CLARIN had a high visibility at the annual conference of the Digital Humanities, which was held 11-16 July 2016 in Kraków. CLARIN was a sponsor of the conference, and ran an exhibition booth to highlight CLARIN activities and meet people, with more than one thousand attendees in total. It proved to be an excellent opportunity to meet not only researchers, but also many people involved in other infrastructure intiatives. More than a dozen different people involved with CLARIN in many different countries manned the booth at various times, and the space was also shared with colleagues promoting the Parthenos project.
Numerous interesting connections were made, including finding participants and speakers for forthcoming workshops, and arranging repository solutions for orphaned data collections.
Below is a round-up of all of the workshops and papers with which they are involved. Read more in the online book of abstracts.
Workshops
- Audiovisual Data And Digital Scholarship: Towards Multimodal Literacy
- RDA/ADHO Workshop: Evaluating Research Data Infrastructure Components and Engaging in their Development
- Where Close and Distant Readings Meet: Text Clustering Methods in Literary Analysis of Weblog Genres, Maciej Maryl, Maciej Piasecki, Ksenia Młynarczyk
Papers and Posters
- correspSearch - A Web Service to Connect Diverse Scholarly Editions of Letters, Stefan Dumont
- Taalportaal: A New Tool For Linguistic Research, Ton van der Wouden
- REDEN ONLINE: Disambiguation, linking and visualisation of references in TEI digital editions, Francesca Frontini, Carmen Brando, Jean-Gabriel Ganascia
- When DH Meets Law: Problems, Solutions, Perspectives, Andreas Witt, Paweł Kamocki
- Topical Diversification Over Time In The Royal Society Corpus, Peter Fankhauser, Jörg Knappen, Elke Teich
- Linguistic Variation In The Hebrew Bible: Digging Deeper Than The Word Level, Martijn Naaijer, Dirk Roorda
- Bringing Migration Data Into Context Using Digital Computational Methods, Ronald Haentjens Dekker, Rik Hoekstra, Marijke van Faassen
- Digital Folkloristics: the Use of Computational Methods in Revealing the Characteristics of Folkloric Communication, Mari Sarv, Liisi Laineste, Greta Franzini, Emily Franzini, Kati Kallio, Risto Järv
- Digitale Tools und Methoden für die geisteswissenschaftliche Forschung praxisnah erklärt: Ein neues Format im Test, Tanja Wissik, Claudia Resch
- Flexible Community-driven Metadata with the Component Metadata Infrastructure, Menzo Windhouwer, Twan Goosen, Jozef Misutka, Dieter Van Uytvanck, Daan Broeder,
- WebSty – an Open Web-based System for Exploring Stylometric Structures in Document Collections , Maciej Piasecki, Tomasz Walkowiak, Maciej Eder
- Diachronic Semantic Lexicon of Dutch (Diachroon semantisch lexicon van de Nederlandse Taal; DiaMaNT), Katrien A. C. Depuydt
- Discursive Constructions Of Culture: A Semantic Model For Historical Travel Guides, Ulrike Czeitschner
- 1 Million Dutch Newspaper Images available for researchers: The KBK-1M Dataset, Martijn Kleppe, Elliott Desmond
- The Royal Society Corpus: Towards a high-quality corpus for studying diachronic variation in scientific writing, Hannah Kermes, Stefania Degaetano-Ortlieb, Ashraf Khamis, Jörg Knappen, Elke Teich
- eComparatio - Editionsvergleich, Charlotte Schubert, Friedrich Meins, Oliver Bräckel, Hannes Kahl
- Interoperability: a new horizon for data sharing in Humanities and Social Sciences. The input of three digital services developed by Huma-Num, , Olivier Baude, Adeline Joffres, Nicolas Larrousse, Stéphane Pouyllau
- Digital Resources and Research Data in the Digital Humanities: The Digital Knowledge Store at the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Marco Jürgens, Sascha Grabsch