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DH2014 – Lausanne 1
. Digital Humanities Conference Program
01 DH2014 – Lausanne 02DH2014 – Lausanne
Welcome to Digital Humanities 2014We are very pleased to welcome you to Lausanne and to DH2014. This year’s conference is being co-hosted by the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and The University of Lausanne (UNIL).
The week will be a very full one, and this will be the largest digital humanities conference yet in terms of participa-tion, so we hope that this program will help to guide you and to make your experience as enjoyable as possible.
About LausanneThe fourth-largest city in Switzerland, and the capital of Vaud canton, Lausanne is a small but vibrant city on the shores of Lake Geneva. A very popular tourist destination, the city is also home to many international companies, particularly the headquarters of multinationals. The city center contains an abundance of shops and restaurants, while the lakeshore is just a quick hop away on the M2 Metro.
About UNILThe University of Lausanne is a Swiss state university founded in 1537.
As a research institution composed of seven faculties, where approximately 13,000 students and 2,300 researchers work and study, UNIL is focused on Medicine, Life Sciences, Geosciences, Environment, Business, Humanities and Social Sciences. Emphasis is placed on an interdisciplinary approach.
UNIL attracts researchers and students from all over the world: more than 33% of the teaching staff and 25% of the students are foreign nationals. UNIL actively encourages exchanges by es-tablishing cooperation agreements with partner universities all around the world.
With the firm support of management, a laboratory in the digital humanities domain, LADHUL, was inaugurated in January 2013. As of today, the lab has 54 members – professors, researchers and PhD students – and runs several research projects belonging to three different faculties. All of these projects are at the crossroads of Arts & Humanities and Social Sciences. The Director of the Ladhul is Professor Dominique Vinck.
About EPFLEPFL is one of the two Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology, located on the shores of Lake Geneva. With the status of a national school since 1969, the young engineering school has grown in many di-mensions, to the extent of becoming one of the most famous European institutions of science and technology. Its main cam-pus brings together over 11,000 persons, students, researchers and staff. With 125 nationalities on campus and over 50% of professors from abroad, EPFL is one of the world’s most cosmopolitan university campuses.
The Digital Humanities Laboratory (DHLAB), founded in 2012 by professor Frédéric Kaplan, develops new com-putational approaches for digitzation and modelling of large-scale archives of ancient documents. Projects conducted at the lab range from building «Google maps of ancient places» to “Facebooks of the middle-ages”. Benefiting from EPFL’s strong technological expertise, the DHLAB conducts research projects in collaboration with prestigious patri-monial institutions and museums, all over Europe. The lab’s interdisciplinary team includes computational scientists, mathematicians, experts in geographi-cal information systems and interaction designers - all with transdisciplinary backgrounds facilitating interaction with humanities scholars from all disciplines.
.Table of Contents
.Welcome Note
Welcome Note p. 02
Overview p. 03
Keynote Speakers p. 05
Workshops p. 07
Session 1 p. 09
Session 2 p. 10
Session 3 p. 11
Session 4 p. 12
Session 5 p. 13
Poster Session 1 p. 14
Poster Session 2 p. 16
Session 6 p. 18
Session 7 p. 19
Session 8 p. 20
Access & Information p. 21
A Brief Guide to Eating and Drinking in Lausanne p. 23
Emergency Contact Information p. 25
Other Activities p. 25
Affiliated Events p. 26
Sponsors p. 26
03 DH2014 – Lausanne 04DH2014 – Lausanne
o v e r v i e w Tuesday, July 8th
09:00 – 12:00 Workshops & Committee Meetings Swiss Tech/EPFL
Lunch break
13:00 – 16:00 Workshops & Committee Meetings Swiss Tech/EPFL
17:00 – 18:45 DH2014 Opening Ceremony & Opening Plenary Lecture Bruno Latour Swiss Tech/EPFL
Salle A
19:30 – 21:30 Buffet Dinner and
Artistic Performance Rolex Learning Center
Thursday, July 10th
09:00 – 10:30 Session 4 Amphimax & Amphipôle
8 Rooms Parallel
11:00 – 12:30 Session 5 Amphimax & Amphipôle
9 Rooms Parallel
Lunch – EADH AGM Amphimax Room 350/351
14:00 – 15:30 Poster Session 1 Amphipôle Common Area
16:00 – 17:00 Poster Session 2 Amphipôle Common Area
17:30 – 19:00 Community Plenary Lecture Bethany Nowviskie Amphimax Room 350/351
19:00 – 20:00 Drinks Reception
20:00 onwards Free evening
Saturday, July 12th
07:30 – 15:45 CERN Excursion Lausanne Tourism
08:00 – 11:30 Gruyère Excursion Lausanne Tourism
09:30 – 11:30 Lausanne Walking Tour Lausanne Tourism
Monday, July 7th
09:00 – 12:00 Workshops & Committee Meetings Swiss Tech/EPFL
Lunch break
13:00 – 17:00 Workshops & Committee Meetings Swiss Tech/EPFL
17:00 onwards Free evening
Wednesday, July 9th
09:00 – 10:30 Session 1 Amphimax & Amphipôle
9 Rooms Parallel
11:00 – 12:30 Session 2 Amphimax & Amphipôle
8 Rooms Parallel
Lunch – ACH AGMAmphimax Room 350/351
13:45 – 15:45 Session 3 Amphimax & Amphipôle
8 Rooms Parallel
16:30 – 18:00 Zampolli Award Lecture Amphimax Room 350/351
18:30 –19:30 Travel to Boat (Ouchy)
19:30 Boarding of the Boat
19:45 – 21:45 CGN Boat Cruise with Buffet Dinner
Friday, July 11th
09:00 – 10:30 Session 6 Amphimax & Amphipôle
8 Rooms Parallel
11:00 – 12:30 Session 7 Amphimax & Amphipôle
8 Rooms Parallela
Lunch ADHO/centerNet AGMAmphimax Room 350/351
14:00 – 16:00 Session 8 Amphimax & Amphipôle 8 Rooms parallel
17:00 – 18:30 DH 2014 Closing Ceremony & Closing Plenary Lecture Sukanta Chaudhuri Amphimax Room 350/351
18:30 – 19:00 Walk to Banquet (UNIL)
19:00 – 22:00 Conference Banquet La Brasserie de
l’Unithèque
05 DH2014 – Lausanne 06DH2014 – Lausanne
Ray SiemensZampolli Award LectureDate: Wednesday, July 9, 2014 at 16:30Location: Amphimax Building, UNIL
Communities of Practice, the Methodolo-gical Commons, and Digital Self-Determi-nation in the Humanities
Overview: In the context of trends shaping and influencing change in the Humanities and the cultures of the university, this talk consi-ders the Digital Humanities’ positive role in the process of the Humanities (digital) self-deter-mination. Considered in this engagement are: the important (and profitably-elusive) process of defining Digital Humanities; foundational notions of the methodological commons and communities of practice, and the ways in which such originate, are fostered, are engaged, and themselves engage; and the value of an open approach to current and future work on mo-delling humanistic data and process, in ways that build on these foundations to embrace the communities and constituencies served by the Humanities.
Biography: Ray Siemens (U Victoria; http://web.uvic.ca/~siemens/) is Canada Research Chair in Humanities Computing and Distinguished Professor in the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Victoria, in English and Computer Science. He is founding editor of the electronic scholarly journal Early Modern Literary Studies, and his publications include, among others, Blackwell’s Companion to Digital Humanities (with Schreibman and Unsworth), Blackwell’s Companion to Digital Literary Studies (with Schreibman), A Social Edition of the Devonshire MS, and Literary Studies in the Digital Age (MLA, with Price). He directs the Implementing New Knowledge Environments project, the Digital Humanities Summer Institute and the Electronic Textual Cultures Lab, and serves as Vice President of the Canadian Federation of the Humanities and Social Sciences for Research Dissemination, recently serving also as Chair of the internatio-nal Alliance of Digital Humanities Organisations’ Steering Committee.
Bruno LatourOpening Plenary LectureDate: Tuesday, July 8, 2014 at 17:00Location: Swiss Tech Convention Center, EPFL
Rematerializing Humanities Thanks to Digital Traces
Overview: Since the great advantage of the digital is to rematerialize the older cognitive functions it becomes possible to transform many activities considered before as “abstract” into an empirical domain. The lecture will go through several attempts at harnessing this new materiality for the benefit of digital humani-ties and social science generally. Examples will be drawn from the field of publishing, design, research as well as from social theory and political science.
Biography: Bruno Latour is professor at Sciences Po Paris, director of its medialab and principal investigator of the AIME project, he has also realized a MOOC on “scientific huma-nities” (on the FUN platform) and developped from the outside, because of his interest in ac-tor-network-theory, an interest in the digital as a tracer of associations. He is the recipient of the Holberg Prize for 2013. Most of his papers and all its references can be find, together with lots of other documents and goodies, on his webpage http://www.bruno-latour.fr
Sukanta ChauduriClosing Plenary LectureDate: Friday, July 11, 2014 at 17:00Location: Amphimax Building, UNIL
Tagore and Beyond: Looking at the Large Literary Database
Overview: I will begin my talk with a short account of the making of the Tagore Online Variorum ‘Bichitra’, the world’s largest literary website, outlining its main features. I will suggest the potential significance of Bichitra as the model of a ‘very large textual object’, to be mined and analysed in innovative ways through sophisticated use of the search and collation functions and the resources of topic modelling. I will argue that perhaps uniquely, textual data requires attention to the ‘third dimension’ of content analysis normally eschewed in proces-sing big data. At the same time, even the ‘very large textual object’, being small by the mea-sures of big data, is exceptionally amenable to such analysis, whose outcome may then be applied to other categories of data. I would like to suggest that the large textual database can open up a new kind of dialogue between hu-mans and computers, a distinctive contribution of digital humanities.
Biography: Sukanta Chaudhuri divided his working life as Professor of English between Presidency College, Kolkata and Jadavpur University. At Jadavpur, he founded the School of Cultural Texts and Records for, inter alia, the practice of digital humanities. He personally administered two of the five projects executed by the School for the Endangered Archives Programme of the British Library. He planned and co-ordinated the Tagore Variorum website ‘Bichitra’, incorporating all English and Bengali works by Rabindranath Tagore in nearly all versions (nearly 140,000 pages of primary material), with some innovative programs to transcribe and process them. His original spe-cialization is in English and European Renais-sance studies, and textual and editorial work. His last monograph was The Metaphysics of Text (Cambridge University Press, 2010). He is currently editing A Midsummer Night’s Dream for the Third Arden Shakespeare. He has also translated widely from Bengali to English, and is General Editor of the Oxford Tagore Transla-tions series.
