Programme

#dhcshef

Thursday (8th September 2022)
09:30 - 11:30
Registration
11:30 - 13:00
Introductions and Plenary 1
Chair: Michael Pidd

A Riddle about the Middle: Meaning at Different Scales

University of Glasgow

13:00 - 14:00
Lunch
Bar
14:00 - 15:30
Session 1
Chair: Kate Simpson
Session 2
Chair: Isabella Magni
Session 3 — No session

Cultural Challenges of DH Reflecting on DH Waves

Implementing Linked Ancient World Data: recommendations from research with users and producers

National Museum of Scotland

Digital Humanities Curriculum Development: an iSchools Approach

Beijing Normal University at Zhuhai

Mimesis and the importance of female characters A comparative social network analysis of Dutch literary fiction, 1960s vs 2010s

Radboud University Nijmegen

Inviting the Humanities to The Data Science Table: Reflections from the Alan Turing Institute

A Quantitative Analysis of Digital Scholarly Editions

Big Language Data Comes with Big Opportunities and Big Challenges: A Learner-Corpus Case Study

University of Cambridge

15:30 - 16:00
Tea Break
Bar
16:00 - 17:30
Session 4
Chair: Isabella Magni
Session 5
Chair: Kate Simpson
Session 6 — No Session

Digital Humanities and the Library: Research Partners?

Beijing Normal University at Zhuhai

How Deep Map Can Enhance Studies on the European Travelers During The Grand Tour

University of Cyprus

Investigating the discourse on Open GLAM

University College London

Using GIS to Illustrate and Understand the Influence of St Æthelthryth of Ely

University of Birmingham

Accessions to Repositories Data: Potentials for Mapping National Collection Practices c.2007 – 2020.

The National Archives, Kew

History of Holocaust Told Anew - Through The Prism of Topography: Digital “ATLAS of the HOLOCAUST LITERATURE”

Institute of Literary Research of the Polish Academy of Sciences

17:40 - 18:30
A presentation by Sarah Coward, CEO of In The Room
Chair: Michael Pidd

Interactive voice encounters for the arts and cultural heritage

In The Room

18:30
Drinks Reception - Sponsored by In The Room
Bar
Friday (9th September 2022)
09:30 - 11:00
Session 7
Chair: Michael Pidd
Session 8
Chair: Seth Mehl
Session 9 — No Session

Locating a National Collection through Audience Research

The British Library

The Spatial Poetics of Artefacts

University of Sheffield

It Is Happening Again: Do we keep building the same Digital Humanities web interfaces?

University of Sheffield

Addressing Inherent Biases in Information Retrieval Systems of Digital Archives: A Multidisciplinary Study in Digital Archives of Holocaust Victims and Perpetrators

UCLA School of Education & Information Studies

From Lockdown to Jupyter: Creating Exploratory Notebooks for Cultural Heritage Datasets

National Library of Scotland

SCWAReD: Scholar-Curated Worksets from the HathiTrust Research Center

11:00 - 11:30
Tea Break
Bar
11:30 - 13:00
Session 10
Chair: Kate Simpson
Session 11
Chair: Isabella Magni
Session 12
Chair: Seth Mehl

Digital Initiatives in Online Service Delivery: Case Study of London Art Museums During the COVID-19 Pandemic Lockdown

Nineteenth-Century Poets and Their Libraries

CitizenHertiage: Crowdsourcing, Digital Curation and Citizen Science with European Photographic Collections

KU Leuven

Exploring Early British Photography and the Impact of the 1862 Fine Arts Copyright Act through the Application of Digital Methods of Analysis to Archival Catalogue Data

The National Archives, UK

Using Wikibase To Model A Data-Driven Approach Ro Ricardo Viñes’ Public Concerts And Repertoire

University of Lleida

Computer Vision and the History of Printing: Search, Segment and Classify

University of Oxford

The Library Catalogue as Dataset: Exploring Data Science Approaches to Analyse Collections at Scale

Don’t Believe the Hype: Scientific Instruments and Inflated Expectations, 1550-1914

National Museum of Scotland

Applying Machine Learning and Image Recognition to the Visual Culture of the Protestant Reformation

University College Dublin

13:00 - 14:00
Lunch
Bar
14:00 - 15:30
Session 13
Chair: Kate Simpson
Session 14
Chair: Jamie McLaughlin
Session 15 — No Session

The Emma B. Andrews Diary Project: A Case Study in Student Collaboration, Tool Development and Data Visualisation

University of Washington

Unlocking Historical Digital Text Collections through Advanced AI methods

University of St Andrews

Collecting and connecting portrait-sittings: a re-evaluation of experiential feedback in enhancing knowledge and understanding of British portraiture 1900-1960

Open University

Understanding Uncertainty in Crowdsourced Digital History Projects : The Operation War Diary

The National Archives, UK

Our Heritage, Our Stories: Methods and Models for Working with Community Generated Digital Content

University of Glasgow

15:30 - 16:00
Tea Break
Bar
16:00 - 17:30
Plenary 2
Chair: Michael Pidd

Close/Distant: Scales of Analysis in Digital Projects

Queen Mary University of London

19:00
Conference Dinner

Sponsored by Gale

Sponsored by Gale

Saturday (10th September 2022)
10:00 - 11:30
Session 16
Chair: Jamie McLaughlin
Session 17
Chair: Isabella Magni
Session 18
Chair: Michael Pidd

Before, During and After: A Bilingual Temporal Sentiment Analysis of the Media Coverage of Rio and London Olympic Legacies

School of Advanced Study, University of London

How To Tell Scholarly Stories in Digital Environment Using Real Spaces? The Case of Postmodern Sienkiewicz Digital Collection and The Oblęgorek Palace

Institute of Literary Research of the Polish Academy of Sciences

Mapping Spectrality: Temporal and Spatial Interruptions in the Irish Urban Gothic

University College Dublin

Between Hermeneutics and Deceit: Keeping Natural Language Generation in Line

King’s College London

Collaborative Project Development with Undergraduates: Text Encoding a Rare Stationery Binder’s Trade Works

Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester

Quantitative Methods in Art History: What Can Titles Tell Us About the History of Modern and Contemporary Art?

Birkbeck, University of London

Sir Han Slone’s Information Architecture: From TEI to CSV for Data Analysis

University College London

Mapping the Growth and Reduction of the British Office of Ordnance in the Long Eighteenth Century

Loughborough University

11:30 - 12:00
Tea Break
Bar
12:00 - 13:30
Plenary 3
Chair: Michael Pidd

Data Loss: Theorizing Digital Disappearance and Remains

Copenhagen Business School

13:30 - 14:30
Lunch
Bar
14:30 - 15:00
Conference closes