11:00 - 12:30Session 6: ACH Panel [TBA]
Session Chair: Lorna Hughes
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Society Panel (SDH/SEMI): Explorations in a variety of interfaces for the reading of a database

[1] Christian Vandendorpe; [2] Dominic Forest; [3] Stan Ruecker; [4] Stefan Sinclair 

SDH/SEMI

11:00 - 12:30Session 23: Modelling and Visualisation
Session Chair: Dr. Melissa Terras
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

Digital Visualization as a Scholarly Activity

Martyn Jessop 

Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London


Preserving information about linearization in document graphs

Lars G. Johnsen, Claus Huitfeldt 

University of Bergen


Through the Reading Glass: Generating an editorial microcosm through experimental modeling

Ron Van den Branden, Edward Vanhoutte 

Centre for Scholarly Editing and Document Studies (CTB), Royal Academy of Dutch Language and Literature (KANTL), Gent, Belgium

11:00 - 12:30Session 24: Representation and Analysis
Session Chair: Dr. Julia Flanders
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

Exploring New Worlds in Old Texts: Text Encoding Projects for the Undergraduate Study of Spanish American Colonial Literature.

Domingo Ledezma, Phoebe Stinson 

Wheaton College, MA, USA


Expressing complex associations in medieval historical documents: the Henry III Fine Rolls project

Arianna Ciula 1, Paul Spence 1, José Miguel Vieira 1, Gautier Poupeau 2 

1: Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London, UK 2: École Nationale des Chartes, Université Paris-Sorbonne, France


Twelve Hamlets: A Stylometric Analysis of Major Characters' Idiolects in Three English Versions and Nine Translations

Jan Rybicki 

Pedagogical University, Krakow, Poland

02:00 - 03:30Session 7: Digital Humanities and the Solitary Scholar
Session Chair: Dorothy Carr Porter
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Digital Humanities and the Solitary Scholar

David J. Birnbaum1, Michael L. Norton2, Linda E. Patrik3, Dorothy Carr Porter4, Wesley Raabe5, Geoffrey Rockwell6, Frederick A. Winter7 

1: University of Pittsburgh 2: James Madison University 3: Union College 4: University of Kentucky 5: University of Nebraska-Lincoln 6: McMaster University 7: National Endowment for the Humanities

02:00 - 03:30Session 8: Roundtable Panel: Modeling and Visualising Historical Narrative
Session Chair: Dr. Ruth Mostern
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

Roundtable Panel: Modeling and Visualizing Historical Narrative

Ruth Mostern 1, Johanna Drucker 2, Matt Jensen 3, Ian Johnson 4, Lewis Lancaster 5, Bruce Robertson 6 

1: Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts, University of California, Merced, USA 2: Media Studies, University of Virginia, USA 3: NewsBlip, USA 4: Archaeological Computing Laboratory, University of Sydney, Australia 5: Classics, Mount Alison College, Canada 6: Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative, UC Berkeley, USA

02:00 - 03:30Session 9: Agora.Techno.Phobia.Philia: Gender, Knowledge Building, and Digital Media
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Martha Nell Smith
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

Agora.Techno.Phobia.Philia: Gender, Knowledge Building, and Digital Media

Martha Nell Smith 1, Carolyn Guertin 2, 3, Katherine D. Harris 4, Laura Mandell 5 

1: University of Maryland, MITH 2: University of Texas at Arlington 3: McLuhan Program in Culture and Technology 4: San Jose State University 5: Miami University

03:30 - 04:00Break 4: Poster / Demo 4
NCSA Atrium (Posters & Breaks) 
 

Digitization and Publication of the Goethe-Dictionary on the Internet

Kurt Gärtner[1], Vera Hildenbrandt[2] 

[1,2] University of Trier, Germany


Extracting Stylistic Distances from Texts for Forensic Linguistics Purposes

Katerina T. Frantzi 

Dept. of Mediterranean Studies, Rhodes, Greece


KanDoku -- interactively reading and marking Chinese texts

Christian Wittern 

Kyoto University, Institute for Research in Humanities


Literate Documentation for XML

Kevin M. Reiss 

Mina Rees Library, Graduate and University Center, City University of New York


QRedit: An Integrated Editor System to Support Online Volunteer Translators

Takeshi Abekawa and Kyo Kageura 

Library and Information Science Course Graduate School of Education University of Tokyo


Synergies: The Canadian Information Network for Research in the Social Sciences and Humanities

Michael Eberle-Sinatra 

University of Montreal


TEI Constrained: yet another presentation system

Syd Bauman 

Brown University Women Writers Project


Text Analysis Portal for Research, Using the Public Release

Geoffrey Rockwell, Stéfan Sinclair 

McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada


The Use of TEI and OAI in Manuscript, an Informational-Analytical System / Применение технологий TEI и OAI в ин

Pavel A. Votincev 

Udmurtia State University

04:00 - 05:30Session 10: Open Source and Digital Humanities
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Amy Earhart
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Open Source and Digital Humanities

Amy Earhart 1; Dominic Forest 2; James Smith 3 

1: Department of English, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, USA 2: Observatoire de Linguistique Sens-Texte, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Canada 3: Computer Information Services, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, USA

04:00 - 05:30Session 25: Models and Tools
Session Chair: Espen S. Ore
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

CITATION NETWORKS: A NEW HUMANITIES TOOL?