Bethany NowviskieCommunity Plenary LectureDate: Thursday, July 10, 2014 at 17:30Location: Amphimax Building, UNIL
Digital Humanities in the Anthropocene
Overview: This will be a practitioner’s talk, and–though the abstract belies it–an optimistic one. I take as given the evidence that human beings are irrevocably altering the conditions for life on Earth and that, despite certain unpre-dictabilities, we live at the cusp of a mass ex-tinction. What is the place of digital humanities practice in the new social and geological era of the Anthropocene? What are the DH commu-nity’s most significant responsibilities, and to whom? This talk will position itself in deep time, but strive for a foothold in the vital here-and-now of service to broad publics. From the pre-sentist, emotional aesthetics of Dark Mountain to the arms-length futurism of the Long Now, I’ll dwell on concepts of graceful degradation, preservation, memorialization, apocalypse, ephemerality, and minimal computing. I’ll discuss digital recovery and close reading of texts and artifacts–like the Herculaneum papyri–once thought lost forever, and the ways that prosopography, graphesis, and distant reading open new vistas on the longue durée. Can DH develop a practical ethics of resilience and repair? Can it become more humane while working at inhuman scales? Can we resist nar-ratives of progress, and yet progress? I wish to open community discussion about the practice of DH, and what to give, in the face of a great hiatus or the end of it all.
Biography: Bethany Nowviskie has been ac-tive in the DH community since the mid-1990s, and is currently President of the Association for Computers and the Humanities. At the University of Virginia, Dr. Nowviskie directs the Scholars’ Lab and UVa Library department of Digital Research and Scholarship, and serves as Special Advisor to the Provost for digital humanities. A mother of two, her less impor-tant projects include the Rossetti Archive, the Ivanhoe Game, Temporal Modelling, NINES, the Scholarly Communication Institute, the Praxis Program, Prism, Speaking in Code, and Neatline. She works on graduate education, textual materiality, the future of libraries, and the intersection of digital methods with hu-manities interpretation. A recent profile in the Chronicle of Higher Education reads: “Bethany Nowviskie likes to build things.”
.Keynote Speakers
07 DH2014 – Lausanne 08DH2014 – Lausanne
O Room: 3A
Kickstarting the GO::DH Minimal Computing Working Group
Simpson, John Edward;
Sayers, Jentery; O’Donnell, Daniel;
Gil, Alex
A Collaborative, Indetermi-nisticand Partly Automatized Approach to Text Annotation
Bögel, Thomas; Gius, Evelyn;
Petris, Marco; Strötgen, Jannik
O Room: 3B
Annotation Studio: An Open Source, Collaborative Mul-timedia Online Note-Taking Tool for Humanities
Fendt, Kurt; Folsom, Jamie;
Schnepper, Rachel; Andrew, Liam
GIS in the Digital Humanities: An Introductory Workshop
Gregory, Ian; Barker, Elton;
Lang, Anouk
O Room: 4A
Introduction to Electronic Books and Epub 3.0
Sperberg-McQueen, Michael
O Room: 4B
Sharing Digital Arts and Hu-manities Knowledge –DARIAH
Chambers, Sally;
Schmunk, Stefan
O Room: 1A
Curation, Management and Analysis of Highly Connected Data in the Humanities
de la Rosa, Javier;
Brown, David Michael;
Ortega, Elika; Suarez, Juan Luis
O Room: 1B
Using the PressForward Plugin to Create and Maintain Web Publications
Westcott, Stephanie;
Troyano, Joan Fragaszy
Are We There Yet? Functionalities, Synergies and Pitfalls of Major Digital Humanities Infrastructures
Bernardou, Agiatis;
Hughes, Lorna; Dunning, Alastair
O Room: 2A
Introduction to Starting and Sustaining DH Centers
Siemens, Lynne
Project Management and Sustainable Revenue Models in the Digital Humanities
Keller, Stefan Andreas;
Keller, Alice; Neuroth, Heike;
Rosenthaler, Lukas
O Room: 2B
Digital Cultural Empowerment
Palm, Frederic; Murphy, Orla;
Day, Shawn; Thély, Nicholas
My Very Own Voyant: From Web to Desktop Application
Sinclair, Stéfan; Rockwell, Geoffrey
O Room: 4C
Ontologies for Prosopogra-phy: Who’s Who or, Who was Who?
Lawrence, Katherine Faith;
Bodard, Gabriel; Bradley, John;
Perdue, Susan; Rahtz, Sebastian
O Room: 5A
Sound and (Moving) Images in Focus
Scagliola, Stef; Kleppe, Martijn;
Kemman, Max; Ordelman, Roeland;
de Jong, Franciska
O Room: 5B
What’s Your Method? Unders-tanding Digital Scholarship Through Ontologies
Dallas, Costis;
Constantopoulos, Panos;
Thaller, Manfred; Hughes, Lorna
13:00 –17:00
.Workshops July 7th
Swiss Tech Convention Center
EPFL
.Workshops July 8th
Swiss Tech Convention Center
EPFL
BC Building
EPFL
O Room: 1A
Hacking with the TEI
Cayless, Hugh; Ciula, Arianna;
Czmiel, Alexander; Mylonas, Elli;
Rahtz, Sebastian;
Cummings, James; Syd, Bauma
O Room: 1B
Linked Data and Literature: Encoding the Facts in Fiction
Lawrence, Katherine Faith
O Room: 2A
Introducing the EpiDoc Collaborative
Bodard, Gabriel; Franzini, Greta;
Stoyanova, Simona;
Tupman, Charlotte
O Room: 2B
Introduction to Text Analysis and Topic Modeling with RJockers, Matthew
O Room: 3A
Leveraging Web Archiving Tools for Digital Humanities Research and Digital Exhibition
Reed, Scott Brian
Prosopography Workshop
Quamen, Harvey;
Crompton, Constance;
Hjartson, Paul
O Room: 3B
Innovative Teaching Methods and Practices in Digital Hu-manities
Scholger, Walter; Clivaz, Claire;
Tasovac, Toma
O Room: 4A
The Representation of Multi-plicity as a Means to Digital Empowerment
Hoeckendorff, Mareike;
Vitale, Valeria; Dunn, Stuart;
Gius, Evelyn
O Room: 4B
Multilinguality in Historical Documents – Challenges and Solutions for Digital Humanities
Romary, Laurent; Dipper, Stefanie;
Bubenhofer, Noah; Vertan, Cristin
O Room: 5A
Using CLARIN for Digital Research
Wynne, Martin; Trippel, Thorsten;
Draxler, Christoph
O Room: 5B
Methods for Empowering Library Staff Through Digital Humanities Skills
Hettel, Jacqueline;
Lindblad, Purdom; Baker, James;
Stack, Padraic; Gil, Alex;
Miller, Laura; Bourg, Chris
09:00 – 12:00
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13:00 – 16:00
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O Room: BC 010
Building Bridges Between Lausanne and Leeds: Virtual Roundtable Discussion – Spatial Aspects in Mediaeval Texts and the Potential of the Digital Humanities
Lausanne –Porter, Dorothy;
Bruhn, Kai-Christian
Leeds –de Blaauw, Sible;
Sailer, Kerstin; Schwartz, Frithjof
09:00 –12:0013:00 –17:00
09:00 – 12:0013:00 – 17:00
14:00 – 16:00
09 DH2014 – Lausanne 10DH2014 – Lausanne
O Room: 315 – AmphipôleShort Paper SessionChair: David Beavan
Swiss Voice App: A smartphone appli-cation for crowdsourcing Swiss German dialect dataKolly, Marie-José; Leemann, Adrian;
Dellwo, Volker; Goldman, Jean-Philippe;
Hove, Ingrid; Almajai, Ibrahim
SyMoGIHproject and Geo-Larhra: A method and a collaborative platform for a digital historical atlasButez, Claire-Charlotte; Beretta, Francesco
Digital Linguistic Archive of the Dutch East India Company (VOC): Modeling a community-sourcing platform for histori-cal linguistic researchPytlowany, Anna
Single Page Apps for Humanists: A Case Study using the Perseus Richmond Times CorpusBorg, Trevor; Thiruvathukal, George Kuriakose
History All Around Us: Towards Best Practices for Augmented Reality for Public History and Cultural EmpowermentKee, Kevin Bradley; Compeau, Timothy;
Poitras, Eric
O Room: 319 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Brian Rosenblum
Validating Computational Stylistics in Literary InterpretationCraig, Hugh; Eder, Maciej; Jannidis, Fotis;
Kestemont, Mike; Rybicki, Jan;
Schöch, Christof
Stylometry of Collaborations: Dickens, Collins and their collaborative writingsTabata, Tomoji
Iμ Services and The Riddle of Literary QualityFilarski, Gertjan; de Jong, Hayco;
van Dalen-Oskam, Karina
O Room: 321 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Jeremy Boggs
An Integrated Approach to the Procedural Modeling of Ancient Cities and BuildingsSaldaña, Marie Giltner
Relating texts to 3D-information: A generic software environment for Spatial HumanitiesUnold, Martin; Lange, Felix
Photogrammar: Organizing Visual Culture through Geography, Text Mining, and Statistical AnalysisTilton, Lauren; Leonard, Peter; Arnold, Taylor
O Room: 410 – AmphimaxPanel Session Chair: Jennifer Guiliano
Remediating 20th-Century Magazines of the Arts: Approaches, Methods, Possibilities Ermolaev, Natalia; Wulfman, Clifford E.;
Biber, Hanno; Crombez, Thomas
O Room: 412 – AmphimaxLong Paper Session Chair: Geoffrey Rockwell
CLARIN: Resources, Tools, and Services for Digital Humanities ResearchHinrichs, Erhard; Krauwer, Steven
National Data Curation and Service Center for Digital Research Data in the HumanitiesRosenthaler, Lukas; Fornaro, Peter; Clivaz, Claire
Navigating the Storm: eMOP, Big DH Pro-jects, and Agile Steering StandardsGrumbach, Elizabeth M.; Christy, Matthew J.;
Mandell, Laura; Neudecker, Clemens;
Auvil, Loretta; Samuelson, Todd;
Antonacopoulos, Apostolos
O Room: 321 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Julianne Nyhan
XML-Print. Typesetting arbitrary XML documents in high qualityGeorgieff, Lukas; Küster, Marc Wilhelm;
Selig, Thomas; Sievers, Martin
An XML annotation schema for speech, thought and writing representationBrunner, Annelen
Transcriptional implicature: a contribution to markup semanticsSperberg-McQueen, C. M.; Marcoux, Yves;
Huitfeldt, Claus
O Room: 410 – AmphimaxPanel SessionChair: Dean Rehberger
<audio>Digital Humanities</audio>: The Intersections of Sound and MethodClement, Tanya; Kraus, Kari; Sayers, Jentery;
Trettien, Whitney; Tcheng, David; Auvil, Loretta;
Borries, Tony; Wu, Min; Oard, Doug;
Hajj-Ahmad, Adi; Su, Hui; Lingold, Mary Caton;
Mueller, Daren; Turkel, William J.; Elliott, Devon
O Room: 412 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Mitsuyuki Inaba
Circling around texts and language: towards ‘pragmatic modelling’ in Digital HumanitiesCristina, Marras; Arianna, Ciula
Computational Models of Narrative: Using Artificial Intelligence to Operational-ize Russian Formalist and French Structuralist TheoriesSack, Graham Alexander; Finlayson, Mark;
Gervas, Pablo
Modèles tridimensionnels pour la représentation de l’état des connaissanc-es et propositions de visualisation pour l’analyse des corpus textuelsLeblanc, Jean-Marc; Pérès, Marie
O Room: 413 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Mia Ridge
Digital Cultural Heritage and the Healing of a Nation: Digital SudanDeegan, Marilyn
Digital Humanities Empowering through Arts and Music. Tunisian Representations of Europe through music and video clipsSalzbrunn, Monika; Mastrangelo, Simon
Revisionism as Outreach: The Letters of 1916 ProjectSchreibman, Susan
O Room: 414 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Glenn Roe
The Workspace for Collaborative EditingHoughton, Hugh A. G.; Sievers, Martin
Modelling digital editing: of texts, documents and worksPierazzo, Elena; Noel, Geoffroy
Matérialiser et rendre perceptible la transmission orale du savoir, L’édition électronique des cours d’Antoine Desgodets à l’Académie royale d’architecture en France, 1719-1728Carvais, Robert; Chateau, Emmanuel
O Room: 415 – AmphimaxShort Paper SessionChair: John Bradley
Collaboratively maximizing inter-ontology agreement for controversial domains: A case study of Jewish cultural heritageZhitomirsky-Geffet, Maayan; Erez, Eden Shalom
Digital Humanists Are Motivated AnnotatorsWalkowski, Niels-Oliver; Barker, Elton
Future Development of a System for Annotation and Linkage of Sources in Arts and HumanitiesSubotic, Ivan; Kilchenmann, André;
Schweizer, Tobias; Rosenthaler, Lukas
Towards a Semantic Network of Dante’s Works and Their Contextual KnowledgeTavoni, Mirko; Andriani, Paola; Bartalesi, Valentina;
Locuratolo, Elvira; Meghini, Carlo;
Versienti, Loredana
O Room: 413 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Kay Walter
Constructing Scientific Archives that Sup-port Humanistic ResearchProm, Christopher; Anderson, Bethany;
Padilla, Thomas; Jordan, Angela; Franch, John;
Thomer, Andrea; Popp, Tracy
Dynamic Visualizations in Enriched Publi-cations of Seventeenth Century ScienceHeuvel, Charles van den; Cocquyt, Tiemen;
Hoogerwerf, Maarten; Nagel, Dylan;
Thijssen, Michiel
Metaphor, Popular Science and Semantic Tagging: Distant Reading with the Histori-cal Thesaurus of EnglishAlexander, Marc; Anderson, Jean;
Dallachy, Fraser; Kay, Christian;
Piao, Scott; Rayson, Paul
O Room: 414 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Claire Warwick
Representation and Absence in Digital Resources: The Case of European a NewspapersDunning, Alastair; Neudecker, Clemens
Exploring Usage of Digital Newspaper Ar-chives through Web Log Analysis: A Case Study of Welsh Newspapers OnlineGooding, Paul Matthew
Exploratory Thematic Analysis for Histori-cal Newspaper ArchivesEisenstein, Jacob; Sun, Iris; Klein, Lauren F.
