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5th DH 2010: London, UK
- Elena Pierazzo, Charlotte Tupman, Camille Desenclos:

5th Annual International Conference of the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations, DH 2010, London, UK, July 7-10, 2010, Conference Abstracts. Office for Humanities Communication and Centre for Computing in the Humanities 2010, ISBN 978-0-9565793-0-0
Plenary Sessions
- Charles J. Henry:

To Hold Up a Mirror: Preservation and Interpretation of Performance in a Digital Age. 7 - Joseph Raben:

Humanities Computing in an Age of Social Change. 8 - Melissa Terras:

Present, Not Voting: Digital Humanities in the Panopticon. 9-12
Art Installations
- Michael Takeo Magruder, Hugh Denard:

Vanishing Point(s) and Communion. 13-16 - Ele Carpenter:

The Embroidered Digital Commons: Rescension. 17-20
Pre-Conference Workshops
- Stuart Dunn:

Access to the Grid: Interfacing the Humanities with Grid Technologies. DH 2010: 21 - Joanne Evans, Nikki Henningham, Helen Morgan:

Content, Compliance, Collaboration and Complexity: Creating and Sustaining Information. DH 2010: 22 - Gerhard Heyer, Marco Büchler, Thomas Eckart, Charlotte Schubert:

Text Mining in the Digital Humanities. DH 2010: 23-24 - Stéfan Sinclair, Geoffrey Rockwell:

Introduction to Text Analysis Using JiTR and Voyeur. DH 2010: 25 - Angela Veomett:

Designing a Digital Humanities Lab. DH 2010: 26 - Dana Wheeles, Laura Mandell:

Peer Reviewing Digital Archives: the NINES model. DH 2010: 27-30
Panels
- Tanya E. Clement, Fotis Jannidis, Willard McCarty:

Digital Literacy for the Dumbest Generation - Digital Humanities Programs 2010. 31-36 - Karina van Dalen-Oskam, Jacob Thaisen, Mike Kestemont:

Computational approaches to textual variation in medieval literature. 37-43 - Charles van den Heuvel, Smiljana Antonijevic, Tobias Blanke, David J. Bodenhamer, Fotis Jannidis, Bethany Nowviskie, Geoffrey Rockwell, Joris van Zundert:

Building the Humanities Lab: Scholarly Practices in Virtual Research Environments. 44-45 - Matthew Kirschenbaum, Patrick Juola, Philip Sabin:

Wargames in a Digital Age. 46-51 - K. Faith Lawrence, Paolo Battino, Paul Rissen, Michael O. Jewell, Tarcisio Lancioni:

Scanning Between the Lines: The Search for the Semantic Story. 52-60 - Jarom McDonald, Alan K. Melby, Harold Hendricks:

Standards, Specifications, and Paradigms for Customized Video Playback. 61-67 - A. Charles Muller, Kozaburo Hachimura, Shoichiro Hara, Toshinobu Ogiso, Mitsuru Aida, Koichi Yasuoka, Ryo Akama, Masahiro Shimoda, Tomoji Tabata, Kiyonori Nagasaki:

The Origins and Current State of Digitization of Humanities in Japan. 68-70 - Gabriela Redwine, Matthew Kirschenbaum, Michael Olson, Erika L. Farr:

Born Digital: The 21st Century Archive in Practice and Theory. 71-75 - Almila Akdag Salah, Wouter de Nooy, Zoe Borovsky:

Networks of Stories, Structures and Digital Humanities. 76-81 - Ray Siemens, Michael Eberle-Sinatra, Lynne Siemens, Stéfan Sinclair, Susan Brown, Meagan Timney, Geoffrey Rockwell:

Understanding the 'Capacity' of the Digital Humanities: The Canadian Experience, Generalised. 82-83 - Martin Wynne, Sheila Anderson, Neil Fraistat, Chad Kainz, Steven Krauwer, David Robey, Harold Short:

Coalition of Humanities and Arts Infrastructures and Networks - CHAIN. 84-86
Papers
- Deborah Anderson:

Character Encoding and Digital Humanities in 2010 - An Insider's View. 87-88 - Andrew Thomas Ashton:

Semantic Cartography: Using RDF/OWL to Build Adaptable Tools for Text Exploration. 89-91 - Sofia J. Athenikos:

Using Wikipedia to Enable Entity Retrieval and Visualization Concerning the Intellectual/Cultural Heritage. 92-93 - Elton T. E. Barker, Chris Pelling, Stefan Bouzarovski, Leif Isaksen:

Mapping the World of an Ancient Greek Historian: The HESTIA Project. 94-97 - Piotr Banski, Adam Przepiórkowski:

TEI P5 as a Text Encoding Standard for Multilevel Corpus Annotation. 98-99 - Jonathan Blaney:

Developing a Collaborative Online Environment for History - the Experience of British History Online. 100 - John Bork:

