Refine
Year of publication
Language
- German (21)
- English (2)
- Multiple languages (1)
Keywords
- Digital Humanities (24) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (24)
Institute
- TELOTA - IT/Digital Humanities (16)
- Initiative Forschungsdatenmanagement (5)
- Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften (2)
- Drittmittelprojekt CLARIN-D (2)
- Zentrum Sprache (2)
- Akademienvorhaben Alexander von Humboldt auf Reisen - Wissenschaft aus der Bewegung (1)
- Akademienvorhaben Die alexandrinische und antiochenische Bibelexegese in der Spätantike (1)
- Drittmittelprojekt Deutsches Textarchiv (1)
- Drittmittelprojekt OCR-D (1)
- Veröffentlichungen externer Institutionen (1)
The computer has come to play a transformative role in the ways we model, store, process and study text. Nevertheless, we cannot yet claim to have realised the promises of the digital medium: the organisation and dissemination of scholarly knowledge through the exchange, reuse and enrichment of data sets. Despite the acclaimed interdisciplinary nature of digital humanities, current digital research takes place in a closed environment and rarely surpasses the traditional boundaries of a field. Furthermore, it is worthwhile to continue questioning the models we use and whether they are actually suitable for our scholarly needs. There’s a risk that the affordances and limitations of a prevailing model may blind us to aspects it doesn’t support.
In her talk, Elli Bleeker discusses different technologies to model data with respect to their expressive power and their potential to address the needs of the scholarly community. Within this framework, she introduces a new data model for text, Text-As-Graph (TAG), and it’s reference implementation Alexandria, a text repository system. The TAG model allows researchers to store, query, and analyse text that is encoded from different perspectives. Alexandria thus stimulates new ways of looking at textual objects, facilitates the exchange of information across disciplines, and secures textual knowledge for future endeavours. From a philosophical perspective, the TAG model and the workflow of Alexandria raise compelling questions about our notions of textuality, and prompt us to reconsider how we can best model the variety of textual dimensions.
Vortrag "ediarum-Funktionen 'sex' & 'gender'" beim BBAW-internen Workshop "Gender&Data in DH-Projekten" am 21.03.2024 über die neu entwickelten ediarum-Funktionen "biologisches Geschlecht (sex)" und "Geschlechtsidentität (gender)". Beschreibt die Vorüberlegungen und Anforderungen sowie die Umsetzung im Datenmodell und den ediarum-Aktionen. Abschließend Ausblick auf mögliche Weiterentwicklungen.