O Room: 415 – AmphimaxShort Paper SessionChair: Glen Worthey
The potential of open computer-mediat-ed communication channels to facilitate collaboration in geographically distributed collaborationsSiemens, Lynne
“How To Do (Digital) History” and Under-graduate Digital HumanitiesSchell, Justin; Gabaccia, Donna
Student Collaborators in Digital Human-ities Outreach and Advocacy: Strategies and Examples from the IDHMC at Texas A&M UniversityIves, Maura; Earhart, Amy; Grumbach, Elizabeth;
Mandell, Laura
A preparatory analysis of peer-grading for a Digital Humanities MOOCKaplan, Frédéric; Bornet, Cyril
Advocating for a Digital Humanities Cur-riculum: Design and ImplementationSmith, David
.Session 1 July 9th – 09:00 to 10:30
Amphimax – Amphipôle Buildings
UNIL
. Session 2 July 9th – 11:00 to 12:30
Amphimax – Amphipôle Buildings
UNIL
O Room: 315 – AmphipôleShort Paper SessionChair: Elena Gonzalez-Blanco
DH on the Fringes: Using Smartphones, Instagram, and Ruby on Rails to Archive the DH Experience at an HBCUDighton, Desiree; Norberg, Brian
Archaeology in social media: users, content and communication on FacebookVosyliute, Ingrida
Fractures and Cohesion: Using Systemic Functional Linguistics to Detect and Analyse Hate Speech in an Online Environment Quinn, Deirdre; Maycock, Keith; Keating, John
Who is we? The social media project: Día de las humanidades digitales/Dia das humanidades digitais Priani, Ernesto; Spence, Paul; Galina, Isabel;
González-Blanco, Elena;
Paixãode Sousa, Maria Clara;
Alves, Daniel; Barrón, José Francisco;
Godinez, Marco Antonio;
Guzmán, Ana María
O Room: 315.1 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Bethany Nowviskie
When Kidnapping is but One Risk: Digital Studies Challenge Scholarly and Regional CulturesToth, Michael B.; Emery, R. Douglas
“Needless To Say”: Articulating Digital Publishing Practices as Strategies of Cultural Empowerment Tullos, Allen E.
Intellectual Property Rights vs. Freedom of Research: Tripping stones in international IPR law Scholger, Walter
O Room: 319 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: John Nerbonne
Tuning the Word Frequency List Hoover, David L.
Dimensions of literary appreciation. Word use and ratings on a book discussion site Boot, Peter
Two Irish Birds: A Stylometric Analysis of James Joyce and FlannO’Brien O’Sullivan, James; Bazarnik, Katarzyna;
Eder, Maciej; Rybicki, Jan
11 DH2014 – Lausanne 12DH2014 – Lausanne
O Room: 315 – AmphipôleShort Paper SessionChair: Peter Stokes
An XML Schema to Interpret Networked Biographies: Reading Mid-RangeSeberger, J.
Building a multi-dimensional space for the analysis of European Integration Treaties. An XML-TEI scenarioArmaselu, F.; Allemand, F.
Problems in Encoding Documents of the Early Modern JapaneseKawase, A.; Ichimura, T.; Ogiso, T.
Uncertain about Uncertainty: Different ways of processing fuzziness in digital humanities dataBinder, F.; Entrup, B.; Schiller, I.; Lobin, H.
On Metaphor in Text Visualization PrototypesPeña, E.; Brown, M.; Dobson, T.
Macro-Etymological Textual AnalysisReeve, Jonathan P.
O Room: 319 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Dot Porter
Digital approaches to understanding the geographies in literary and historical texts CulturesGregory, I.; Donaldson, C.; Murrieta-Flores, P.;
Rupp, C.J.; Baron, A.; Hardie, A.; Rayson, P.
Mapping and Unmapping Joyce: Geopars-ing Wandering Rocks Derven, C.; Teehan, A.; Keating, J.
Pelagios3: Towards the semi-automatic annotation of toponymsin early geospatial documents Simon, R.; Barker, E. T. E.; de Soto, P.; Isaksen, L.
Reconstruction and Display of a Nineteenth Century Landscape ModelPriestnall, G.; Lorenz, K.; Heffernan, M.; Bailey, J.;
Goodere, C.; Sullivan, R.
O Room: 321 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Neil Fraistat
From Markup to Analysis: Culture Claims and Code in the Digital ArchiveFlanders, J.; Dillon, E. Maddock
Mixed data, mixed audience: building a flexi-ble platform for the Visionary Cross projectRosselli Del Turco, R.
Modelling digital edition of medieval and early modern accounting documentsVogeler, G.
Leaves of Grass: Data Animation and XML TechnologiesBarney, B.; Pytlik Zillig, B.
O Room: 410 – AmphimaxPanel SessionChair: Arianna Ciula
Global Outlook: Digital Humanities: Promoting Digital Humanities Research Across disciplines, regions, and cultures O’Donnell, Daniel Paul; Bordalejo, Barbara;
Risam, Roopika; Spence, Paul;
Gonzalez-Blanco, Elena
O Room: 412 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: David Smith
\/\/ÆΓÑing: A Conceptual Parsing of ASCII Character SubstitutionsKatelnikoff, Joel
Pushing Back the Boundary of Interpreta-tion: Concept, Practice and Relevance of a Digital HeuristicMeister, Jan Christoph; Jacke, Janina
The Story of Stopwords: Topic Modeling an EkphrasticTraditionRhody, Lisa
Z-Axis Scholarship: Modeling How Modernists Wrote the CityChristie, Alexander; Tanigawa, Kathryn;
Sayers, Jentery
O Room: 413 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Aimee Morrison
Digital learning in an undergraduate context: promoting long term student-fac-ulty (and community) collaboration in the Susquehanna Valley, PAJakacki, Diane Katherine; Faull, Katherine Mary
Digital Activism: Canon Expansion and Textual Recovery in the Undergraduate ClassroomEarhart, Amy; Taylor, Toniesha
Realizing the democratic potential of online sources in the classroomSweeny, Robert C.H.; Burton, Valerie C.
DigCurV: curriculum framework for digital curationin the cultural heritage sectorGow, Ann; Molloy, Laura; Konstantelos, Leo.
O Room: 414 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Mark Algee-Hewitt
Discourses and Disciplines in the Enlightenment: Topic Modeling the French EncyclopédieRoe, Glenn; Gladstone, Clovis; Robert Morrisey
Seeing the Trees & Understanding the ForestMontague, John Joseph; Rockwell, Geoffrey;
Ruecker, Stan; Sinclair, Stéfan; Brown, Susan;
Chartier, Ryan; Frizzera, Luciano; Simpson, John
Trading Consequences: A Case Study of Combining Text Mining & Visualisation to Facilitate Document ExplorationHinrichs, Uta; Alex, Beatrice; Clifford, Jim;
Quigley, Aaron
O Room: 415 – AmphimaxShort Paper SessionChair: Deb Verhoeven
Mining the Cloud of Witness: Inferring the Prestige of Saints from Medieval PaintingsLombardi, Thomas
Towards visualizing linguistic patterns of deliberation: a case study of the S21 arbitrationBögel, Tina; Gold, Valentin;
Hautli-Janisz, Annette; Rohrdantz, Christian;
Sulger, Sebastian; Butt, Miriam;
Holzinger, Katharina; Keim, Daniel A.