Almila Akdag 1, Zoe Borovsky 2 

1: Department of Art History, UCLA, LA, USA 2: UDHIG, UCLA, LA, USA


Models and Explanation in the Cultural Sciences

Allen H. Renear 

GSLIS/UIUC


Thinking about Interpretation: Pliny and Scholarship in the Humanities

John Bradley 

Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London

04:00 - 05:30Session 26: Measure and Meaning
Session Chair: Edward Vanhoutte
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

An evaluation of text classification methods for literary study

Bei Yu and John Unsworth 

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign


Meaning and Mining: the Impact of Implicit Assumptions in Data Mining for the Humanities

Brad Pasanek1, D. Sculley2 

1: USC Annenberg Center for Communication 2: Tufts University, Computer Science Department


Phonemic Accumulations and the Analysis of Poetry

Marc Plamondon 

Nipissing University

6:30 - 9:30 pmBanquet, with music by High Cotton
Alice J. Campbell Alumni Center 
 
Date: Thursday, 07/06/2007
09:00 - 10:30Session 13: Digital Representation and the Hyper Real
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Susan Schreibman
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Digital Representation and the Hyper Real

John Lavagnino1, Willard McCarty2, Susan Schreibman3 

1: Kings College London 2: Kings College London 3: University of Maryland

09:00 - 10:30Session 14: \"Done\": Finished Projects in the Digital Humanities
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Matthew Kirschenbaum
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

"Done": Finished Projects in the Digital Humanities

Matthew Kirschenbaum 1, William A. Kretzschmar, Jr. 2, David Sewell 3, Susan Brown 4, Patricia Clements 5, Isobel Grundy 

1: University of Maryland 2: University of Georgia 3: University of Virginia Press 4: University of Guelph 5: University of Alberta

09:00 - 10:30Session 27: Learning and Play
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Lisa Lena Opas-Hänninen
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

Digital innovations in teaching and learning: interactive computer environments in the undergraduate classroom

Lisa M. Snyder 

University of California, Los Angeles


The WWW as Curricular Method in the Digital Humanities

Tatjana Chorney 

Saint Mary's University


Three Play Effects: Eliza, Tale-Spin, and SimCity

Noah Wardrip-Fruin 

University of California, San Diego

10:30 - 11:00Break 5: Poster / Demo 5
NCSA Atrium (Posters & Breaks) 
 

Lost in the Archives, Found in Digital Collections

Natalia (Natasha) Smith, Dongqing Xie, Elizabeth McAulay, Todd Cooper, Adrienne W. MacKay 

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, US


RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE MUSIC ENCODING INITIATIVE PROJECT: ENHANCING DIGITAL MUSICOLOGY AND SCHOLARSHIP

Perry Roland 1, J. Stephen Downie 2 

1: University of Virginia 2: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign


Second Life for Museums and Archeological Modeling

Richard Urban, Michael Twidale 

Graduate School of Library and Information Science University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign


TEI By Example

Ron Van den Branden 1, Edward Vanhoutte1, Melissa Terras2 

1: Centre for Scholarly Editing and Document Studies, Royal Academy of Dutch Language and Literature, Gent, Belgium 2: School for Library, Archive, and Information Studies, University College London, London, UK


The Complete Works of W.F. Hermans. Using Automatic Text Comparison and XML for a Voluminous Edition.

Bert Van Elsacker 

Huygens Institute of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences


The Paradise Lost Flash Audiotext

Olin Robert Bjork and John Peter Rumrich 

University of Texas at Austin


The Versioning Machine 3.0: Lessons in Open Source Software [Re]Development

Susan Schreibman1, Sean Daugherty2, Gretchen Gueguen3, Tony Ross4 

University of Maryland


The Voyage of the Slave Ship Sally: Exploring Historical Documents in Context

Kerri Hicks, Clifford Wulfman, Julia Flanders 

Scholarly Technology Group, Brown University


Updating Delta and Delta Prime

David L. Hoover 

New York University

11:00 - 12:30Session 30: Interface and User-perspective
Session Chair: Paul Vetch
NCSA Auditorium (seats 190) 
 

Human-Centered Analysis and Visualization Tools for the Blogoshpere

Xavier Llorà, Noriko Imafuji Yasui, David E. Goldberg 

UIUC


Multilevel Displays and Document Blueprints: Dynamic Browsing Using XML Structures and Text Features

Stéfan Sinclair 1, Stan Ruecker 2 

1: McMaster University 2: University of Alberta


The Digital Museum in the Life of the User

Paul F. Marty 

Florida State University

11:00 - 12:30Session 28: Interoperability, Multimodalism, Utility
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Elisabeth Burr
NCSA 1030 (seats 40) 
 

Digital Text Projects in Eastern Europe: Promoting International Interoperability

Miranda Remnek 

UIUC


The LInguistic and Cultural Heritage Electronic Network (LICHEN): A new electronic framework for the collection, management, online display and exploitation of multimodal corpora

Lisa Lena Opas-Hänninen, Matti Hosio, Ilkka Juuso and Tapio Seppänen 

University of Oulu, Finland


Un outil pour un nouveau savoir musical

Louis Jambou 1, Florence Le Priol 2 

1: Lexique Musical de la Renaissance - Patrimoines Musicaux (EA 2560), Université Paris-Sorbonne 2: LaLICC (FRE2919), Université Paris-Sorbonne/CNRS

11:00 - 12:30Session 29: Text and Applications
Session Chair: Kevin Scott Hawkins
NCSA 1040 (seats 40) 
 

Collex: facets, folksonomy, and fashioning the remixable web

Bethany Nowviskie 

Applied Research in Patacriticism, University of Virginia


The Encoding of Terminology Related to the Medieval Slavic Manuscripts: Philological and Technological Results and Perspectives

Andrej Todorov Bojadžiev 

University of Sofia, Bulgaria


The Other Side of the Rug: TokenX on the Willa Cather Archive

Andrew Jewell, Brian L. Pytlik Zillig 

Center for Digital Research in the Humanities, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

12:30 - 5:00 pmAllerton Excursion
includes box lunch
Allerton Park 
 


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