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, 06:57:03pm WEST

 
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Session Overview
Session
SP-32
Time:
Thursday, 17/July/2025:
4:00pm - 5:30pm

Session Chair: Nicholas Y. H. Wong, The University of Hong Kong
Location: Aud B2 (TB)

152 places

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Presentations

Historicizing Controlled Vocabularies in Digital Humanities: A Lightweight Context-Indexed Extension for Vocabulary Systems

Tsz-Kin Chau, Sarah Kenderdine

Laboratory for Experimental Museology, EPFL, Switzerland

This paper shows the necessity and motivation behind historicizing the power/knowledge embedded in LOD vocabulary systems. By utilizing CRMaaa, this paper presents a lightweight data model as a “quick fix” to augment existing vocabulary systems. This paper uses a particular case from a 19th c. painted panorama in Switzerland.



Radically inclusive software development for digital cultural heritage

Mia Ridge, Lanie Okorodudu, Saira Akhter, James Misson, Erin Burnand

British Library, United Kingdom

Sustaining open source software can be challenging. We discuss collaboration on the Universal Viewer (UV), software designed to display cultural heritage collections. We highlight methods including innovative, inclusive and multi-institution sprints. We showcase UV’s evolution, including accessibility and user experience enhancements, future plans and ways for others to contribute.



Local Contexts, Global Conversations: Digital History in Central Asia

Dinara Gagarina

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany

This study explores the emergence of digital history in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan, highlighting innovative projects, thematic focuses, and methodological shifts. Integrating literature reviews, interviews, and community events, it reveals infrastructural challenges, underscores postcolonial dimensions, and suggests that diverse, region-specific approaches can enrich global digital humanities discourse in meaningful ways.



A Conceptual History of Humanism in a Post-WWII Chinese-language Literary Journal via Word Vector Spaces

Nicholas Y. H. Wong

The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong S.A.R. (China)

This paper uses Chinese word vectors to develop a conceptual history of humanism and related keywords in a post-1945 modernist literary journal from Malaysia, and contributes to scholarship on digital multilingual practices, by asking how to accurately represent semantic and syntactic information from languages of non-Latin script in geometric spaces.



From Draft to Model: Semi-Automated Parametric Extraction of Historical Ship Designs

Giovanni Maria Pala1, Marco Mercuri2, Gian Maria Santi3, Lisandra Costiner4

1University of Oxford, United Kingdom; 2Bologna, Italy; 3University of Bologna, Italy; 4Utrecht University, Netherland

Using a historically informed approach, this contribution proposes a way to reconstruct historical ship 3D models, starting from their 2D drawings. It offers a study of the way ships were drawn, and uses this to charactyerise them as a parametrised problem.



 
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