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Showing posts with the label digital libraries

Access 2018 Conference Day 2 Afternoon Sessions #AccessYMH

Integrating Digital Humanities Into the Web of Scholarship with SHARE: An Exploration of Requirements Joanne Paterson osf.io/pkvtu Today going to talk about SHARE, ways to use, integrating DH scholarship, emerging themes and initial thoughts. What is SHARE? Schema agnostic approach to aggregate diverse metadata. Community open source initiative. Scholars are doing various things, how can we bring all that together so we can see their body of work and things that are related? ARL initiative started in 2013. Aggregates metadata. Looks at research cycle and various outputs of research. To aggregate metadata, they put out a call to ask someone to help them build this, answered by Center for Open Science. (OSF - looks at research workflow, allows you to collaborate with others and share easily). OSF free and open project support, can work privately or publicly. SHARE - harvested datasets from wherever they're open, metadata about scholarly research - scholar's portal, figshare...

Documenting Born Digital Creative and Scholarly Works for Access and Preservation [Day 2 a.m.]

Digital Humanities Summer Institute Workshop #2 Documenting Born Digital Creative and Scholarly Works for Access and Preservation Day 2 a.m. What can you walk away with in a week? What resources do you have to complete your vision (funding, skills, people, knowledge)? Where can you go for further help? What needs to be done for your project to count towards your academic output (RTP)? How do you document what you've done so it counts Barnett's Memory Machines .  Medieval Popular Culture - first time someone collected what the simple folk do, local catechisms, death records, reviving what was happening at ground level in continental Europe. Collecting current ephemera will be valuable to someone.  Virtuality and the Art of Exhibition by   Dziekan - online and physical exhibitions. Looks at teh notion of liveness. All digital objects are digital, but not all digital are virtual. Liveness/Virtuality has 3 characteristics: participatory, interactive, exp...

Documenting Born Digital Creative and Scholarly Works for Access and Preservation [Day 1, a.m.]

Digital Humanities Summer Institute Workshop #2 Documenting Born Digital Creative and Scholarly Works for Access and Preservation Morning Day 1 By Dene Grigar and Nicholas Schiller Syllabus In STEAM - virtual game platform, can put your game up and sell it (Apple store for games), game sits ephemeral on site, do not own it physically. Beyond Eyes Game Tags you would use: third person/God view , game, multimedia, interactive, juvenile, non-violent, indiegames [independent developers], visual novel, visual storytelling, blindness, memory, No one path, how do you represent that in documentation? Walkthroughs try to do that. Limited There's no practical limit to describing things (used to be 3, as many as you could fit on a catalog card). Translation studies: translators betray the text no matter what they do kakamoron - a bad, stupid thing (doesn't capture the stupidity and the badness in the English translation. We are translating for a future audience we don't ...

DHSI Colloquium Day Conference (Digital Humanities Summer Institute) - Morning

People Documenting Online Lives This is Just to Say I have the in Your : Modernist Memes in an Era of Public Apology by Shawna Ross (Texas A&M) Humanities Commons - the paper is available there. Trigger warning - evocation of people who are known abusers, racists, harassers--not what they've done, but their apologies and what they sound like. William Carlos William "This is Just To Say" was meme-ed on Twitter, blew up in Nov 2017. Proliferation of mashups. Why did this one blow up? Why not his "So Much Depends" which is fewer characters? Why is the shortest story #babyshoes meme mashup with the plums is more popular than #babyshoes alone? Why the surge? Poem's accessibility. Lack of meter and rhyme scheme makes it easy to understand and replicate. Compulsive overeating subject is attractive. Desired consumables - happened between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Wheelbarrow is less seductive than plums. Also people can finally use line breaks in Twitt...

Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 4 [Morning] Making Choices About Your Data

Making Choices About Your Data Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 4 (Morning) Paige Morgan and Yvonne Lam Housekeeping The Shock of the Old (D. Edgerton) - People adopt new tech but the old runs alongside for many reasons. (I'd also recommend The Diffusion of Innovations  on top of this.) Class discussion of D'Ignazio and Klein's "Feminist Data Visualization." Colonialist legacies of tabular data. Even JSON's tree structure is hierarchical. What should we use? Jacqueline Wernimont's Numbered Lives: Life and Death in Quantum Media .  Donella Meadows - leverage points. Instead of massive interventions (which can be most temporary and ephemeral), smaller interventions can be most powerful. Bethany's piece on "The eternal September" of DH - when do you stop explaining yourself to the new but not establish gatekeeping. People have to discover for themselves and discover where they are. --------------------------- Visi...

Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 3 [Morning] Making Choices About Your Data

Making Choices About Your Data Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 3 (Morning) Paige Morgan and Yvonne Lam Standardized rights statements: http://rightsstatements.org/en/ Controlled vocabularies Working with Openrefine Free work time Lunch Reading: Against Cleaning Free work time Tomorrow: Meeting with FemDH Controlled vocabulary: a set of carefully chosen words and phrases used to help structure and define information so that it can be easily returned in a search, or parsed by analysis programs. May be the basis for taxonomies and ontologies; can be hierarchical or restricted in various ways. Ex) Pizza vocabulary.  Crust (deep dish; crispy) Sauce (marinara, alfredo, olive oil) Cheese (mozzarella, Provolone, parmesan) Veggies (mushrooms, green peppers, onions, tomatoes, olives) Meat We can say every pizza must have a crust, must have one or more sauces, etc. Can add another layer and say there are 'veggie pizzas' and 'm...

Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 2 [Afternoon] Making Choices About Your Data

Making Choices About Your Data Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 2 Afternoon Paige Morgan and Yvonne Lam Find and share datasets at: Figshare Humanities CORE repository Data is Plural Twitter (datset #dataset) GitHub Documentation Data dictionaries a record of what data is and isn't supposed to do, definitions, usage similar to a codebook, used more by folks working with coding languages that define different functions, how was it done in this experiment. Data dictionaries do the same for humanities What are your categories meant to cover? Workflows Set of instructions/rules (doesn't need to be a table, can be a list - what to do for each thing, what not to do) see smartdraw,com For tomorrow: Openrefine.org is free, works on Windows and Linux (use 2.8, not the beta)

Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 2 [Morning] Making Choices About Your Data

Making Choices About Your Data Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 2 Morning Paige Morgan and Yvonne Lam Clean data vs tidy data Cleaner data is grouped in fewest 'boxes' possible, categories. makes data more interoperable and legible to their agencies. Think 'race/ethnicity' - either few checkboxes/labels, or open where folks can write in anything at all (where running analysis would be difficult). Ambiguity and complexity. Ambiguity is - how does having more or less ambiguity in your data/project affect where the work goes?  Limited categories is legible and understandable to others. If you are studying something that manifests differently among categories, you'd need the 'messier' more detailed data.  machine parsable non machine parsable less accurate more accurate representation of complexity Book recommendation: Sorting Things Out - death causes and diseases data. Dataset originated for people working on merchant ...

Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 1 [Afternoon] Making Choices About Your Data

Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 1 Afternoon Paige Morgan and Yvonne Lam [ #wrangledata ] Are you in it for the process or the product? Need to be sure you and your tenure committee and chair are on the same page. Ex - Old Bailey online is most successful. Over 300 years of records from London's criminal court. Can search all sorts of facets. Project has several controlled vocabularies for offenses, verdicts, sentences, etc. This successful project was funded by UK grantign agencies that grant within high 6 figures into low 7 figures (pounds, not dollars) - that's the kind of money it takes for a source project. Depending on wher you get news of DH from, you'll hear about different types and aspects of DH. Twitter: cool projects, I'm looking for this kind of tool, omg this tool is failing, small projects and struggling with DH. Not going to hear that from the elite and official sources - if reading from mainly elite official sources, your first o...

Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 1 [Morning] Making Choices About Your Data

Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 1 Morning Paige Morgan and Yvonne Lam [ #wrangledata ] Goals Spreadsheet of data and metadata you can take to librarian or developer Clearer idea of what research questions you can ask of your data Better sense of what tools would be a good fit for your data; or what you would need to do to your data to make it work better with certain tools Start of specific plans about work that you want to do ON your data So much depends on what you're going to prioritize because you are not going to learn all the things at once. Encouragement ot think carefully and realistically and generously with selves about setting goals of what we're going to learn. Goals, milestones , FemTechNet MEALS Framework Idea is to poke a little bit at assumptions we have about technologies work and good ways of using them, what's an acceptable thing to apply technology to (mostly discussing digital tech). Not only is there this idea of ho...

Digital Humanities Summer Institute #DHSI18 Day 1 Orientation/Welcome

Welcome Ray Siemens, Alyssa Arbuckle Library and faculty of the humanities joined together. Territory welcome: Victor Underwood Welcome to UVic: Jonathan Bengston (University Librarian)  Acknowledgment of the peoples on whomse traditional territories the UVic stands - I've seen this at other Canadian uni conferences. Library's trusted role in enabling and serving knowledge must engage actively with stakeholders in adopting sustainable methods. Academic libraries are increasingly valued interdisciplinary research collaborators. UVic reoriented about 6 years ago anticipating change in research environment (MIT draft Future fo the Library report of 2017 - libraries a networked set of open digital global platforms). Jounrey UVic is walking that is enriched and informed by strength of dighum faculty and students. Margaret Cameron (Assoc Dean Research, Humanities) See 3rd floor library digital commons. Humanities refers to library as "laboratory from parchment to pi...

UC DLFx 2018: Defining and Sustaining Digital Collection and Scholarship Services

UC DLFx 2018 Defining and Sustaining Digital Collection and Scholarship Services Zoe Borovsky UCLA), Mary Elings, Erik Mitchell (UCB), Laura Smart (UCI), Carl G. Stahmer (UCD), Stacey Reardon (UCB)  Dialogic open space: Panelists will introduce.  Framing questions What current use cases demonstrate a need for DS? Who are we missing? Demographics of folks we're serving? How are digital outputs changing our collection and preservation strategies and what changes do we need to make in the future? What additional or redeployed resources and labor will be required to provide necessary services? Are current and imagined services sustainable compared to traditional library services? https://ds.lib.ucdavis.edu/ucdlf has the questionnaire No one definition of digital scholarship, but seeing working with different groups on campus, but not sure how working best with that group. Is this question of expertise or infrastructure that we're providing? Different v...