Small-Scale Big Data: Experimental Litera-ture and Distributed ComputingMauro, Aaron Mathew
Common Container Correlation: A Simple Method for the Extraction of Structural Models from Statistical DataAlvarado, Rafael Elvira; Meghini, Carlo;
Versienti, Loredana
Less explored multilingual issues in the automatic processing of historical texts – a case studyVertan, Cristina
The MAAYA Project: Multimedia Analysis and Access for Documentation and Deci-pherment of Maya Epigraphy Gatica-Perez, Daniel; Pallan, Carlos;
Marchand-Maillet, Stephane; Odobez, Jean-Marc;
Roman Rangel, Edgar; Grube, Nikolai
O Room: 315 – AmphipôleShort Paper SessionChair: Paul Arthur
Using Social Network Analysis to Reveal Unseen Relationships in Medieval ScotlandJackson, Cornell Alexander
BFM Collection -Open-Source Digital Editions of Medieval French TextsLavrentiev, Alexei
On automatically disambiguating end-of-line hyphenated words in French textsPöckelmann, Marcus; Ritter, Julia; Gießler, André
What remains to be done – Exposing invis-ible collections in the other 6500 languag-es and why it is a DH enterpriseThieberger, Nick
Building impact and value into the development of digital resources in the humanities: RhyfelByd1914-1918 a’rpro-fiadCymreig/ Welsh experience of World War One 1914-1918Hughes, Lorna; Roberts, Owain; McCann, Paul
O Room: 319 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Vika Zafrin
Play as Process and Product: On Making Serendip-o-maticRidge, Mia; Croxall, Brian; Papaelias, Amy;
Kleinman, Scott
Designing the next big thing: Randomness versus serendipity in DHMartin, Kim; Quan-Haase, Anabel
STAK – Serendipitous Tool for Augment-ing Knowledge: Bridging Gaps between Digital and Physical ResourcesMartin, Kim; Greenspan, Brian;
Quan-Haase, Anabel
O Room: 321 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Eric Wertheimer
Sequence, Tree and Graph at the Tip of Your Java ClassesEide, Øyvind
Towards an Archaeology of Text Analysis ToolsSinclair, Stéfan; Rockwell, Geoffrey
5 Design Rules for Visualizing Text Variant GraphsJänicke, Stefan; Geßner, Annette
O Room: 410 – AmphimaxPanel SessionChair: Takafumi Suzuki
Rethinking Text Reuse as Digital ClassicistsBerra, Aurélien; Romanello, Matteo;
Trachsel, Alexandra
O Room: 412 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Purdom Lindblad
Mixing contributions, collaborations and co-creation: participatory archaeology through crowd-sourcingPett, Daniel; Bonacchi, Chiara; Bevan, Andy
Socially-Derived Linking and Data Sharing within a Virtual Laboratory for the HumanitiesBurrows, Toby Nicolas; Verhoeven, Deb;
Hawker, Alex
Mining a “Trove”: Modeling a Transnational Literary CultureBode, Katherine
O Room: 413 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Jan Rybicki
Making Waves: Algorithmic Criticism RevisitedHoover, David L.
Beyond Style: Literary Capitalism and the Publishing IndustryFuller, Simon; O’Sullivan, James Christopher
Progress Through Regression. Modeling Style across Genre in French Classical Theater Schöch, Christof; Riddell, Allen
O Room: 414 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Tomoji Tabata
The Telltale Hat: LDA and Classification Problems in a Large Folklore CorpusMimno, David; Broadwell, Peter M.;
Tangherlini, Timothy R.
Visualizing Computational, Transversal Narratives from the World Trade TowersMiller, Ben; Shrestha, Ayush; Olive, Jennifer
Building a metrical ontology as a model to link digital poetic repertoiresGonzález-Blanco, Elena; Martos, MaríaDolores;
Del Río, MaríaGimena; Martínez, Clara I.;
Seláf, Levente
O Room: 415 – AmphimaxShort Paper SessionChair: Elena Pierazzo
ClipNotes: Digital Annotation and Da-ta-Mining for Film & Television AnalysisdeWaard, Andrew
Two new tools for multimodal editionsReside, Doug
Incommensurability? Authorship, Style, and the Need for TheoryPlasek, Aaron Louis
CAMPUS MEDIUS – Topography and Topology of a Media ExperienceGanahl, Simon; Solomon, Rory
Building the social graph of the History of European Integration: A pipeline for the Integration of Human and Machine ComputationWieneke, Lars; Sillaume, Ghislain; Düring, Marten;
Pasini, Chiara; Fraternali, Piero;
Tagliasacchi, Marco; Melenhorst, Marc;
Novak, Jasminko; Micheel, Isabel; Harloff, Erik;
Garcia Moron, Javier; Lallemand, Carine;
Vincenzo, Croce; Lazzaro, Marilena;
Nucci, Francesco
.Session 3 July 9th – 13:45 to 15:45
Amphimax – Amphipôle Buildings
UNIL
.Session 4 July 10th – 09:00 to 10:30
Amphimax – Amphipôle Buildings
UNIL
13 DH2014 – Lausanne 14DH2014 – Lausanne
O Room: 315 – AmphipôleShort Paper SessionChair: Sarah Potvin
Beslanand the disappearance of opinionFredheim, Rolf
Using digitized newspaper archives to investigate identity formation in long-term public discourseHuistra, Hieke; Pieters, Toine
Cultural text mining: using text mining to map the emergence of transnational reference cultures in large public media repositoriesVerheul, Jaap; Pieters, Toine
Modeling Linguistic Research Data for a Repository for Historical CorporaOdebrecht, Carolin
Aplicación del análisis dinámico de redes científicas al estudio de la evolución de la investigación española relacionada con el descriptor “historiadel arte” durante1976-2012, según ISOC Pino-Díaz, José; Cruces-Rodríguez, Antonio;
Rodríguez-Ortega, Nuria; Bailón-Moreno, Rafael
O Room: 315.1 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Mark Wolff
Topotime: Representing historical temporalityGrossner, Karl; Meeks, Elijah
The Problem of Time and Space: The Difficulties in Visualising Spatiotemporal Change in Historical DataÓMurchú, Tomás; Lawless, Séamus
O Room: 319 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Gabriel Bodard
Tracking Semantic Drift in Ancient Languages: The Bible as Exemplar and Test CaseMunson, Matthew Aaron
“Civilization arranged in chronological strata”: A digital approach to the English semantic spaceAlexander, Marc; Anderson, Wendy
Marrying the Benefits of Print and Digital: Algorithmically Selecting Context for a Key WordBenner, Drayton Callen
O Room: 321 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Lisa Spiro
Developing for Distant Listening: Develop-ing Computational Tools for Sound Analy-sis By Framing User Requirements within Critical Theories for Sound Studies Clerment, Tanya
Kinomatics: big cultural data and the study of cinemaVerhoeven, Deb; Coate, Bronwyn;
Arrowsmith, Colin; Davidson, Alwyn
Integrating Score and Sound: “Augmented Notes” and the Advent of Interdisciplinary Publishing FrameworksSwafford, Joanna Elizabeth Quigley, Aaron
O Room: 410 – AmphimaxPanel SessionChair: Paul Spence
What is Modeling and What is Not? Van Zundert, JorisJob; Jannidis, Fotis;
Drucker, Johanna; Rockwell, Geoffrey;
Underwood, Ted; Kestemont, Mike;
Andrews, Tara; Sperberg-Mcqueen, Michael
O Room: 412 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Susan Schreibman
Exploring a model for the semantics of Medieval Legal ChartersBradley, John; Rio, Alice; Hammond, Matthew;
Broun, Dauvit
Digitizing the Dead and Dismembered: DH Technologies for the Study of Coptic TextsSchroeder, Caroline T.; Zeldes, Amir
Digital Yoknapatawpha: Interpreting a Palimpsest of PlaceVogeler, Georg
O Room: 413 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Andrea Rapp
A Network Analysis Approach of the Venetian IncantoSystemRochat, Yannick; Fournier, Mélanie;
Mazzei, Andrea; Kaplan, Frédéric
Distributed “Forms of Attention”: eMOP and the CobreToolduPlessis, Anton Raymund; Mandell, Laura;
Creel, James; Maslov, Alexey
The Layered Text. From Textual Zoom, Text Network Analysis and Text Sum-marisationto a Layered Interpretation of MeaningArmaselu, Florentina
O Room: 414 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Matt Kirschenbaum
On Reusability and Electronic LiteratureDurity, Anthony; O’Sullivan, James
Monolith: Materialised Bits, the Digital Rosetta FilmFornaro, Peter R.; Wassmer, Andreas;
Rosenthaler, Lukas; Gschwind, Rudolf
Harddrive Philology: Analysingthe Writing Process on Thomas Kling’sRies, Thorsten
O Room: 415 – AmphimaxShort Paper SessionChair: Lorna Hughes
Clustering Search to Navigate A Case Study of the Canadian World Wide Web as a Historical ResourceMilligan, Ian
Analysis of perspectives in contemporary Japanese novels using computational stylistic methodsSuzuki, Takafumi; Yamashita, Natsumi
Mining poetic rhythm: using text-to-speech software to rewrite English literary historyCade-Stewart, Michael Alan
Enjambment and the Poetic Line: Towards a Computational PoeticsHouston, Natalie M.
Kanripo and Mandoku: Tools for distributed repositories of premodern Chinese textsWittern, Christian
.Session 5 July 10th – 11:00 to 12:30
Amphimax – Amphipôle Buildings
UNIL
O TEI Customization for encoding para-texts in spanish printed books (XV-XVIII)Martos Pérez, María Dolores; Baranda Leturio,
Nieves; MarínPina, MaríaCarmen
O An easy tool for creating digital scholar-ly editionsDumont, Stefan; Fechner, Martin
O Enduring Traces: Exploring correspond-ence from the archives of Canadian mod-ernism using digital tools and methodsLang, Anouk
O SNAP:DRGN -Standards for Networking Ancient Prosopographies: Data and Rela-tions in Greco-romanNamesBodard, Gabriel; Depauw, Mark; Rahtz, Sebastian
O What’s in a Discipline? Research Practices, Use of Tools and Content in the Humanities and Social Sciences - The web-based questionnaires of EHRI and Europeana Cloud.Benardou, Agiatis; Chatzidiakou, Nephelie;
Papaki, Eliza
O Medical Humanities. Projet de musée digitalSuciu, Radu; Wenger, Alexandre; Bolli, Laurent
O Interoperable Infrastructures for Digital Research: a proposed pathway for enabling transformationBaker, James William; Farquhar, Adam
O Empowering Play, Experimenting with Poems: Disciplinary Values and Visualiza-tion DevelopmentColes, Katharine; Meyer, Miriah;
Lein, Julie Gonnering; McCurdy, Nina
O The Proportional Sizes of Genres in Eighteenth-and Nineteenth-Century Eng-lish-Language BooksUnderwood, Ted
O Linked Open Data Technologies and Emblematica Online IIWade, Mara R.; Cole, Timothy; Han, Myung-Ja
O Digital Actors’ Parts: An Interactive Tool for Learning Shakespeare’s PlaysEstill, Laura; Meneses, Luis
O The Annotated Star: A Collaborative Digital Edition of Rosenzweig’s Star of RedemptionHandelman, Matthew; Wygoda, Ynon; Rojansky,
Shay; Rusinek, Sinai
O Critical editing with TXSTEPOtt, Wilhelm; Ott, Tobias
O TextGrid: Creating, archiving, publishing and exploring digital editions and other humanistic research data via a Virtual Research EnvironmentSöring, Sibylle; Veentjer, Ubbo; Funk, Stefan
O The Early Modern OCR Project (eMOP): Fostering Access to Early Modern Cultural MaterialsGrumbach, Elizabeth M; Mandell, Laura;
Christy, Matthew J.
