InterFace 2010 – First Call for Papers

InterFace 2010: Humanities and Technologies
2nd International Symposium for Humanities and Technology

July 15th-16th 2010, International Digital Laboratory, University of Warwick, UK.
Paper Deadline: 10th May. 1000 Word abstract.

InterFace is a new type of annual non-profit event. Based on the format of last year’s successful forum at the University of Southampton, this year follows in the same footsteps: part conference, part forum, part networking opportunity. The conference aims to bring PhD students, early postdocs and other early researchers together from the fields of Technologies and the Humanities in order to foster cutting-edge collaboration. Delegates can also expect to receive illuminating talks from experts, presentations on successful interdisciplinary projects and on how to succeed as academics.

Paper Submissions
If you are interested in attending, please submit an original paper of 1000 words or less, describing an idea or concept you wish to present. Following acceptance of your submission you will need to give a three-minute presentation of your paper at the conference. Papers should focus on potential, realistic areas for collaboration between the Technologies and Humanities sectors, either by addressing particular problems, new developments or both. As such, the scope is extremely broad but topics might include:

Technologies:
Agent Based Modelling, Computer Graphics & Visualization, Internet Technologies, Natural Language Processing, Online Collaboration, Pervasive Technologies, Sensor Networks, Semantic Web, Web Science

Humanities:
Applied Sociodynamics & Social Network Analysis, Archaeological Reconstruction, Dynamic Logics, Electronic Corpora, History & Art History, Information Ethics, Linguistics New Media, Spatial Cognition, Text Editing and Analysis, Teaching Methodologies

For further information, please visit the conference website: http://www.interface2010.org.uk, or e-mail the committee: contact@interface2010.org.uk

Kind Regards,
InterFace 2010 Committee

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)

Symposium on TEI and Scholarly Publishing * Dublin, Ireland * 28 April 2010

*Please circulate*

Symposium on TEI and Scholarly Publishing
http://dho.ie/node/673

Wednesday, 28 April 2010
Royal Irish Academy, 19 Dawson Street, Dublin 2

The TEI Council and the Digital Humanities Observatory, a project of the Royal Irish Academy, invite you to participate in a one-day Symposium on TEI and Scholarly Publishing, to be held 28 April 2010 in conjunction with a meeting of the TEI Council. Invited speakers from universities, publishing organizations, and private industry will identify current difficulties in making publication systems interoperable and identify priority actions for the TEI to intervene in this arena.

During the presentations, there will be simultaneous discussion in the backchannel #teipublishing and in a publicly readable and editable Google Docs file for collaborative identification of priority actions for the TEI. To avoid infestation by spambots, we will not include the actual URL in announcements. Please type “docs.google.com” into your browser and then paste the following after it:

/Doc?id=dv3dx7h_12gtqzjxg5

We encourage participation on the backchannel and in this collaborative writing exercise by all, even those unable to attend in person.

Registration to attend in person is free but required. For further information, please see http://dho.ie/node/673

Posted by: Kevin Hawkins (kevin.s.hawkins@ULTRASLAVONIC.INFO).

TEI members meeting 2010: call for proposals

TEI Applied: Digital Texts and Language Resources

2010 Annual Meeting of the TEI Consortium

http://ling.unizd.hr/~tei2010/

  • Meeting dates: Thu 11 November to Sun 14 November, 2010
  • Workshop dates: Mon 08 November to Wed 10 November, 2010

The Program Committee of the 2010 Annual Meeting of the Text Encoding Initiative Consortium invites individual paper proposals, panel sessions, poster sessions, and tool demonstrations particularly, but not exclusively, on digital texts, language resources and any topic that applies TEI to its research.

Submission Topics

Topics might include but are not restricted to:

  • TEI and natural language processing
  • TEI and language resources
  • Analyzing and quantifying encoded texts
  • Aggregation and compilation
  • Integrating the TEI with other technologies and standards
  • Tools that create and process TEI data
  • TEI used in conjunction with other technologies and standards
  • TEI as:
    • metadata standard
    • interchange format: sharing, mapping, and migrating data

In addition, we are seeking micropaper proposals for 5 minute presentations on how you applied TEI.

Submission Types

Individual paper presentations will be allocated 30 minutes: 20 minutes for delivery, and 10 minutes for questions & answers.

