Conference Agenda
Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 14th June 2025, 07:45:26pm WEST
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Session Overview |
Date: Monday, 14/July/2025 | |
9:00am - 12:30pm | Building Ethical Bridges: Collaborative Approaches to Research Integrity in the Digital Humanities (Workshop) Vicky Garnett1,2, Otto Bodi-Fernandez3, Francis P. Crawley4, Françoise Gouzi1, Paweł Kamocki5, Koraljka Kuzman Šlogar6, Dirk Luyten7,8, Walter Scholger9, Kristen Schuster10 1: DARIAH-EU, Ireland; 2: Trinity College Dublin; 3: AUSSDA (Austrian Service Provider of CESSDA-ERIC); 4: Coalition for Advancing of Research Assessment (CoARA)’s Working Group on ‘Ethics and Research Integrity Policy for Responsible Research Assessment in Data and Artificial Intelligence (ERIP)’; 5: Leibniz-Institut für Deutsche Sprache; 6: Institute of Ethnology and Folklore Research; 7: Belgian State Archives; 8: Study and Documentation Centre for War and Contemporary Society; 9: University of Graz; 10: University of Southampton Location: Aud B2 (TB) |
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The evolving digital ecosystem presents new ethical challenges for researchers in the (digital) humanities and social sciences. This workshop addresses those challenges by highlighting the critical importance of understanding best ethical practices. The results of this workshop will be developed into a white paper for wider discussion and dissemination. |
9:00am - 12:30pm | Design Qualitative Research on Large Text Corpora using I-Analyzer (Workshop) Mees van Stiphout1, Berit Janssen2, Jelte van Boheemen1 1: Utrecht University; 2: University of Amsterdam Location: Aud B3 (TB) |
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This workshop is an introduction to using text mining tools such as I-Analyzer for qualitative research, on both a theoretical and practical level. Learn how to design effective lists of search terms, how to become aware of your context, and how to use datasets containing millions of documents! |
9:00am - 12:30pm | Networking Through Collaborative Reflection on Methods: A Peer Review–World Café for Early Career Researchers (Workshop) Anna Schlander1, Ruth Reiche1, Johanna Konstanciak2, Alexandra Büttner3, Aline Deicke3, Andrea Rapp1, Marina Lemaire2 1: Technical University of Darmstadt, Germany; 2: Trier University; 3: Academy of Science and Literature Mainz Location: B210 (TB) |
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This workshop promotes data literacy in humanities, highlighting data as resources based on human decision-making. 12 PhD students meet in a World Café to peer review their projects mutually, emphasizing research design and reproducibility. By changing perspectives in a role-play, participants will develop their skills in methodology and scientific communication. |
9:00am - 12:30pm | From the Dispatch Box: Unlocking Topics and Sentiments in Multilingual ParlaMint Corpora (Workshop) Darja Fišer1, Anna Kryvenko1,3, Kristina Pahor de Maiti Tekavčič1,2 1: Institute of Contemporary History, Slovenia; 2: University of Ljubljana, Slovenia; 3: NISS, Ukraine Location: B302 (TB) |
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This half-day hands-on tutorial introduces researchers with little or no familiarity with corpus linguistic tools – particularly noSketchEngine – to the upgraded version of the ParlaMint corpora enhanced with topic and sentiment coding under the Open Science ParlaCAP project, empowering research on individual national parliaments, transnational comparisons and cross-disciplinary collaboration. |
9:00am - 12:30pm | Computer Vision and the Illustrated Book (Workshop) Giles Edward Bergel, David Miguel Susano Pinto University of Oxford, United Kingdom Location: B304 (TB) |
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This workshop will introduce several fundamental techniques for the computational analysis of early European printed books (15th-19th centuries). Techniques will include illustration detection; full-page segmentation; illustration matching and classification; OCR; and document understanding. Materials will include early printed editions of Dante; Spanish and Scottish chapbooks; and nineteenth-century books and periodicals. |
9:00am - 12:30pm | Impresso Datalab Hackathon. Programmatic Access and Annotation Services for Multilingual and Multimodal Historical Media Collections Marten Düring1, Caio Mello1, Daniele Guido1, Maud Ehrmann2, Kaspar Beelen3 1: Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History, Luxembourg; 2: École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Switzerland; 3: School of Advanced Study, University of London, United Kingdom Location: B309 (TB) |
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9:00am - 5:00pm | Creating Interactive 3D Applications with the Open-Source Game Engine “Godot” – A DH Hackathon/Game Jam Peter Mühleder, Franziska Naether, Dirk Goldhahn, Patrice Bleckmann Saxon Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Germany Location: Aud C1 (EC) |