O Stylometry, Network Analysis, and Latin LiteratureEder, Maciej
O Exploring Qualitative Data for Second-ary Analysis: Challenges, Methods, and TechnologiesBischoff, Kerstin; Niederée, Claudia;
Tran, Nam Khanh; Zerr, Sergej; Birke, Peter;
Brückweh, Kerstin; Wiede, Wiebke
O The Arabic Papyrology DatabaseThomann, Johannes
O Annotating texts with ontologies, from geography to persons and eventsLana, Maurizio; Ciotti, Fabio; Magro, Diego;
Peroni, Silvio; Tomasi, Francesca; Vitali, Fabio
O The Text portal: An online resource providing medieval literature for students and their teachersSchneider, Gerlinde; Schwinghammer, Ylva
O How to make games more GLAM-orous: developing game prototypes for the museum and cultural heritage sector in IndiaRay Murray, Padmini
O Spreading DiRT: extending the Digital Research Tools directoryDombrowski, Quinn; Gold, Matthew
O Shedding Light on Dickens' Style Through Representativeness & Distinc-tivenessKlaussner, Carmen; Nerbonne, John;
Çöltekin, ÇağrıBig
O Big Data and the Literary Archive: Topic Modeling the Watson-McLuhan Corre-spondenceQuamen, Harvey; Hjartarson, Paul;
Bouchard, Matthew; van Orden, Nicholas
O Enhancing Scholarly Communication and Communities with the PressForward-PluginFragasy Troyano, Joan; Rhody, Lisa; Coble, Zach;
Shirazi, Roxanne; Potvin, Sarah; Pinto, Caro
O NeueMöglichkeitender Arbeitmitstruk-turiertenSprachressourcenin den Digital Humanities mithilfevon Data-MiningBartz, Thomas; Beißwenger, Michael;
Pölitz, Christian; Radtke, Nadja; Storrer, Angelika
O Liberate the Text! TypeWright, Cobre, and MapThePageMandell, Laura C.; Heil, Jacob; Duguid, Timothy;
Grumbach, Elizabeth; Christy, Matthew
O Digital Humanities Data CurationInsti-tutes: Challenges and Preliminary FindingsSenseney, Megan; Muñoz, Trevor;
Flanders, Julia; Fenlon, Ali
O Créer un centre de recherche interuni-versitaire sur les humanités numériques au Québec : Défis et succèsEberle-Sinatra, Michael; Sinclair, Stéfan;
Dyens, Olliver; Vitali Rosati, Marcello
O Digitization of Hmong Sacred TextsOgden, Mitchell Paul
O Rethinking Hathi Trust Metadata to Support Workset Creation for Scholarly AnalysisFenlon, Katrina; Cole, Timothy W.;
Han, Myung-Ja; Willis, Craig; Fallaw, Colleen
.Poster Session 1 July 10th – 14:00 to 15:30
Amphipôle Building
UNIL
15 DH2014 – Lausanne 16DH2014 – Lausanne
O Quantifying "The Thing Not Named": A Computational Analysis of Willa Cather’s "Unfurnished" Writing Style(s)”Ankenbrand, Rebecca; Bernardini, Caterina;
Brotnov Eckstrom, Mikal; Kinnaman, Alex;
Tedrow, Kimberly Ann
O Local voices, worldwide conversations: ethnographic methodologies as a route to understanding meaning and value of niche local digital cultural heritage resources.Johnston, Penny
O Visualizing HomelessnessEngel, Maureen; Zwicker, Heather;
Frizzera, Luciano; Pedraça, Samia;
Regattieri, Lorena; Schoenberger, Zachary;
Windsor, Jennifer
O Adams Family Legacy: Visualizing the World of an American Presidential FamilySikes, Sara B.; Christian-Lamb, Caitlin
O Probing Digital Scholarly Curation-through the Dynamic Table of ContextsBrown, Susan; Adelaar, Nadine Phillips;
Dobson, Teresa; Knechtel, Ruth;
MacDonald, Andrew; Nelson, Brent;
Peña, Ernesto; Radzikowska, Milena;
Roeder, Geoff; Ruecker, Stan; Sinclair, Stéfan;
Windsor, Jennifer
O Mapping Colonial America's Printing ProjectBauer, Jean Ann; Egan, James
O What we make of Code: The Role of Programming in the Digital HumanitiesJakacki, Diane Katherine; O'Sullivan, James
O An ontology for 3D visualisationof cul O
tural heritageVitale, Valeria
O Reading Between the Lines: Im-age-to-Segment Relationship Develop-ment and AnalysisSmith, Dustin; Karadkar, Unmil; Galloway, Pat;
Davis, King
O Speaking in CodeNowviskie, Bethany; Rochester, Eric;
Graham, Wayne; Boggs, Jeremy; McClure, David;
Bailey, Scott
O Library Science and Textual Transmis-sion in the Online Age: A Fluid Text Model and Proposed Documenting InfrastructureMacCall, Steven L.
O How we work: a critical approach to program development to serve library/dh partnershipsPotvin, Sarah; Herbert, Bruce; Earhart, Amy
O Orthography and Biblical CriticismDershowitz, Idan; Dershowitz, Nachum;
Hasid, Tomer; Ta-Shma, Amnon
O Enhancing Access to Online Oral Histo-ry: Oral history in the Digital Age (OHDA) and Oral History Metadata Synchronizer (OHMS)Rehberger, Dean; Boyd, Douglas
O Data Curation Nightmare: Migrating VM/CMS to GNU/Linux in 2 weeksBauman, Syd
O Geographies of Access: Mapping the Online Attention to Digital Humanities Articles in Academic JournalsPriego, Ernesto; Atenas, Javiera; Havemann, Leo
O Semantic Blumenbach: Exploration of text-object relationship with sematic web technologies in the history of scienceWettlaufer, Joerg
O CatCor: Correspondence of Catherine the GreatCummings, James; Rubin-Detlev, Kelsey;
Kahn, Andrew
O Marked E-Books and Kindle’s popular highlight cultureRowberry, Simon
O Our Marathon: The Boston Bombing Digital Archive McGrath, Jim; Peaker, Alicia
O Discovering Old Maps Online and Transforming Them Into Digital Humani-ties ResourcesPridal, Petr
O Empowering Student Digital Schol-arship: CLASS Program as a model for digital humanities scholarship in the Liberal ArtsSimons, Janet Thomas; Nieves, Angel David;
Grimaldi, Kerri
O Data Criticism: General Framework for the Quantitative Interpretation of Non-Tex-tual SourcesKitamoto, Asanobu; Nishimura, Yoko
O Converting Medieval Documents into a Searchable DatabaseSporleder, Caroline; Fertmann, Susanne;
Krones, Tim; Kolatzek, Robert; Teufel, Isolde
O Reading Again: Annotating, Editing, and Writing in the Browser. Pedagogy, Design, and Development of Annotation StudioFendt, Kurt E.; Kelley, Wyn; Folsom, Jamie
O Taking manuscripts apart, and putting them togetherEmery, Doug; Porter, Dorothy Carr;
Campagnolo, Alberto
O Modeling Melville’s Reading: Editing Marginalia in TEI, Topic Modeling Reading and InfluenceOhge, Christopher
O The DigiPal Framework for Script and ImageStokes, Peter Anthony; Brookes, Stewart;
Noël, Geoffroy; Buomprisco, Giancarlo;
Marques de Matos, Debora; Watson, Matilda
O L’Innommable/ The Unnamable: The Second Module of the Samuel Beckett Digital Manuscript Project’s Hybrid Genet-ic EditionDillen, Wout
O The CWRC-Writer Bridge: from Coder to Writer, XML to RDF, DH to Mainstream Brown, Susan; Brundin, Michael;
Chartrand, James; Knechtel, Ruth;
MacDonald, Andrew; Rockwell, Geoffrey;
Sellmer, Megan
.Poster Session 1 July 10th – 14:00 to 15:30
Amphipôle Building
UNIL
O A Text Encoding Support System for Pre-modern Japanese Historical MaterialsYamada, Taizo; Inoue, Satoshi
O Finding Inexact Quotations Within a Tibetan Buddhist CorpusKlein, Benjamin Eliot; Dershowitz, Nachum; Wolf,
Lior; Almogi, Orna; Wangchuk, Dorji
O La Hiperedição Dos Panfletos De Eulálio Motta: Edición Filológica Y Cultura Digital, Retos De Un Nuevo TiempoNunes Barreiros, Patrício
O A Quantitative Analysis for the Author-ship of Saikaku’sPosthumous Works in the Seventeenth CenturyUesaka, Ayaka; Murakami, Masakatsu
O The MiCLUES system: Dynamic, rich contextual support for museum visitsGold, Nicolas E.; Rossi Rognoni, Gabriele
O Mapping French Press to the Digital AgeAbi Haidar, Alaa; Ganascia, Jean-Gabriel
O A Digital Metaphor Map for EnglishAnderson, Wendy; Aitken, Brian;
Hamilton, Rachael
O HistoGlobe-Visualising HistoryWestermeier, Carola
O Light, Liturgy, and Art at the Monastery of Saint John in Müstair, Switzerland: A Software DemonstrationAtaoguz, Jenny Kirsten
O The SyMoGIH project: Sharing and pub-lishing historical and geographical data in a standard, open and interoperable wayGedzelman, Séverine, Sonia; Beretta, Francesco;
Ferhod, Djamel; Boschetto, Sylvain;
Butez, Charlotte; Vernus, Pierre; Hours, Bernard
O Seeing Dialogue: Network Visualization of Dramatic TextsPowell, Daniel James
O “Tout ce qui n’est point vers, est prose”: Raymond Queneau’s Matrix Analysis of Language and Syntactic StylometryWolff, Mark
O Combining Macro-and Microanalysis for Exploring the Construal of Scientific DisciplinarityFankhauser, Peter; Kermes, Hannah; Teich, Elke
O Sustainability?! Four Paradigms for Humanities Data CentersSahle, Patrick; Kronenwett, Simone;
Blumtritt, Jonathan
O How a story is performed: traditional storytelling in the hands of computingGomes, Mariana
O Check! – An online tool for the recogni-tion and evaluation of DH workGalina Russell, Isabel; Priani Saisó, Ernesto
O Taco: A Metadata System for Hierarchi-cal Structured Data CollectionsZastrow, Thomas; Gross, Karin
O The Open Philology Project at the Uni-versity of LeipzigBerti, Monica; Baumgardt, Frederik;
Celano, Giuseppe; Crane, Gregory R.; Dee, Stella;
Foradi, Maryam; Franzini, Emily; Franzini, Greta;
Stoyanova, Simona
O Crowdsourcing Annotation and the ‘Social Edition’: Ossian OnlineTonra, Justin; Barr, Rebecca
O Visualizing theatrical heritage: Comput-er modellingas a tool for researching the theatre history of the Low CountriesDe Paepe, Timothy
O Cirilo Client: An application for data curationand content preservationSteiner, Elisabeth
O User-friendly lemmatization and mor-phological annotation of Early New High German manuscriptsGießler, André; Ritter, Jörg; Molitor, Paul;
Andert, Martin; Kösser, Sylwia; Leipold, Aletta
O DARIAH-DE – Digital Infrastructure for the Arts and HumanitiesSchmunk, Stefan; Smith, Kathleen;
Blümm, Mirjam
O Open-Access Cultural Heritage Re-sources and Native American Stakehold-ers: A Case Study from Chaco Canyon, New MexicoHeitman, Carrie C.