Panel sessions will be allocated 1.5 hours and may be of varied formats, including:

  • three paper panels: 3 papers on the same or related topics
  • round table discussion: 3-6 presenters on a single theme. Ample time should be left for questions & answers after brief presentations.

Posters (including tool demonstrations) will be presented during the poster session. The local organizer will provide flip charts and tables for poster session/tool demonstration presenters, along with wireless internet access. Each poster will have the opportunity to participate in a slam immediately preceding the poster session.

Micropapers will be allocated 5 minutes.

Submission Procedure

All proposals should be submitted at http://www.tei-c.org/conftool/ by May 1st, 2010.

You will need to create an account (i.e., username and password) in order to file a submission. For each submission, you may upload files to the system after you have completed filling out demographic data and the abstract.

  • Individual paper or poster session proposals (including tool demonstrations):
    • Please submit a brief abstract (no more than 500 words) in the “Abstract” field.
    • Supporting materials (including graphics, multimedia, etc., or even a copy of the complete paper) may be uploaded after the initial abstract is submitted.
  • Micropaper:
    • The procedure is the same as for an individual paper, however the abstract should be no more than 300 words, but may be as short as the name of the feature.
    • Please be sure the abstract mentions the feature to be presented!
  • Panel sessions:
    • The panel organizer submits an abstract for the entire session, listing the proposed papers, and explaining the organizing theme and rationale for the inclusion of the papers in no more than 500 words in the “Abstract” field.
    • The panel members each submit a separate complete individual paper proposal; see above.

The program committee reserves the right to accept papers submitted as part of a panel without accepting the whole panel.

All proposals will be reviewed by the program committee and selected external reviewers.

Those interested in holding working paper sessions outside the meeting session tracks should contact the meeting organizers at meeting@tei-c.org to schedule a room.

Please send queries to meeting@tei-c.org.

Conference submissions will be considered for conference proceedings. Further details on the submission process will be forthcoming.

For the international programm comittee,

Christian Wittern (chair)


Christian Wittern
Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University
47 Higashiogura-cho, Kitashirakawa, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8265, JAPAN

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)

Invitation to Participate in a Digital Humanities Study

Dear Colleague,
Implementing New Knowledge Environments (INKE) is a large-scale collaborative research project in the digital humanities directed by Dr. Ray Siemens, Department of English, University of Victoria, and funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). Our research team is examining the complex processes of human engagement with information that is available digitally. Specifically, we are interested in identifying and understanding the ways in which social sciences and humanities readers engage with forms such as the electronic scholarly edition, the academic monograph, scholarly journal and essay collections, and electronic literature.

With this letter, we are inviting you to complete a short survey about how you experience and use digital resources in the context of your research. The findings of this survey will be used to improve existing digital tools and to derive requirements for prospective tools and resources that we hope will be of benefit to you and other researchers.

The questionnaire should take approximately twenty minutes to complete. If you are willing to participate, you will find it online at . Your identity will be kept confidential. All documents and participants will be identified only by code number. Digital data records will be kept on password-protected hard drives and on disks stored in locked filing cabinets. Only the principal investigator and the co-investigators will have access to the data. If you have any concerns about your treatment or rights as a research participant, you may contact the Research Subject Information Line in the UBC Office of Research Services at 604-822-8598. Your participation in this study is entirely voluntary and you may refuse to participate or withdraw from the study at any time. Your completion and submission of the survey will indicate your consent to participate.
In consideration of your time, you may enter a draw for a $150.00 gift certificate from an online bookstore upon completion of the questionnaire.

We look forward to the prospect of your participation in this study. Please feel free to contact the INKE Graduate Research Assistant, Karen Taylor, at any time if you have questions about this research: 604-737-2873 (British Columbia, Canada) or katay164@interchange.ubc.ca.

Best regards,

Dr. Teresa Dobson for the INKE Team
Associate Professor
Director, Digital Literacy Centre
University of British Columbia
c/o Department of Language & Literacy
2125 Main Mall,
Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z4

Posted by: Karen Taylor (katay164@interchange.ubc.ca).

