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, 10:15:27am WEST
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Session Overview |
Session | ||
LP-39: Cultural Property, Literary Texts and Languages in the Age of AI
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Presentations | ||
Can African policies support community-led governance over cultural property in the age of artificial intelligence? 1University of Hull / DAIM, United Kingdom; 2Universite Nazi Boni, Burkina Faso; 3Independent scholar and consultant; 4University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa Many African policies position both digital /AI technologies and cultural industries as engines of sustainable development, but use of AI can also undermine artist livelihoods. The paper will consider how African policy frameworks could support communities in managing, protecting and promoting their digital cultural information in the age of AI. Du repérage à l’analyse : un modèle NER pour l’analyse des entités nommées dans les textes littéraires 1Sorbonne Université; 2Université d’Avignon Cette étude présente la création d’un corpus de romans du 19ᵉ siècle annotés en entités nommées dans leur intégralité, et l’élaboration d’un modèle de reconnaissance d’entités nommées adapté à de tels longs textes littéraires, et disponible librement en ligne. Nous évaluons ses performances, démontrant sa précision et sa robustesse. The power of context: Random Forest classification of (near) synonyms. A case study in Modern Hindi Institute of Polish Language, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland This paper investigates the problem of synonymy in the langugage, namely is a classifier based only on word embeddingsl able to correctly classify synonyms according to their origin. Although the language used for this analysis is Modern Hindi—significantly underrepresented in contemporary language research—the methodology presented is language-agnostic. |