UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
Dh presentation helig 2014
1. MAKING SENSE OF DIGITAL HUMANITIES - A
CONVERSATION STARTER:
A LIASA HELIG WEBINAR
Presented by Ingrid Thomson, UCT Libraries
2. Outline
• Introduction
• Brief history
• DH Projects
• DH Tools
• DH Organisations/Conferences/Workshops
• DH@UCT
• Role that Libraries play
3. What is this thing called Digital
Humanities or DH?
• Umbrella term covering a wide range of activities, from
online preservation and digital mapping to data mining
and use of GIS technologies , like infrared scans,
geolocation mapping, and optical character recognition
to enrich these resources with related information or
make entirely new discoveries about them.
There have been scholars and technologists doing DH
work long before DH was a word!
Previously known as Human Computing
4. Definitions....
• Day in the Life of Digital Humanities (8 April
2014)
• Some definitions: http://dayofdh2014.matrix.msu.edu/members/
DH is a cover term for a wide variety of activities that attempt to explore and
expand areas of knowledge typically examined in the Humanities by developing
and/or applying computational tools or methods in ways best suited for these
areas. DH is also a cover term for a supporting community of practitioners who
share a common interest in the tools and methods--and challenges--generated by
the activities DH scholars, as well as potentially useful activities in fields outside the
traditional Humanities. - Scott Kleinman California State University, Northridge
5. Definition
We use “digital humanities” as an umbrella term for a number of
different activities that surround technology and humanities
scholarship. Under the digital humanities rubric, I would include topics
like open access to materials, intellectual property rights, tool
development, digital libraries, data mining, born-digital preservation,
multimedia publication, visualization, GIS, digital reconstruction, study
of the impact of technology on numerous fields, technology for
teaching and learning, sustainability models, and many others
. -Brett Bobley, NEH, United States (2011)
6. More definitions
I define the digital humanities as two things. Firstly, I think of it as using new
and emerging technologies to enhance our understanding of our humanistic
fields of inquiry. For me, as a historian, it is learning new things through
technology that we couldn't learn otherwise. Secondly, I think of it as playing
and exploring new methods of scholarly communication - i.e. putting history
online - Ian Milligan, Uni of Waterloo
The humanities are the
humanities. Technology is merely
a tool (albeit a powerful one), not
a defining factor of a discipline.
You use it or you don't. The
Digital Humanities do not exist. -
Ethan Gruber American Numismatic Society
12. Different types of DHers
• Research DH impact on Humanities
• How to embed technology into pedagogy
• Project managers bringing together experts in
various fields
• Study large collections of texts, numeric data etc
• Visualising traditional humanities data using new
data visualisation techniques
• Digital content creation
13. DH Projects
• What knowledge can digital humanities
scholars produce that their predecessors
could not?
• One of the principle projects was making
historical and literacy texts available online
• Data mining and text encoding projects are
often paired with interesting visual
representations, multimedia, and interactive
tools
14. DH Tools + Technical Resources
• Comprehensive list at Bamboo
DiRT
http://dirt.projectbamboo.org/
15. Types of analysis and research
• Network analysis
• Data visualisations
• Text mining/analysis
• GIS
• Digital exhibits
16. Network analysis
• Explore the relationships between individuals,
places, topics and more e.g. Sex, Race and
Allegiance in the Hobbit and Lord of the Rings
http://www.eduhacker.net/digital-humanities/sex-race-allegiance-hobbit-lord-of-the-rings.html
17. Data Visualisation
• Visualise to tell a story, understand, identify
trends, make connections, see patterns ....
With great speed
• A tool called Palladio which was used to do
Mapping the Republic of Letters http://palladio.designhumanities.org
18. Text analysis
• Studying texts with computers and software
to uncover new patterns, overlooked
connections and deeper meaning
19. GIS
• A geographic information system (GIS)
integrates hardware, software and data for
capturing, managing, analyzing, and displaying
all forms of geographically referenced
information
http://timemapper.okfnlabs.org/
33. COAR Report
Joint Task Force on Librarian’s Competencies in support of e-Research and Scholarly
Communication
• Evolving specialisation in librarianship
• Needs domain expertise in arts and
humanities
• Techie grounding to support research +
teaching in Humanities
• Project Management
• Advisor, advocate and partner for special
collections
34. COAR Report
Joint Task Force on Librarians’ Competencies in support of e-Research and Scholarly
Communication: Competencies/Skills/Expertise
• Subject/domain knowledge
• Technical Skills
• Project Management
• Partnerships/Collaboration
• Teaching/Training
35.