Conference: III Incontro di Filologia Digitale – Verona 3-5 marzo 2010

III Incontro di Filologia Digitale – Verona 3-5 marzo 2010
Sala Conferenze
Banco Popolare di Verona
Via san Cosimo, 10 Verona

Conference Programme

Mercoledì 3 marzo 2010

14.30 Saluti delle Autorità
15.00 Apertura dei lavori

15.00-15.45 Federico Giusfredi / Alfredo Rizza (Hethitisches Wörterbuch, Institut für Assyriologie und Hethitologie, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München – Dep. of Linguistics, UCB, Rotary International Ambassadorial Scholar)
Zipf’s Law and the Distribution of Signs

15.45-16.30 Manuela Anelli / Marta Muscariello / Giulia Sarullo (Istituto di Scienze dell’Uomo, del Linguaggio e dell’Ambiente, Libera Università di Lingue e Comunicazione IULM, Milano)
The Digital Edition of Epigraphic Texts as Research Tool: the ILA Project

16.30-17.15 Margherita Farina (Dipartimento di Scienze Storiche del Mondo Antico, Università di Pisa)
Electronic analysis and organization of the Syro-Turkic Inscriptions of China and Central Asia

Pausa

17.45-18.30 Mariachiara Pellegrini / Alfredo Trovato (Laboratorio del Lessico di Linguistica – Dipartimento di Linguistica, Letteratura e Scienze della Comunicazione, Università degli Studi di Verona)
Analisi informatica dei fenomeni di interferenza grafematica nelle iscrizioni di Selinunte

18.15-19.00 Federico Boschetti (Centro Interdipartimentale Mente/Cervello [CIMeC], Università degli Studi di Trento)
Modello collaborativo per migliorare l’accuratezza dell’OCR del Greco antico

Giovedì 4 marzo 2010

9.30 Inizio dei lavori

9.30-10.15 Matteo Romanello (Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King’s College London)
L’edizione critica digitale di frammenti: problemi teorici e soluzioni tecniche

10.15-11.00 Alessandro Bausi (Asien-Afrika-Institut, Universität Hamburg)
Il progetto COMst (Comparative Oriental Manuscript Studies); Etiopistica e filologia digitale

Pausa

11.30-12.15 Manuel Barbera (Dipartimento di Scienze letterarie e filologiche, Università di Torino)
Intorno a Schema e storia del ‘Corpus Taurinense’

12.15-13.00 Marco Tomatis (Dipartimento di Scienze letterarie e filologiche, Università di Torino)
Aspetti computazionali e metodologici della disambiguazione del ‘Corpus Taurinense’

Pausa (Buffet lunch)
15.00 Ripresa dei lavori

15.00-15.45 Odd Einar Haugen (Institutt for lingvistiske, litterære og estetiske studier, Universitetet i Bergen)
Do we need all these characters? On the transcribing and encoding of medieval vernacular manuscripts

15.45-16.30 Matthew James Driscoll (Den Arnamagnæanske Samling, Københavns Universitet)
Mapping the manuscript matrix

16.30-17.15 Marina Buzzoni (Dipartimento di Scienze del Linguaggio, Università Ca’ Foscari)
The ‘Electronic Hêliand Project’: theoretical and practical updates

Pausa

17.45-18.30 Stefano Minozzi (Dipartimento di Linguistica, Letteratura e Scienze della Comunicazione, Università degli Studi di Verona)
Latin WordNet: una rete semantica per il latino

18.30-19.15 Franco D’Agostino / Matteo Scalzo (Dipartimento di Studi Orientali, Università La Sapienza)
Toward a Knowledge Based Approach to the Sumerian Culture

Venerdì 5 marzo 2009

9.30 Inizio dei lavori

9.30-10.15 Enrica Salvatori (Dipartimento di Storia, Università di Pisa)
Umanista esperto di informatica o informatico umanista?
Ragionamenti su discipline, ricerche e professioni a cinque anni
dalla nascita di Informatica Umanistica all’Università di Pisa

10.15-11.00 Roberto Rosselli del Turco (Dipartimento di Scienze del Linguaggio, Università di Torino)
Filologia digitale: ragioni, problemi, prospettive di una disciplina

Pausa

11.30-12.15 Paola Cotticelli Kurras/ Alfredo Rizza / Alfredo Trovato (Laboratorio del Lessico di Linguistica – Dipartimento di Linguistica, Letteratura e Scienze della Comunicazione, Università degli Studi di Verona)
Lessico di Linguistica On line: A Linguistics Lexicon Archive

12.15-13.00 Adele Cipolla / Federica Goria (Dipartimento di Anglistica, Germanistica e Slavistica Università degli Studi di Verona – EdiText Torino)
Open BMS: a New Software for a Snorri’s Edda Annotated Bibliography

Posted by: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco (rosselli at ling dot unipi dot it)