Moderated by Eva Pfanzelter (University of Innsbruck, Austria) and featuring Antoine Doucet (University of La Rochelle, France)
Ann Dooms, Vrije Universiteit Brussel (Belgium)
‘An image says more than a thousand words’
This talk will highlight how a mathematical approach can leverage the information hidden within images/scans of our cultural heritage.
Clemens Neudecker, Berlin State Library (Germany)
Multimodal Perspectives for Digitised Newspapers
This talk will present recent advancements for digital curation of digitised documents on the basis of AI/ML through the Berlin State Library’s participation in the Qurator AI project. It will showcase most promising developments and opportunities for Document Analysis and Natural Language Processing, discuss some remaining challenges and future potentials.
Gerben Zaagsma, University of Luxembourg (Luxembourg)
‘Digital History and the Politics of Cultural Heritage Digitisation’
Ian Milligan, University of Waterloo (Canada)
‘Digitized Newspapers as Everyday Interdisciplinarity: The Transformation of Historical Scholarship’
Historical research has been fundamentally transformed by digitized newspapers over the past two decades. Yet historians have not considered the depth of this transformation; to do so requires a grappling with the ‘everyday interdisciplinarity’ of interfaces and platforms.
Moderated by Sally Chambers (KBR, the Royal Library of Belgium and Ghent Centre for Digital Humanities
Led by Eva Pfanzelter (University of Innsbruck, Austria)