O Detecting Linguistic Signal in Cather’s Early Journalism: Polishing the Bibliogra-phyKumari, Ashanka; Lawton, Courtney;
McCue, Carmen; Moreno, Jose Luis; Thomas, Grace
O Cultivating the Public Philosophy JournalLong, Christopher; Fisher, Mark; Rehberger, Dean
O Le labo junior «Nhumérisme» (ENS Lyon), observateur et acteur du «cultural empowerment» françaisArmand, Cécile
O Visualization of Historical Knowledge Structures: An Analysis of the Bibliogra-phy of PhilosophySula, Chris Alen; Dean, Will
O Measuring the style of chick lit and literatureJautze, Kim Johanna
O LAUDATIO-Repository: Accessing a heterogeneous field of linguistic corpora with the help of an open access repositoryKrause, Thomas; Lüdeling, Anke;
Odebrecht, Carolin; Romary, Laurent;
Schirmbacher, Peter; Zielke, Dennis
O Arabic and Greek New Testament man-uscripts: Identities and Digital culturesClivaz, Claire; Schulthess, Sara; Bouvier, David;
Teule, Herman
.Poster Session 2 July 10th – 16:00 to 17:00
Amphipôle Building
UNIL
17 DH2014 – Lausanne 18DH2014 – Lausanne
O Kiln: XML Publishing FrameworkVieira, Miguel; Norrish, Jamie
O The Inherited Self: Reappraising Literary Cultural Heritage through Digital MethodsMalm, Mats Ulrik; Bergenmar, Jenny;
Kokkinakis, Dimitrios, Leonard, Peter
O Mountains of Text. Analyzing Alpine Literature from the AACBiber, Hanno
O Transcribo: A Graphical Editor for Tran-scribing and Annotating Textual Witness-es. Preparing a Historical-Critical Edition of Arthur Schnitzler’s Works.Buedenbender, Stefan; Friedrich, Vivien (2);
Burch, Thomas; Fink, Kristina; Lukas, Wolfgang;
Nühlen, Kathrin; Queens, Frank;
Sirajzade, Joshgun
O Interdisziplinarität modellieren – Über-die Modellierung einer Ontologie wissen-schaftlicher Prozesse für den Exzellenz-cluster Bild Wissen GestaltungStein, Christian
O Network Analysis for the History of Religions – The SeNeReKo projectElwert, Frederik; Hofmann, Beate;
Wortmann, Sven; Knauth, Jürgen
O Taking a Global Perspective on the Skills and Competencies Important to Digital ScholarshipSpiro, Lisa; Cawthorne, Jon; Lewis, Vivian;
Wang, Xuemao
O Edition Visualization Technology: a simple tool to publish digital editions and digital facsimilesMasotti, Raffaele; Kenny, Julia; Di Pietro, Chiara
O Digital multi-text editions from scratch to electronic performance. Transcription and collation routines transformed in a flexible database systemStolz, Michael
O The CENDARI Project: A user-centered “enquiry environment” for modern and medieval historiansBenes, Jakub; Bohn, Anna; Pawliczek, Aleksandra;
Charles, Valentine; Freire, Nuno; Bulatovi, Nataša;
O’Connor, Alexander; Knezević, Milica;
Porqueddu, Nella; Dimara, Evanthia;
Lopez, Patrice; Romary, Laurent; Meyer, Alexander
O Visualization As a Bridge to Close Reading: The Audience in The Castle of PerseverancePeterson, Noah Gene
O The Development of The Dickens Lex-icon Digital and its Practical Use for the Study of Late Modern EnglishHori, Masahiro; Imahayashi, Osamu;
Tabata, Tomoji; Koguchi, Keisuke; Nishio, Miyuki;
Nagasaki, Kiyonori
O Collaborative Scholarly Building with the Early Caribbean Digital ArchiveHopwood, Elizabeth; Doyle, Benjamin J.
O The Digital Alchemist: A Mixed Reali-ty Exploration of Jonson’s Alchemist as Site-Specific TheatreQuinsland, Kirk; Rouse, Rebecca
O Large-scale text analysis through the HathiTrust Research CenterOrganisciak, Peter; Bhattacharyya, Sayan;
Auvil, Loretta; Downie, Stephen; Plale, Beth
O The SMART-GS Project: An Approach to Image-based Digital HumanitiesHashimoto, Yuta; Aihara, Kenro;
Hayashi, Susumu; Kukita, Minao; Ohura, Makoto
O Empowering The Matsu (Goddess) Festival Celebration: From Static Woodcut Print to Animated ArtDay, Jia-Ming; Hsu, Su-Chu
O Visualization, Interactivity and Con-textualization as Digital Cultural Empow-erment: Ancient Egyptian Architectural Terminology OnlineWendrich, Willeke
O Digitalizing the Matsu Festival Cel-ebration: The Study and Application of Value-Added Creative Methods to Taiwan Folk Culture and ArtChen, Chun-Wen; Hsu, Su-Chu; Day, Jia-Ming;
Lin, Cheng-Wei
O All databases are created equal: build-ing profiles for database standards and interoperability in the HumanitiesJohnson, Ian R.
O Supporting cross-media analyses by automatically linking multiple collectionsKleppe, Martijn; Max, Kemman
O Digital Humanities as Vocation: Possibilities for Undergraduate EducationOgden, Mitchell Paul
O Euterpe’s Hidden Song: Patterns in ElegyScheirer, Walter J.; Forstall, Christopher W.
O Building the Princeton Prosody ArchiveWythoff, Grant; Martin, Meredith; Wilson, Meagan;
Brown, Travis
.Poster Session 2 July 10th – 16:00 to 17:00
Amphipôle Building
UNIL
O Room: 315 – AmphipôleShort Paper SessionChair: Ryan Cordell
Crowdsourcing Performing Arts History with NYPL’s ENSEMBLEReside, Doug; Vershbow, Ben
A vocabulary of the aesthetic experience for modern dance archivesPaquette-Bigras, Ève; Forest, Dominic
Hartmut Skerbisch – Envisioning associa-tion processes of a conceptual artistSemlak, Martina
Active Authentication through Psycho-metricsNoecker Jr., John
Text Mining Plato’s Dialogues Nally, Edith Gwendolyn
O Room: 319 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Glen Worthey
Does “colour” mean “color”?: Disambiguating word sense and ideology in British and American orthographic variantsGrue, Dustin Elias
Ideas, Events and Actions: The Digital Humanity Study of the Concept Formation in Modern ChinaCheng, Wen-huei; Yang, Jui-sung; Chiu, Wei-Yun;
Liu, Chao-lin; Jin, Guan-tao; Liu, Qing-feng
Riorganizzare Sign Writingper favorire la ricerca linguistica sulle Lingue dei SegniBianchini, Claudia Savina; Borgia, Fabrizio;
De Marsico, Maria
O Room: 321 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Kathleen Fitzpatrick
The dog that didn’t bark: A longitudinal study of reading behaviour in physical and digital environmentsWarwick, Claire; Mahony, Simon;
Rayner, Samantha; Team, The INKE
Supporting “Distant Reading” for Web ArchivesLin, Jimmy; Kraus, Kari;
Punzalan, Ricardo L. Punzalan
Canon, value and artistic culture: critical inquiry about the new processes of assigning value in the digital realmRodríguez-Ortega, Nuria
O Room: 410 – AmphimaxPanel SessionChair: Aurélien Berra
Spectacle vivant et technologie numéri-que : du laboratoire scientifique au plateau de théâtre Pluta, Izabella; Fourmentraux, Jean-Paul;
Bauchard, Franck; Bardiot, Clarisse
O Room: 412 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Deb Verhoeven
Using Computer Vision to Improve Image MetadataResig, John; Reside, Doug
Creating a Digital Tombstone Archive: From Fieldwork to Theory FormationStreiter, Oliver; Goudin, Yoann
The Landscapes of CastaPaintings: Depic-tions of Social Anxieties in XVIII Century New Spanish ArtCaldas, Natalia; Ortega, Elika; Brown, David; Suárez, Juan Luis
O Room: 413 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Toru Tomabechi
Six terms fundamental to modelling transcription Caton, Paul
A “Deeply Annotated” Bibliography of Local Social Histories of Early Modern EuropeTheibault, John Christopher
IMPACT : un dispositif de transcription et de commentaire de l’oral, pour l’enseignementet la rechercheJacquin, Jérôme; Gradoux, Xavier
O Room: 414 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Sarah Potvin
A Morphological Analysis of Classical Chinese TextsYasuoka, Koichi; Yamazaki, Naoki;
Wittern, Christian; Nikaido, Yoshihiro;
Morioka, Tomohiko
A glimpse of the change of worldview between 7th and 10th century China through two leishuHsiang, Jieh; Chen, lihua; Chung, Chia-Hsuan
L’édition numérique – système d’organisation des connaissances avec les outils sémantiquesAndréys, Clémence, Borel, Clément; Roxin, Ioan
O Room: 415 – AmphimaxShort Paper SessionChair: Amy Earhart
The Ancient Coins of Thrace: A Numismatic Web PortalHanrahan, Elise
Treasure Challenge: an archaeological video conferencing journeyPett, Daniel Edward John;
Kelland, Katharine Louise
A Sense of Place: Mapping Fictional Land-scapes in Literary NarrativesLynch, John; Kurtz, Wendy; Rocchio, Michael
Problems in Modeling TransactionsBauman, Syd; Tomasek, Kathryn
A hipersensibilidadedo Território–viveren-tre terra e nuvensOliveira, Lídia; Baldi, Vania
.Session 6 July 11th – 09:00 to 10:30
Amphimax – Amphipôle Buildings
UNIL
19 DH2014 – Lausanne 20DH2014 – Lausanne
O Room: 315 – AmphipôleShort Paper SessionChair: Øyvind Eide
Binarization-free Text Line Extraction for Historical ManuscriptsArvanitopoulos Darginis, Nikolaos;
Süsstrunk, Sabine
Framework for Quantitative Analysis of ScriptsRajan, Vinodh
Book History and Software Tools: Examin-ing Typefaces for OCR Training in eMOPSamuelson, Todd; Christy, Matthew J;
Torabi, Katayoun; Tarpley, Bryan;
Grumbach, Elizabeth
Automating the Search for Cross-lan-guage Text ReuseGawley, James; Forstall, Chris; Clark, Konnor
A top-down approach to the design of components for the philological domainBoschetti, Federico; Del Grosso, Angelo Mario;
Khan, Anas Fahad; Lamé, Marion; Nahli, Ouafae
O Room: 319 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Jeremy Browne
Starting the Conversation: Literary Stud-ies, Algorithmic Opacity, and Comput-er-Assisted Literary Insight Plasek, Aaron; Hoover, David
