Humanist Discussion Group

Humanist Archives: March 24, 2022, 6:01 a.m. Humanist 35.615 - events: increasing access; writing processes

				
              Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 35, No. 615.
        Department of Digital Humanities, University of Cologne
                      Hosted by DH-Cologne
                       www.dhhumanist.org
                Submit to: humanist@dhhumanist.org


    [1]    From: AEOLIAN Project <Aeolian@lboro.ac.uk>
           Subject: AEOLIAN Network Workshop 4: AI/ML: Increasing Access, Visibility, and Engagement (63)

    [2]    From: Floor Buschenhenke <floor.buschenhenke@huygens.knaw.nl>
           Subject: Symposium on digital writing processes (68)


--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Date: 2022-03-23 15:46:18+00:00
        From: AEOLIAN Project <Aeolian@lboro.ac.uk>
        Subject: AEOLIAN Network Workshop 4: AI/ML: Increasing Access, Visibility, and Engagement

Dear members,

Please join us on Tuesday 19th April and Wednesday 20th April for the AEOLIAN
Network’s fourth online workshop, 'AI/ML: Increasing Access, Visibility, and
Engagement', hosted by the Frick Art Reference Library (NYC). Full details for
Day 1 of the workshop are now available on our website, and further details of
Day 2 will be released shortly. Registration for both days is now open, and can
be accessed via our website: https://www.aeolian-network.net/events/online-
workshop-4/

As part of the two-day workshop, guest speakers from cultural institutions in
the U.S. and Europe will examine current and future trends in museums and
libraries utilizing artificial intelligence (AI), such as machine learning (ML),
to enhance visitor experiences.


Day One: Tuesday, 19 April

     – 9:00 am to 10:30 pm Pacific Daylight (UTC -7)

     – 11:00 am to 12:30 pm Central Daylight (UTC -6)

     – 12:00 pm to 1:30 pm Eastern Daylight (UTC -5)

     – 5:00 pm to 6:30 pm UK (UTC +1)

Day One of the two-day workshop, held via Zoom, opens with an interactive
session led by Elizabeth Merritt, Vice President for Strategic Foresight at the
American Alliance of Museums and Founding Director of the Center for the Future
of Museums (CFM), and chaired by Catherine Nicole Coleman. The end of the
workshop will be followed by an open session where participants will have the
opportunity to engage in discussion with Elizabeth about current technological
trends and the role of AI in art galleries, libraries, archives, and museums.


Day Two: Wednesday, 20 April

     – 8:00 am to 10:30 pm Pacific Daylight (UTC -7)

     – 10:00 am to 12:30 pm Central Daylight (UTC -6)

     – 11:00 pm to 1:30 pm Eastern Daylight (UTC -5)

     – 4:00 pm to 6:30 pm UK (UTC +1)

Day Two of this workshop, also held via Zoom, features case studies of projects
showcasing how artists, libraries, and archives are currently using AI and ML to
enhance visitor experiences. The talks will be followed by an open discussion
session where participants will have the opportunity to discuss these AI
initiatives and broader digital trends with the guest speakers. [Speakers for
day two will be confirmed shortly.]


We hope to see you there,

Best wishes,
Katie Aske

Dr Katherine Aske (she/her)
Research Assistant, AEOLIAN<https://www.aeolian-network.net/> and
AURA<https://www.aura-network.net/> Projects
School of Social Sciences and Humanities, Loughborough University


--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Date: 2022-03-23 14:48:11+00:00
        From: Floor Buschenhenke <floor.buschenhenke@huygens.knaw.nl>
        Subject: Symposium on digital writing processes

Invitation

Track Changes Symposium
April 28th, 2022
9.30 - 17:00 CET
Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Organised by Huygens ING (KNAW) & University of Antwerp

How do literary writers create their art? And how can we study their writing
process when they are writing in a digital environment? These questions form the
core of the research project Track Changes. We have brought together
international experts from writing process studies as well as from the field of
genetic criticism to share their insights and exchange ideas.

The conference will take place on site (Covid permitting) in Amsterdam, but
online attendance is also facilitated. If you would like to attend this
interdisciplinary day, registration is now open via this link:
https://trackchanges.survey.clariah.nl/index.php/517251?lang=en


Our Programme:

Time in writing
Elena Pierazzo - "A time for writing, a time for encoding"
Christophe Leblay (Online) - "Visualising the time-oriented data: From text
geneticsto mathematical graph theory"

Track Changes Project
Lamyk Bekius - "Nanogenesis: tracing the decision-making process in
literarywriting processes"
Floor Buschenhenke -
"From keystroke dynamics to writers' strategies"

Discovery and revision in writing
David Galbraith - "The dual process model of the development of content
duringwriting"
Andrea Révész & Marije Michel - "Cognitive processes of second language writers"

The art of the process: Digital forensics and timelapse
Annelyse Gelman on poetry timelapse journal
Midst
Thorsten Ries (Online) - "The historical dimension of the born-digital dossier
génétique"

KEYNOTE
Matthew Kirschenbaum (Online)
Track_Changes.book.v2.revised.28April2022_someupdatesandreflections


Best wishes on behalf of the organizers,

Floor Buschenhenke


PhD Student
Track Changes<https://www.huygens.knaw.nl/track-changes/>:Textual scholarship
and the challenge of digital literary writing
Dept. of Literary Studies
+31-614661675

Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands
(Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences)

Postbus (PO Box) 10855
NL - 1001 EW Amsterdam

Oudezijds Achterburgwal 185
NL - 1012 DK Amsterdam


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