36. • Adam Crymble describes his Digital
Humanities Thesis in two minutes
“Big Data, Old History “
http://www.phdcomics.com/tv/#047
37. Useful Reads + Links
EXAMPLES OF DH PROJECTS
• Mapping the Republic of Letters http://www.republicofletters.stanford.edu/
• First World War Poetry Digital Archives http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/www1lit/
• Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade http://www.slavevoyages.org/tast/index.faces
• Kindred Britain http://kindred.stanford.edu/#
• Old Bailey Proceedings http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/
• Charles Darwin’s Library http://www.biodiversity.org/collection/darwinlibrary
• Sex, Race and Allegiance in the Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings http://www.eduhacker.net/digital-humanities/sex-race-allegiance-hobbit-lord-
of-the-rings.html
TOOLS TO EXPLORE
• Bamboo Dirt http://dirt.projectbamboo.org/
• Voyant http://www.voyant-tools.org
• Tapor http://portal.tapor.ca/portal/portal
• Palladio http://palladio.designhumanities.org
ORGANISATIONS
• Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations http://adho.org/
• That Camps http://thatcamp.org/
38. Useful Reads + Links
• ACRL Digital Humanities Interest Group http://connect.ala.org/node/158885
• Task Force on Librarians’ Competencies in Support of E-Research and Scholarly Communication
https://www.coar-repositories.org/activities/support-and-training/task-force-competencies/
• Schaffner, Jennifer and Erway, Ricky: Does Every Research Library Need a Digital Humanities Center? OCLC
http://oclc.org/research/publications/library/2014/oclcresearch-digital-humanities-center-2014-overview.html
• Response from Beth Nowviskie to the OCLC Report above http://nowviskie.org/2014/asking-for-it/
• Dh+lib: where the Digital Humanities and Librarianship meet http://acrl.ala.org/dh/
• Coble, Zach: Make it New? A dh+lib Mini Series zachcoble.com/dhlib/Make-It-New-A-dhlib-Mini-Series.pdf
• Hubbard, Melanie: Explore Digital Humanities. Syracuse University. http://melaniehubbard.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/exploredh_plan_20141.pdf
• Adams, Jennifer and Gunn, Kevin. Digital Humanities: Where to start. College & Research Libraries News vol. 73 no. 9 536-569 October 2012.
http://crln.acrl.org/content/73/9/536.full
• VandeGrif, Michau: What is digital humanities and what is it doing in the library? http://www.inthelibrarywiththeleadpipe.org/2012/dhandthelib/
• Alexander,Laurie , Case, Beau David , Downing, Karen E, Gomis, Melissa and Maslowski, Eric: Librarians and Scholars: Partners in Digital Humanities. Educause
Review Online, June 2, 2014. http://www.educause.edu/ero/article/librarians-and-scholars-partners-digital-humanities
• Lease, Eric Morgan: Digital Humanities and Libraries (blog posting on Days in the Life of a Librarian) http://blogs.nd.edu/emorgan/2014/04/dh-and-libraries/
• Unsworth, John: What’s digital humanities and how did it get here? http://blogs.brandeis.edu/lts/2012/10/09/whats-digital-humanities-and-how-did-it-get-here/
BOOKS
Gold, Matthew: Debates in the Digital Humanities. Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press, 2012.
Bryson, Tim: Digital Humanities. Washington, DC : Association of Research Libraries, c2011.
LIBGUIDES
• Boston College Libguide to Digital Humanities http://libguides.bc.edu/c.php?g=44359&p=280873
• University of Ottawa Libraries: Digital Humanities: Research guide to provide information about the growing field of study called Digital Humanities
http://uottawa.ca.libguides.com/digitalhumanities-en
Hinweis der Redaktion
The project to digitize the entire corpus of St. Thomas Aquinas' work by Roberto Busa is often cited as the beginning of digital humanities
Repositories like Dspace, Fedora, Digitool. Display/publishing ones projects - Greenstone, Omeka, Zotero (which can be integrated with other DH research tools)
Timemapper
Can use tools like Voyant, and Zotero to do data mining. Called with Criminal Intent Project.