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, 06:42:38pm WEST
Session Chair: Kyriaki Zoutsou, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Location:B210 (TB)
60 places
Presentations
11:00am - 11:10am
Cultural Preservation Through Digital Access and Community Building: The Kentucky Hispanic Heritage Project
Ruth Brown, Taylor Leigh, Yanira Paz, Ixchel Collazo
University of Kentucky, United States of America
Presenters will discuss the evolution and future directions of the Kentucky Hispanic Heritage Project, highlighting how a backward design approach informed by community input has guided decision making about accessibility and source selection, positioning the project as engaged digital scholarship that celebrates the production of knowledge by the local community.
Exploring the Technical Knowledge Interaction of Global Digital Humanities: Three-decade Evidence from Bibliometric-based perspectives
Jiayi Li, Chengxi Yan, Yurong Zeng, Zhichao Fang, Huiru Wang
Renmin University of China, China
This study introduces Topic-Method Composition (TMC) to analyze the co-occurrence of research topics and methods in Digital Humanities. By constructing a TMC network from large-scale bibliographic data, it identifies key research paradigms, highlights DH’s interdisciplinary nature, and provides a replicable workflow for exploring topic-method relationships across academic disciplines.
Transformação de metodologias através da inovação tecnológica: reflexões a partir de um caso de estudo
Paula Aguiar do Nascimento
UNIARQ, University of Lisbon, Portugal
Atualmente a preservação do património cultural carece de a inovação metodológica praticada para a gestão de coleções ser mais eficiente. Inovar metodologicamente a rastreabilidade através de métodos como QR Codes e RFID permitirá colmatar carências. Esta comunicação pretende explorar soluções aplicadas à museologia complementando o tradicional e a tecnologia.
Reconstructing Sensitive Narratives in Digital History: Wikibase as a Tool for Enhancing Accessibility and Fostering Citizen Participation
Tugce Karatas1, Ismail Ahouari2, Daniele Guido1, Bruno Buccalon3
1University of Luxembourg; 2University of Milano- BICOCCA; 3Getty Research Institute
This paper examines domain-specific knowledge graphs as transformative tools for Digital History, highlighting their ability to model complex relationships, support multilingual datasets, and integrate linked data essential for reconstructing fragmented narratives of sensitive events. It particularly explores Wikibase’s role in advancing historical research, cultural preservation, citizen participation, and open science.
Department of History and Philosophy of Science, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece
This paper investigates the application of citizen science in cultural heritage through an ontology-based analysis of Scopus articles. By utilizing the Citizen Science Ontology, it examines project aims, tools, and outcomes. Findings underscore contributions, challenges, and future opportunities for advancing participatory approaches in preservation and promotion of cultural heritage.