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9:00am - 5:00pm | FAIR data in the Wikibase Ecosystem Tiago Assis7, André Barbosa8, Gustavo Candela2, Maria Hinzmann9, Manuel Joaquim7, Maximilian Kristen4, Filomena Limão7, David Lindemann1, Vojtěch Malínek10, Vera Moitinho de Almeida7, Camillo Carlo Pellizzari di San Girolamo5, Ana Salgado6, Christof Schöch9, Carlos Silva8, Luis Trigo7, Tomasz Umerle11, Christos Varvantakis3 1: UPV/EHU University of the Basque Country; 2: University of Alicante; 3: Wikimedia Deutschland; 4: Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München; 5: Scuola Normale Superiore Pisa; 6: NOVA FCSH, Lisbon; 7: University of Porto; 8: Wikimedia Portugal; 9: Trier Center for Digital Humanities, University of Trier; 10: Institute of Czech Literature, Czech Academy of Sciences; 11: Institute of Literary Resarch, Polish Academy of Sciences Location: B207 (TB) |
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9:00am - 5:00pm | Doing DH with Omeka: a Mini-con for Omeka Users and Developers Sharon M. Leon1, Tugce Karatas2, Lise Foket3, Pierre Willaime4, Valérie Adriaens5 1: Digital Scholar, United States of America; 2: University of Luxembourg; 3: Ghent University; 4: Archives Henri-Poincaré, CNRS/Lorraine University/Strasbourg University; 5: LIBIS, KU Leuven Location: B308 (TB) |
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10:30am - 11:00am | Coffee-break (14th morning) Location: B007 (TB) |
12:30pm - 2:00pm | Lunch - 14th (see restaurants on website) |
1:30pm - 5:00pm | Comparative Literature Goes Digital (SIG) Simone Rebora1, Joanna Byszuk2, Yina Cao3, Maciej Eder2, Berenike Herrmann4, Youngmin Kim5, Suzanne Mpouli6, Federico Pianzola7, Pablo Ruiz Fabo8 1: University of Verona, Italy; 2: Polish Academy of Sciences; 3: Sichuan University; 4: University of Bielefeld; 5: Dongguk University, Hangzhou Normal University, Linnaeus University; 6: Paris Cité University; 7: University of Groningen; 8: University of Strasbourg Location: Aud B2 (TB) |
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1:30pm - 5:00pm | From Voyant to Spyral: Documenting Research in Notebooks (Workshop) Ayushi Khemka1, John Bradley2, Geoffrey Rockwell1 1: University of Alberta, Canada; 2: King's College London Location: Aud B3 (TB) |
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This workshop, divided into two segments, will introduce people to Spyral Notebooks, a notebook programming extension to Voyant Tools. We will demonstrate how Spyral Notebooks let researchers and students annotate, modify, and save visualizations and analytical results from Voyant. |
1:30pm - 5:00pm | Libraries & DH: Histories, Perspectives, Prospects Mini-Conference (SIG) Glen Layne-Worthey1, Isabel Galina2, Hege Høsøien3, Sarah Potvin4, Caitlin Christian-Lamb5, Nickoal Eichmann-Kalwara6, Alex Wermer-Colan7, Pamella Lach8, Hilary Richardson9 1: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States of America; 2: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México; 3: National Library of Norway; 4: Texas A&M University; 5: Louisiana State University; 6: University of Colorado; 7: Temple University; 8: San Diego State University; 9: Mississippi University of Women Location: B207 (TB) |
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1:30pm - 5:00pm | AVinDH workshop (SIG) Mila Oiva1, Taylor Arnold2, Justin Wigard3 1: University of Turku; 2: University of Richmond; 3: University of South Dakota Location: B302 (TB) |
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1:30pm - 5:00pm | Digital Humanities Tech Symposium (SIG) Julia Damerow1, Rebecca Sutton Koeser2, Jeffrey Tharsen3, Jose Hernandez4, Robert Casties5, Cole Crawford6 1: Arizona State University, United States of America; 2: Princeton University; 3: University of Chicago; 4: Florida State University; 5: Max Planck Institute for the History of Science; 6: Harvard University Location: B304 (TB) |
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1:30pm - 5:00pm | Introduction to MapReader: Learning to work with maps as data (Workshop) Katherine McDonough1,2, Kaspar Beelen3, Daniel Wilson2, Rosie Wood2, Kalle Westerling2 1: Lancaster University, United Kingdom; 2: The Alan Turing Institute, United Kingdon; 3: School of Advanced Study, University of London, United Kingdom Location: B309 (TB) |
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During this workshop, the team will introduce the MapReader software library and how it fits into a growing ecosystem of computer vision tools for humanities research with maps. Participants will explore MapReader's image classification and text spotting features using colab notebooks and reflect on working with maps as data. |
3:30pm - 4:00pm | Coffee-break (14th afternoon) Location: B007 (TB) |
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