The DARIAH Annual Event 2019 thematizes a catalogue of research questions that arise when we speak of Humanities Data. At the very heart of this topic linger questions around the type and amount of data that humanists collect: what kind of data do we have; where is it; and who owns it? Is our data indeed complex, and if so, what makes it complex? How do definitions and conceptualisations of the term ‘data’ resonate with or, perhaps more accurately, alienate us from our conceptions of our source landscape as art and humanities scholars? And, of course, how will the major European policy initiative to build an Open Science Cloud for research data impact upon our practices and opportunities? The upcoming DARIAH Annual Event 2019 combines forms...
The digital transformation of research opened up radically new potentials in innovation and dissemin...
The DARIAH-EU Annual Event features a series of engaging keynote lectures and interactive sessions, ...
While the humanities have caught the “big data” wave, “little data” remains the norm in those many d...
Slides presented at DARIAH-HR "Digital Humanities and Heritage" Conference on 15 October, 2021. (htt...
International audienceThis paper presents the main issues related to scholarly data in the humanitie...
In late March, DARIAH organised the third DARIAH beyond Europe event in conjunction with the second...
International audienceThis paper provides both an update concerning the setting up of the European D...
This poster provides a snapshot of the Humanities Data Inquiry (HDI), a new community of practice ex...
Poster for the DARIAH Annual Event 2019, 15.-17.05.2019, Warsaw The poster is based on the winning b...
Publishing research data as open data is not yet common practice for researchers in the arts and hum...
In the Humanities, data are difficult to define and all the more so to be properly curated and manag...
This recording took place during the DHCH2023 event in Rome on June 5-7 in 2023. This event focuses...
DARIAH (Digital Research Infrastructure for the Arts and Humanities) is a Europ...
As part of the DARIAH-DESIR project, a series of workshops will be organised in 2018 and 2019 entit...
What does it mean to treat poetry, brain scans, and library borrowing records alike as “data”? Today...
The digital transformation of research opened up radically new potentials in innovation and dissemin...
The DARIAH-EU Annual Event features a series of engaging keynote lectures and interactive sessions, ...
While the humanities have caught the “big data” wave, “little data” remains the norm in those many d...
Slides presented at DARIAH-HR "Digital Humanities and Heritage" Conference on 15 October, 2021. (htt...
International audienceThis paper presents the main issues related to scholarly data in the humanitie...
In late March, DARIAH organised the third DARIAH beyond Europe event in conjunction with the second...
International audienceThis paper provides both an update concerning the setting up of the European D...
This poster provides a snapshot of the Humanities Data Inquiry (HDI), a new community of practice ex...
Poster for the DARIAH Annual Event 2019, 15.-17.05.2019, Warsaw The poster is based on the winning b...
Publishing research data as open data is not yet common practice for researchers in the arts and hum...
In the Humanities, data are difficult to define and all the more so to be properly curated and manag...
This recording took place during the DHCH2023 event in Rome on June 5-7 in 2023. This event focuses...
DARIAH (Digital Research Infrastructure for the Arts and Humanities) is a Europ...
As part of the DARIAH-DESIR project, a series of workshops will be organised in 2018 and 2019 entit...
What does it mean to treat poetry, brain scans, and library borrowing records alike as “data”? Today...
The digital transformation of research opened up radically new potentials in innovation and dissemin...
The DARIAH-EU Annual Event features a series of engaging keynote lectures and interactive sessions, ...
While the humanities have caught the “big data” wave, “little data” remains the norm in those many d...