Digital Humanities Conference 2025
14 - 18 July 2025 | Lisbon, Portugal
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: 31st July 2025, 09:09:09pm WEST
|
Session Overview |
Session | ||
SP-30: Semantic Web Technologies for Historical and Cultural Data
| ||
Presentations | ||
An OIE Pipeline for the Identification and Production of Missing Biographical Knowledge 1Harvard University, United States of America; 2University of Turin, Italy We present an Open Information Extraction pipeline to identify and address knowledge gaps in Wikidata for underrepresented writers, using the Leksikon Fun Der Nayer Yidisher Literatur as a case study. Our approach benchmarks representation, assesses property alignment, and introduces resources to enhance digital humanities research on marginalized literatures. Making GLAM resources more accessible and reusable: a FAIR case study on European Literary Bibliography 1University of Alicante, Spain; 2Institute of Literary Research of the Polish Academy of Sciences; 3Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry of the Polish Academy of Sciences This study presents a reproducible framework for publishing and reusing bibliographic metadata from GLAM, focusing on the European Literary Bibliography. It emphasizes Linked Open Data transformation, metadata enrichment, and computational reuse via Jupyter Notebooks. Key contributions include a framework, DH research scenarios, and tools enabling scholarly exploration of bibliographic collections. Improving access to interchanges between material and immaterial cultural heritage through semantic modeling 1Leibniz Institute of European History (IEG), Mainz, Germany; 2La Sapienza University of Rome, Italy; 3University of Turin, Italy; 4Huygens Institute, Amsterdam, Netherlands; 5University of Amsterdam, Netherlands Semantic modeling can play an important role in enhancing accessibility to the immaterial culture related to artifacts. To this end, we examine whether the domain standards CIDOC-CRM and LRMoo can express the interactions of an artwork with the contexts it traverses through a case study of XVII Century integrative restoration. Preserving Musical Ephemera : A Digital Archive Framework for Classical Vocal Music Seoul National Univeristy, Korea, Republic of (South Korea) This study introduces a domain-specific ontology and digital archive for classical vocal music ephemera in South Korea. Addressing data fragmentation and inconsistent formats, it integrates Linked Open Data principles and visualization tools to ensure accessibility, cultural preservation, and analytical exploration across a decade of performance ephemera. Historical Wine Labels of the German Mosel Region: Enabling Insights into Visual Cultural Heritage using Linked Open Data 1Trier Center for Digital Humanities, Trier University, Germany; 2Computational Linguistics and Digital Humanities, Trier University, Germany This paper presents a project undertaking the digitisation, enrichment, modeling and publication of modern and historical wine labels from the German Mosel region as witnesses of local cultural history using manual annotations and multimodal Large Language Models for enrichment and Linked Open Data for data modeling. |