New Trends in e-Humanities
KNAW e-Humanities Group
The e-Humanities Group generally holds a research meeting every Thursday afternoon, and persons interested in the topics of the presentations are welcome to attend.
Meetings are held at the eHumanities Group from 15.00 – 17.00 with one or two presentations on current research, followed by discussion.
Scholars engaged in the broad domain of e-research in the humanities and social sciences are invited to share their work at these meetings.
Next New Trends in eHumanities Meeting
Upcoming New Trends in eHumanities Meetings
May 12-13, 2016
CHproject – Tunes and Tales Final event
May 20, 2016
eHumanities group- Big Event!
Past, Present and Future of Digital Humanities & Social Sciences in the Netherlands
May 23-25, 2016
CHproject- Elite Network Shifts Final event
June 8, 2016
CH Project – CEDAR Final event
Computational Humanities Programme- Annual Symposium
June 26, 2013. The four Computational Humanities projects will bring us up-to-date with their progress over the past year. For each project
Matthijs Dröes, Meertens Institute
June 20, 2013. Workshop: interface design voor geesteswetenschappelijk onderzoek
Dr. Emilia Gómez, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona
June 6, 2013. Towards Computer-Assisted Transcription and Description of Music Recordings
Seda Guerses, Catholic University Leuven
May 23, 2013.. Exploring boundary work among computer scientists in the search for "privacy research paradigms''
Junte Zhang and Erik Tjong Kim Sang, Meertens Institute
May 16, 2013. Technical aspects of Nederlab, such as searching and vizualisation
Ashley Burgoyne, University of Amsterdam (UvA)
April 25, 2013. Fishing for Hooks: An Empirical Approach to Understanding Long-Term Musical Salience
1. Max Kemman, Erasmus University Rotterdam and Laura Hollink, VU University Amsterdam and 2. Maciej Eder, Pedagogical University in Kraków, eHg visiting fellow
April 18, 2013. Building the PoliMedia search system; data- and user-driven.
Authorship attribution and beyond: techniques of assessing the literary style.
1. Menzo Windhouwer, The Language Archive and 2. Eric Deibel, L’Institut francilien recherche, innovation et société” (IFRIS) en Centre d’Economie de l’Université Paris Nord (CEPN)
March 28, 2013. 2 Presentations
Willem Robert van Hage and Rinke Hoekstra, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
March 14, 2013. Tutorial on Analyzing and Visualizing Linked Data with R 2013
Wido van Peursen, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
March7, 2014. Data and Debora: New Avenues in the Computational Analysis of the Old Testament
Almila Akdag Salah, Samir Passi, Andrea Scharnhorst & Sally Wyatt (eHumanities Group)
February 14, 2013. Introducing the EU Network of Excellence about Internet Science: What does it mean for e-Humanities?
Christine Arnold, Maastricht University
January 31, 2013. Facets of Political Representation: Data and Measurements
Maarten de Rijke (UvA), Ridho Reinanda (KITLV, eHg)
January 24, 2013. Why Is Digital Humanities Interesting For A Computer Scientist?
Smiljana Antonijević and Ellysa Stern Cahoy, Penn State University
January 17, 2013. Following Workflow of a Digital Scholar
Folkert de Vriend, Meertens institute
January 10, 2013. Tools for Computational Analyses of Dialect Geography Data
Dr Juan Garcés, Academic Coordinator, Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities
December 6, 2012. eHumanities Group Annual Lecture
Gerrit Bloothooft, Universiteit Utrecht and Jan Pieter Kunst, Meertens Institute
November 29, 2012. Detailed interactive mapping of migration in the Netherlands in the 20th century
Christophe Guéret, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and e-Humanities Group and Clement Levallois, Erasmus University Rotterdam
November 22, 2012. Workshop on Linked Data: "Linked Data: Is It For Me?"
Peter Wittenburg, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
November 15, 2012. Interoperability - is it feasible -
1. Hui Jung Chang, Fu-Jen Catholic University, Taiwan. Visitor e-Humanities group and 2. José de Kruif , Utrecht University
November 8, 2012. 2 presentations
Junte Zhang, Meertens Institute
November 1, 2012. Digital Archiving at the Meertens Institute
Marten Düring, Radboud University Nijmegen
October 11, 2012. Project MERIT
Iina Hellsten, VU Free University Amsterdam
October 4, 2012. Activist Networks online: Methodological experiments
Karina van Dalen, Huygens ING
September 20, 2012. Names, Novels, and Namescape
Frank van Harmelen, VU University
/in New Trends in e-HumanitiesApril21, 2016. The Big Ideas in Computing
(and how they are relevant to eHumanities)