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, 06:02:05pm WEST
Session Chair: Cristina Guardado, University of Aveiro
Location:Aud B3 (TB)
152 places
Presentations
European Literary Bibliography: Tool for Research on Bibliographical Data on Literature and Literary Science
Vojtěch Malínek1, Tomasz Umerle2, Ondřej Vimr1
1Institute of Czech Literature, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic; 2Institute of Literary Research, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland
This paper discusses the workflow and results of the European Literary Bibliography (ELB) initiative. The ELB is an ongoing international project aimed at processing, integrating, enriching, presenting, and visualizing multilingual bibliographical datasets to enhance the understanding and exploration of the European literary landscape.
Crossing the Bifrost: Towards an open access FAIR HTR model for Old Norse manuscripts.
Katarzyna Anna Kapitan, Chahan Vidal-Gorène
ENC - PSL, France
Showcasing scalable solutions for under-resourced disciplines and addressing questions of accessibility and sustainability, we present the first Old Norse HTR model with ground truths in Open Access. By fine-tuning CATMuS-medieval on sparse data, we achieved notable accuracy improvements, demonstrating that today only a few pages are indeed enough.
Overcoming Silences in the Archive: Establishing a Collaborative Digitization Framework for Medieval Manuscript Collections Across the Midwestern United States
Michelle Dalmau1, Elizabeth Hebbard1, Sarah Noonan2
1Indiana University Bloomington, United States of America; 2Saint Mary’s College, United States of America
We will discuss the formation of a diverse group of partners who collaborated to streamline a distributed digitization and description workflow for medieval manuscripts across the midwestern United States, and how, through these collaborations, we have uncovered/recovered collections of distinction that are already impacting new and emerging scholarship.
Fabulation and Care: What AI, Wikidata, and an XML Schema Can Recognize in Women's Biographies
Alison Booth
University of Virginia, United States of America
Collective Biographies of Women, a feminist prosopography and study of short biographies, explores not only the results of stand-aside XML annotation of Biographical Elements and Structure Schema applied to ~400 chapters in 1270 books but also experiments with AI versions triangulated with available Wikidata, VIAF and other linked data.
Digital Intellectual History of Modern Korean Literary Studies: Bibliometric Analysis of Korea Citation Index and OpenAlex Data Sets
Byungjun Kim1, Yongsoo Kim2
1Cultural Informatics, Graduate School of Korean Studies, The Academy of Korean Studies, Republic of (South Korea); 2Department of English Language and Literature / Digital Arts and Humanities, Hallym University, Republic of (South Korea)
Leveraging comprehensive bibliometric analysis of OpenAlex (2000-2024) and Korea Citation Index (2002-2024) datasets, this pioneering digital humanities study maps the intellectual history of modern Korean literary studies. Through computational methods, we reveal the dynamic interplay between Korean literature and global literary discourse, illuminating patterns of cultural exchange and scholarly evolution.