Visualizing Global News Losh, Elizabeth; Manovich, Lev
Extracting Relationships from an Online Digital Archive about Post-War Queens-land Architecture Hunter, Jane; Macarthur, John;
Van der Plaat, Deborah; Gosseye, Janina;
Muys, Andrae; Macnamara, Craig;
Bannerman, Gavin
O Room: 315 – AmphipôleShort Paper SessionChair: Michael Sinatra
The opportunistic librarian: A Leuven confessionVerbeke, Demmy
Exploring the Intersection of Personal and Public Authorial Voice in the Works of Willa CatherDimmit, Laura; Kirilloff, Gabrielle; Warren, Chandler; Wehrwein, James
Lacuna Stories: Building an Annotation Platform for Historical ThinkingWidner, Michael Lee; Johnsrud, Brian
Digital humanities in Estonia: digital divide or linguistic isolation?Kulasalu, Kaisa; Sarv, Mari
TheofPhilo. A prototype for a Thesaurus of PhilosophyLamarra, Antonio; Tardella, Michela
Rethinking Recommendations: Digital Tools for Art Discovery Gonzalez, Desiree; Andrew, Liam
O Room: 319 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Glen Worthey
The Rowling Case: A Proposed Standard Analytic Protocol for Authorship Questions Juola, Patrick
Beautiful lips and porcelain cheeks: extracting physical descriptions from recent Dutch fictionKoolen, Corina; Wubben, Sander;
van Cranenburgh, Andreas
Simulating the Cultural Evolution of Literary GenresSack, Graham Alexander
The Cryptic Novel: A Computational Taxonomy of the Eighteenth-Century Literary FieldAlgee-Hewitt, Mark Andrew; Eidem, Laura;
Heuser, Ryan; Law, Anita; Llewellyn, Tanya
O Room: 321 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Brian Croxall
Framework of an Advisory Message Board for Women Victims after DisastersHashimoto, Takako; Shirota, Yukari
Distant reading of naïve poetry: corpora comparison as research methodologyBonch-Osmolovskaya, Anastasia; Orekhov, Boris
The Stanford Literary Lab Transhistorical-Poetry Project Phase II: Metrical FormAlgee-Hewitt, Mark; Heuser, Ryan;
Kraxenberger, Maria; Porter, J.D.;
Sensenbaugh, Jonny; Tackett, Justin
O Room: 410 – AmphimaxPanel SessionChair: Tomoji Tabata
New and recent developments in image analysis: theory and practice Robey, David; Crowther, Charles; Nyhan, Julianne;
Tarte, Segolene; Dahl, Jacob
O Room: 412 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Mark R. Lauersdorf
Bridging the Local and the Global in DH: A Case Study in JapanNagasaki, Kiyonori; Muller, A. Charles;
Tomabechi, Toru; Shimoda, Masahiro
MapaHD: Exploring Spanish and Portu-guese Speaking DH Communities Ortega, Elika; Gutierrez, Silvia.
Tracing Workflow of a Digital ScholarAntonijevic, Smiljana; Stern Cahoy, Ellysa
O Room: 413 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Lynne Siemens
Unhappy? There’s an App for That: Digital Happiness, Data Mining, and Networks of Well-BeingBelli, Jill
The social pleasure of the text: Applying digital humanities methods to reception studiesLang, Anouk
Sentiment Analysis for the Humanities: the Case of Historical TextsMarchetti, Alessandro; Sprugnoli, Rachele;
Tonelli, Sara
O Room: 321 – AmphipôleLong Paper SessionChair: Nuria Rodríguez-Ortega
Encoding metaknowledge for historical databasesNuessli, Marc-Antoine; Kaplan, Frédéric
Europe as a Digital Network: EGO Europe-an History OnlineBurch, Thomas; Berger, Joachim
A Large Database Approach to Cultural HistorySullivan, Brenton; Tappenden, Fred;
Muthukrishna, Michael; Logan, Carson;
Slingerland, Edward
A novel approach for a reusable federa-tion of research data within the arts and humanitiesGradl, Tobias; Henrich, Andreas
O Room: 410 – AmphimaxPanel SessionChair: Elton Barker
Annotating in Digital Music Edition - concepts, processes and visualisation of annotations Beer, Nikolaos; Bohl, Benjamin; Seuffert, Janette
O Room: 412 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Elli Mylonas
Making Digital Humanities WorkMuñoz, Trevor; Guiliano, Jennifer
Potential Criticism in the Digital Humanities Edwards, RIchard Lawrence
Developing a Physical Interactive Space for Innovative Digital Humanities ExhibitionLiu, Jyi-Shane; Liao, Wen-Hung
Digital Pedagogy is About Breaking StuffStommel, Jesse
O Room: 413 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Jieh Hsiang
Process Data for Digital Scholarly EditionsVasold, Gunter
The Scholarly 3D Toolkit: Annotation, Publication, and Analysis of 3D Scenes alongside Imported Humanities DataColtrain, James Joel
Quelle médiation numérique pour le patri-moine bâti?Hennebert, Jérôme
Producción de contenidos abiertos en mu-seos. Un análisis crítico de los discursos museológicosen el mediodigitalHidalgo Urbaneja, María Isabel
O Room: 414 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Aimee Morrison
Where is my Other Half?Ben-Shalom, Adiel; Choueka, Yaacov;
Dershowitz, Nachum; Shweka, Roni; Wolf, Lior
The Changing Canon of Beauty: Facial Attractiveness in the Representation of Human Faces in World Paintingde la Rosa, Javier; Suárez, Juan Luis;
Caldas, Natalia; Dutta, Nandita
Aiding Modern Textual Scholarship using a Virtual HinmanCollatorKejriwal, Gaurav; Furuta, Richard; Olivieri, Ryan
O Room: 415 – AmphimaxShort Paper SessionChair: Sabine Bartsch
Scholarly primitives revisited: towards a practical taxonomy of digital humanities research activities and objectsBorek, Luise; Dombrowski, Quinn;
Munson, Matthew; Perkins, Jody;
Schöch, Christof
Introducing digital humanities through cultural analysisReyes-Garcia, Everardo
Beyond the Tool: A Reflexive Analysis on Building Things in Digital HumanitiesCouture, Stéphane; Sinclair, Stefan
Let DH Be Sociological!Goldstone, Andrew Loredana
Literary Canon and Digital Bibliographies: The Case of the United StatesFerrer, Carolina
O Room: 414 – AmphimaxLong Paper SessionChair: Elisabeth Burr
CURIOS: Connecting and Empowering Community Heritage through Linked DataBeel, David; Webster, Gemma; Mellish, Chris;
Wallace, Claire
Geoweb 2.0 and Design Empowerment: A Critical Evaluation of Eleven CasesPak, Burak; Verbeke, Johan
Digitizing women’s literary history: The possibility of collaborative empowerment?van Dijk, Suzan; Dekker, Ronald;
Partzsch, Henriette; Prats Lopez, Montserrat;
Sanz, Amelia; Filarski, Gertjan
The Chimeria Platform: User Empower-ment through Expressing Social Group Membership PhenomenaHarrell, D. Fox; Lipshin, Jason; Kao, Dominic;
Lim, Chong-U; Sutherland, Ainsley
O Room: 415 – AmphimaxShort Paper SessionChair: Melissa Terras
From the Archimedes’ Palimpsest to the Vercelli Book: Dual Correlation Pattern Recognition and Probabilistic Network Approaches to Paleography in Damaged ManuscriptsAnthony, Eleanor Chamberlain
Diagnosing Page Image Problems with Post-OCR Triage for eMOPChristy, Matthew J.; Auvil, Loretta;
Gutierrez-Osuna, Ricardo; Capitanu, Boris;
Gupta, Anshul; Grumbach, Elizabeth
Readings of a photograph: Cognition and AccessDas Gupta, Vinayak
Detection of Poetic Content in Historic Newspapers through Image AnalysisLorang, Elizabeth M; Soh, Leen-Kiat;
Lunde, Joseph; Thomas, Grace
Accessing, navigating, and engaging with high-resolution document image collections using Diva.jsHankinson, Andrew; Pugin, Laurent;
Fujinaga, Ichiro
Arch-V: A Platform for Image-Based Search and Retrieval of Digital ArchivesStahmer, Carl
.Session 7 July 11th – 11:00 to 12:30
Amphimax – Amphipôle Buildings
UNIL
.Session 8 July 11th – 14:00 to 16:00
Amphimax – Amphipôle Buildings
UNIL
21 DH2014 – Lausanne 22DH2014 – Lausanne
.Access & Information
Due to important maintenance work taking place on the M1 Metro Line, travel will not be possible between the Laus-anne-Flon and UNIL-Dorigny stops from July 7 to August 24 inclusive. During this period, a replacement service by bus will cover the affected section of the line, and detailed information will be available at each closed metro stop. The M1 Metro will operate normally between UNIL-Dorigny and Renens-Gare, in both directions.
Specifically concerning travel to/from the Digital Humanities 2014 Conference, we recommend that you use the following option to get to the EPFL/UNIL campus, as it is the most efficient way:
Catch the train at Lausanne-Gare (main station) to Renens-Gare, then the M1 Metro to the EPFL stop (for the Swiss Tech Convention Center and/or Rolex Learning Center) or to the UNIL-Sorge stop (for Amphimax and Amphipôle). Depending on train/metro departures, the timing should be between 12 and 20 minutes from Lausanne to either EPFL or UNIL-Sorge.
There are 5 trains per hour between Lau-sanne and Renens, detailed on the Swiss Federal Railways website: http://www.sbb.ch/en/home.html
You may also use their free smartphone application “SBB Mobile”
There is also a replacement bus service covering the close portions of the M1 line, which will be leaving Lausanne-Flon every 6 to 10 minutes. However, these buses run the risk of being overloaded during peak hours (morning and early evening), so we recommend that you allow 45 minutes if travelling this way during those times.
If you to arrive in Lausanne before the start of the conference, the M1 Metro will be operating normally across the entire line on July 5th and 6th.
Please find the map below, detailing the changes and travel options.
