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Ancient Lives: Classics and Digital Humanities at Oxford

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
Embed
James Brusuelas from the Faculty of Classics, Oxford University, gives a talk at DHOxSS 2014, around the Ancient Lives project.
Since August 2011, Ancient Lives has recorded well over 1.5 million transcriptions of ancient Greek papyri (over 7 million characters), the work of over 250,00 online collaborators. The result was not simply the creation of big data, but the inception of an entirely different way of conceiving and interfacing ancient digital texts. Put simply, Ancient Lives has created something that has never existed before: a database of unedited Greek texts. We have strings of Greek characters without word division or any modern editorial convention. However, to access and make full use of that data, as texts actually read in antiquity, new algorithmic methods and digital tools that merge machine and human intelligence are required. The purpose of this lecture is to showcase, first, the Ancient Lives' method for data extraction, curating, and producing digital Greek texts from this unique crowd sourced dataset. Then, and perhaps more importantly, to introduce two new Ancient Lives grant funded projects, in which new tools are being developed for the digital editing, data mining, and researching Greek and Coptic fragments through an advanced online interface.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
James Brusuelas
Keywords
classics
greek
Coptic
texts
manuscripts
zooniverse
oxford
digital
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 23/07/2014
Duration: 00:37:10

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Panel - The Future of Data Access and Preservation

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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This panel discussion will bring together those working in the area of data access and preservation to discuss the numerous problems and future possibilities of data curation, preservation, and long-term access.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
David De Roure
William Kilbride
Christine Madsen
Carole L. Palmer
Allen H. Renear
Kenji Takeda
Keywords
data
curation
script
digital
access
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 23/07/2014
Duration: 00:41:51

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Obtaining the Unobtainable: The Holy Grail of Seed Funding for Small-Scale Digital Projects

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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A talk given by Emma Goodwin, Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages, University of Oxford, at DHOxSS 2014.
Inspired by the successes of Zooniverse's internationally acclaimed digital projects, and the growing appetite among funding bodies to fund collaborative and interdisciplinary projects, today's doctoral students face an exciting challenge. How can a doctoral or early career researcher advance knowledge creation and production through the creative and exciting myriad of opportunities available in Digital Humanities?

Even for established academics, it is very difficult to attract funding without a proof-of-concept prototype of the planned project and a workable budget which demonstrates value, innovation and alignment with the stated aims of funding bodies. Addressing these and many more aspects is crucial for demonstrating in a funding proposal that new digital approaches can create world-leading research which will be disseminated widely.

Reflecting on the successful funding bids for ‘Crowd-Map-The-Crusades' and the AHRC-funded ‘Promoting Interdisciplinary Engagement in the Digital Humanities', this paper will discuss some ideas about useful strategies which doctoral and early career researchers can use when looking to set up and fund their own small-scale digital projects, including developing concepts into scalable and sustainable models, accessing seed funding, how to access the requisite skills training, and how to engage with international DH networks.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
Emma Goodwin
Keywords
zooniverse
Crowd-sourcing
digital
research
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 23/07/2014
Duration: 00:25:33

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If a picture is worth 1000 words what's a medium quality scan worth?

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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This presentation from DHOxSS 2014 is based on the practical experience of archiving 46 thousand (plus) images taken by a Cameroonian studio photographer over a 30 years period as part of the British Library ‘Endangered Archive Programme' (EAP).
This talk will discuss some of the practical and conceptual issues of working with images collections, looking at how face recognition and pattern matching can help put some order into collections whose scope is too large for an individual to hold in their consciousness. Scaling up means we need technological assistance to explore large collections else we are constrained by human attention spans and memory. Scholarship needs to develop or at least face up to these limitations.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
David Zeitlyn
Keywords
scan
photography
digital humanities
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 23/07/2014
Duration: 00:49:34

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Panel - Scholarly Digital Editing

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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This panel discussion will bring together those working in the area of scholarly digital editing to examine how and why such editions should and are being made and what issues and assumptions we bring to the creation of scholarly digital editions.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
Pip Wilcox
Lou Burnard
Eugene Giddens
Eleanor Lowe
Judith Siefring
Ray Siemens
Keywords
editing
text
journal
publication
academia
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 23/07/2014
Duration: 00:59:19

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Community, Community of Practice, and the Methodological Commons

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
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This talk considers notions of community, community of practice, and the methodological commons as it applies to the digital humanities. A keynote by Ray Siemens, University of Victoria from DHOxSS 2014.
The Digital Humanities Summer Institute, DHOxSS, and other institutes, as well as the remarkable range and variety of THATCamps, workshops and other training events and meetings taking place around the world — taken together these elaborate a number of emerging models of networked activities at local, regional and national level of great significance to the growth of the DH community, and the principles on which it is founded.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
People
Ray Siemens
Keywords
digital humanities
oxford
communication
networking
communities
Department: Humanities Division
Date Added: 23/07/2014
Duration: 00:39:40

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Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School

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Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School
The Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School is the University of Oxford's annual training event for the Digital Humanities. Each delegate follows a week-long workshop and supplements this with additional parallel lectures, which have been filmed as part of this series.

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Conclusion - taking iPads and tablets into the classroom

Series
Digital Sketchbooks: Using tablets to support a museum art visit
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In this film, Adrian and Helen give their personal reflections on the apps and how iPads and tablets can be best integrated into classroom art teaching as well as museum visits.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Sketchbooks: Using tablets to support a museum art visit
People
Helen Ward
Adrian Brooks
Keywords
iPad
Android
tablet
touchscreen
App
museum
students
teaching
learning
research
classroom
Department: Ashmolean Museum
Date Added: 23/07/2014
Duration: 00:09:12

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Brushes 3 - Creating a visual masterpiece on an iPad

Series
Digital Sketchbooks: Using tablets to support a museum art visit
Embed
Brushes 3 is a dynamic, versatile drawing app with many features that you would expect to find on a sophisticated photo editing package. Adrian explains how it can benefit student work and how to get started with making your own art.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Sketchbooks: Using tablets to support a museum art visit
People
Adrian Brooks
Keywords
art
iPad
tablet
Smartphone
drawing
museum
photoshop
teaching
learning
classroom
App
Department: Ashmolean Museum
Date Added: 23/07/2014
Duration: 00:07:48

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123d Catch - creating 3D images with an iPad or tablet

Series
Digital Sketchbooks: Using tablets to support a museum art visit
Embed
123d Catch is a piece of 3D modelling software that allows you to create high quality, rotating 3D images on an ipad by taking a series of pictures around the object. This short video explains how to get started.

Episode Information

Series
Digital Sketchbooks: Using tablets to support a museum art visit
People
Adrian Brooks
Tim Dobson
Helen Ward
Keywords
art
iPad
tablet
Android
touchscreen
3D
3D printing
modelling
sculpture
museum
teaching
learning
Department: Ashmolean Museum
Date Added: 23/07/2014
Duration: 00:04:20

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