Geneva Airport
Lausanne CFFRenens CFF
~ 1 h
~ 42 min
~ 7 min
~ 1 min ~ 5 min
~ 2 h 30Zürich Airport
Stop UNIL- Sorge
Stop EPFL
Swiss Tech Convention Center
EPFL Station
Amphipôle
Rolex Learning Center
Amphimax
UNIL – Sorge Station
UNIL & EPFL Campus Map
Internet & Wi-Fi
eduroam – accessible on both campuses for those whose institutions are members. www.eduroam.org
UNILNetwork: guest-unil Guest Pass: dh2014
Twitter: @DH2014 LausanneEmail: [email protected]
Train & Metro Travel Time
EPFLNetwork: public-epflEn Clair ServiceUsername: x-digitalPassword: avedup44
Swiss Tech Convention CenterNetwork: STCC1SMS Login
23 DH2014 – Lausanne 24DH2014 – Lausanne
Lausanne is a multcultural city with many nice cafés, restaurants, bars and clubs to experience. While the cost of eating out in Switzerland may seem daunting at times, the bars and restaurants listed here all fall into the low-ish to mid-range in terms of pricing:
Appetizer: CHF 8 to 14 Main Course: CHF 20 to 35 Dessert: CHF 8 to 12
Soups and salads tend to come in at the low end of the appetizer range, with pizza and pasta at the lower end of the main courses. Meat dishes are the most costly and will take you into the higher end. There are also some nice take-away options listed, for those seeking more budget concious alternatives. Many of these restaurants also have daily menu specials, so please consult their websites for more information. You will also usually notice these listed on boards near the restaurant entrance.
Lastly, but certainly not least, a quick word or two on drinks. Hard alcohol is the most expensive when going out in Switzerland, so mixed drinks and shots will cost over CHF 10 each. Beer and wine are quite comparable, with costs between CHF 5 and 9. Bottled water will cost around CHF 8 per litre in restaurants, so a good tip is to ask for tap water. The water quality is very high in Switzerland, so this is always a good option.
Italian Food
L’Antica Trattoria Homestyle Napolitan Specialties Open Monday to Saturday
Rue Marterey 9, 1005 Lausanne
Baz’Art Casual restaurant with Italian Cuisine and Spanish Tapas Open Monday to Saturday, except
Saturday lunch
Avenue de France 38, 1004 Lausanne,
+41 21 661 26 66
www.bazart.ch
La BruschettaCasual restaurant with traditional Italian cuisine Open Monday to Saturday
Avenue de la Gare 20, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 312 57 34
Swiss Food
Café de l’ÉvêchéCafé restaurant, fondue specialityOpen every day
Rue Louis-Curtat 4, 1005 Lausanne,
+41 21 323 93 23
www.leveche.ch
Café du GrütliBrasserie cuisine, Fondue specialityOpen Monday to Saturday
Rue Mercerie 4, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 312 94 93
www.cafedugruetli.ch
Café RomandTraditional Brasserie , Fondue specialityOpen Monday to Saturday
Place Saint-François 2, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 312 63 75
www.cafe-romand.ch
Le Chalet SuisseSwiss restaurant, cheese specialities, great viewOpen every day
Route du Signal 40, 1018 Lausanne,
+41 21 312 23 12
http://www.chaletsuisse.ch/
Greek Food
Le LyriqueGreek CuisineOpen Monday to Saturday
Rue Beau-Séjour 29, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 312 88 87
Lebanese Food
O’BeirutOpen Monday to Saturday, except for Monday
lunch
Rue Bellefontaine 2, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 349 10 10
http://www.obeirut.com
Café Mozart (du Conservatoire)Casual brasserie, French and Italian, good viewOpen Monday to Saturday, except Mon. and Sat.
Evenin
Rue de la Grotte 2, 1002 Lausanne,
+41 21 323 10 30
www.mozartcafe.ch
Le JavaCasual French café-restaurantOpen every day
Rue Marterey 36, 1005 Lausanne,
+41 21 321 38 37
www.lejava.ch
L’Elephant BlancCasual, Nice little placeOpen Tuesday to Saturday
Rue Cité-Devant 4, 1005 Lausanne,
+41 21 312 64 89
www.lelephantblanc.ch
La Pomme de Pin (Brasserie Side)Casual, Nice little placeOpen Monday to Saturday, except Wednesday
evening
Rue Cité-Derrière 11, 1005 Lausanne,
+41 21 323 46 56
www.lapommedepin.ch
On EPFL Campus
Tech a BreakBar and GrillOpen every day
Les Arcades - Route Louis-Favre 8F, 1024
Ecublens
facebook.com/techabreak
Gina Ristorante ItaliOpen Monday to Saturday
(11:45 to 14:00 and 19:00 to 21:30)
Les Arcades - Route Louis-Favre 8C,
1024 Ecublens
+41 21 691 01 33
www.gina-ristorante.ch
Take Away Food
Holy Cow!Gourmet Burger Bar, some tables and take awayOpen Monday to Saturday
Rue de Terraux 10, 1003 Lausanne
Rue Chenneau-de-Bourg 17, 1003 Lausanne
www.holycow.ch
The Hot Dog FaktoryGourmet Hot Dogs, a few tables and take awayOpen Monday to Saturday
Avenue du Tribunal Fédéral 5, 1005 Lausanne
http://www.thehotdogfaktory.com/
Amigo TacoMexican Tacos, a few tables and take awayOpen Monday to Saturday
Rue de Marterey 72, 1005 Lausanne
Bars and Pubs
Brasserie Artisinale du ChâteauBrew Pub/Restaurant, pizza specialtyOpen every day, except Sunday lunch
Place du Tunnel 1, 1005 Lausanne,
+41 21 312 60 11
http://www.biereduchateau.ch
The Great EscapeSmall pub with large terraceOpen every day
Rue Madeleine 18, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 312 31 94
www.the-great.ch
La BavariaBrasserie, Traditional German foodOpen every day, except Sunday lunch
Rue du Petit-Chêne 10, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 323 39 13
www.labavaria.ch
Crazy CanucksOpen every day
Place Pépinet 1, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 312 93 33
Les BrasseursLarge Brew Pub/RestaurantOpen every day, except Sunday lunch
Rue Centrale 4, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 351 14 24
www.les-brasseurs.ch
Bourg PlageOutdoor Terrace, unique, minimal foodOpen every evening (depending on the weather)
Under the western arch of the Bessières bridge
http://www.le-bourg.ch/bourg-plage
French Food (or French influenced)
Le ByblosCasual French café-restaurantOpen Monday to Saturday
Cheneau-de-Bourg 2, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 311 83 73
facebook.com/barbyblos
Café Saint-PierreTrendy restaurant and bar, with tapasOpen Tuesday to Sunday (no reservation possible)
Benjamin-Constant 1, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 323 36 36
http://www.cafesaintpierre.ch
Café de GrancyCasual French café-restaurantOpen every day
Ave. du Rond-Point 1, 1006 Lausanne,
+41 21 616 86 66
www.cafedegrancy.ch
Café des AvenuesCasual French café-restaurantOpen Tuesday to Sunday
Ave. de Jurigoz 20, 1006 Lausanne,
+41 21 616 11 11
www.cafe-des-avenues.ch
Café des ArtisansCasual French café-restaurantOpen every day, except Sunday
Rue Centrale 16, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 311 06 00
Bleu LézardCasual French café-restaurantOpen every day
Rue Enning 10, 1003 Lausanne,
+41 21 321 38 30
www.bleu-lezard.ch
Les AlliésCasual French café-restaurantOpen Monday to Friday
Rue de la Pontaise 48, 1018 Lausanne,
+41 21 648 69 40
www.lesallies.ch
La BossetteCasual French café-restaurant, good beer selectionOpen every day, except Saturday
and Sunday lunch
Place du Nord 4, 1005 Lausanne,
+41 21 320 15 85
http://bossette.ch
.A Brief Guide to Eating and Drinking in Lausanne
25 DH2014 – Lausanne 26DH2014 – Lausanne
The Alliance of Digital Humanities Organiza-tions (ADHO) organizes an annual conference for the benefit of its members and for the advancement of research and scholarship in the variety of disciplines and professions they represent. ADHO works actively toward the creation of a more diverse, welcoming, and inclusive global community of digital humanities scholars and practitioners, and is therefore dedicated to the creation of a safe, respectful, and collegial conference experience for all attendees.
Open, critically-engaged, and often challenging discourse is expected to flourish at ADHO conferences. Participants are encouraged to respect and celebrate cultural and linguistic differences, and to be mindful of the internatio-nal nature of our community in preparing pre-sentations and engaging in conversation. There is no place at ADHO meetings for harassment or intimidation based on race, religion, ethni-city, language, gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, physical or cognitive ability, age, appearance, or other group status. Un-solicited physical contact, unwelcome sexual attention, and bullying behavior are likewise unacceptable.
Conference organizers are listed in the program and can be identified by their name badges. In the event a participant has been made to feel unsafe or unwelcome at an ADHO event, they are always available to assist. Please see the important numbers for further information.
Important Numbers:
Police: 117Fire: 118Ambulance: 144 Campus Security: 115Police (non-emergency): +41 21 315 15 15
Primary Contact Phone Number During the Conference: +41 21 692 25 44
Taxi Information:Coopérative Taxiphone: 0844 810 810 / www.taxiphone.chTaxi Services: 0844 814 814 / www.taxiservices.ch
Ombudsman service of the University of Lausanne and of the EPFL: Marie Ligier+41 79 541 89 18 In case of incident, or if you have any concerns, please ask for or contact any of the conference organizers listed below:
Chair of the ADHO Steering Committee:Neil Fraistat: [email protected]
Coordinator, ADHO Inclusivity Working GroupBethany Nowviskie: [email protected]
DH2014 Program Committee ChairMelissa Terras: [email protected]
DH2014 Local Co-ChairsClaire Clivaz: [email protected]édéric Kaplan: [email protected]
DH2014 Event Coordinator:Kevin Baumer: [email protected]: +41 21 693 02 37
.Code of Conduct & Emergency Contact Information
For any unofficial events, please see www.dh2014.org for more details.
Fun Run
Date: Thursday, July 10thTime: 06:45 – 07:45Meeting Place: UNIL Sports Centre, Dorigny, Building SOS1
The route will take you on a short 45 minute run through the trails and beside the lake. The distance will be between 7 to 8 kilometers, at a pace of around nine km/h.
Please arrive at 06:45, as the group will leave at 07:00 sharp. The locker room and shower facilities at the Sports Centre will be available to use from 06:45 and also after the run: Building SOS1.
.Other Activities
Amphipôle
SOS1
Amphimax
.Sponsors
.Affiliated Events
Partners:
Organizers:
Silver Level Sponsors:
Bronze Level Sponsors:
For more information on meetings and events affiliated to DH2014, please see the website: http://dh2014.org/affiliated-events
DH2014 – Lausanne