From Codework to Working Code: A Programmer's Approach to Digital Literacy. 101-102 - Claire Brierley, Eric Atwell:

Non-traditional Prosodic Features for Automated Phrase-Break Prediction. 103-104 - Susan Brown, Jeffery Antoniuk, Michael Bauer, Jennifer Berberich, Milena Radzikowska, Stan Ruecker, Terence Yung:

How Do You Visualize a Million Links? 105-107 - George Buchanan, Kirsti Bohata:

Digital Libraries of Scholarly Editions. 108-109 - Mark Byron:

Digital Mediation of Modernist Literary Texts and their Documents. 110-112 - Marco Büchler, Annette Geßner, Gerhard Heyer, Thomas Eckart:

Detection of Citations and Textual Reuse on Ancient Greek Texts and its Applications in the Classical Studies: eAQUA Project. 113-114 - Paul Caton:

No Representation Without Taxonomies: Specifying Senses of Key Terms in Digital Humanities. 115-117 - Paul Conway:

Modes of Seeing: Case Studies on the Use of Digitized Photographic Archives. 118-119 - Paul Conway, Neil Fraistat, Patricia Galloway, Kari Kraus, Dean Rehberger, Katherine L. Walter:

Digital Humanities Internships: Creating a Model iSchool-Digital Humanities Center Partnership. 120-122 - Christopher Coufal, Patrick Juola:

Authorship Discontinuities of El Ingenioso Hidalgo don Quijote de la Mancha as detected by Mixture-of-Experts. 123 - Hugh Craig:

Entropy and Divergence in a Modern Fiction Corpus. 124-125 - Marcus Deufert, Judith Blumenstein, Andreas Trebesius, Stefan Beyer, Marco Büchler:

Objective Detection of Plautus' Rules by Computer Support. 126-127 - Peter Doorn, Dirk Roorda:

The ecology of longevity: the relevance of evolutionary theory for digital preservation. 128-129 - Michael Eberle-Sinatra, Tom C. Crochunis, Jon Sachs:

Joanna Baillie's : from Hypermedia Edition to Resonant Responses. 130-131 - Maciej Eder:

Does Size Matter? Authorship Attribution, Small Samples, Big Problem. 132-134 - Maria Esteva, Weijia Xu:

Finding Stories in the Archive through Paragraph Alignment. 135-137 - Joanne Evans, Helen Morgan, Nikki Henningham:

Naming the unnamed, speaking the unspoken, depicting the undepicted: story. 138-139 - Edward Finn:

The Social Lives of Books: Mapping the Ideational Networks of Toni Morrison. 140-142 - Domenico Fiormonte, Laura Guadalupi:

Codifica digitale e semiotica della cultura: un esperimento. 143-145 - Kathleen Fitzpatrick:

Open vs. Closed: Changing the Culture of Peer Review. 146-147 - Julia Flanders, Syd Bauman:

Using ODD for Multi-purpose TEI Documentation. 148-149 - John Flower, Pamela Leonard, Worthy Martin:

Xiakou: A Case Study in Digital Ethnography. 150-152 - Fenella G. France, Michael B. Toth, Eric F. Hansen:

Challenges of Linking Digital Heritage Scientific Data with Scholarly Research: From Navigation to Politics. 153-155 - Liuliu Fu, Kurt Maly, Harris Wu, Mohammad Zubair:

Building Dynamic Image Collections from Internet. 156-158 - Ian N. Gregory:

GIS, Texts and Images: New approaches to landscape appreciation in the Lake District. 159 - Georgina Guy, Stuart Dunn, Nicolas Gold:

Capturing Visitor Experiences for Study and Preservation. 160-162 - David I. Holmes, Daniel W. Crofts:

The Diary of a Public Man: A Case Study in Traditional and Non-Traditional Authorship Attribution. 163-164 - Martin Holmes:

Using the Universal Similarity Metric to Map Correspondences between Witnesses. 165-167 - David L. Hoover:

Teasing Out Authorship and Style with T-tests and Zeta. 168-170 - Sonia Howell, John G. Keating, Margaret Kelleher:

A New Digital Method for a New Literary Problem: A Proposed Methodology for Briding the "Generalist" - "Specialist" Divide in the Study of World Literature. 171-173 - Barbara Hui:

"Litmap": Networked Narratives. 174 - Jane Hunter, Timothy W. Cole, Robert Sanderson, Herbert Van de Sompel:

The Open Annotation Collaboration: A Data Model to Support Sharing and Interoperability of Scholarly Annotations. 175-177 - Lesley Jeffries, Brian David Walker:

A corpus approach to cultural keywords: a critical corpus-based analysis of ideology in the Blair years (1998-2007) through print news reporting. 178-180 - Sarah Whitcher Kansa, Nada Shabout, Saleem Al-Bahloly:

The Modern Art Iraq Archive (MAIA): Web tools for Documenting, Sharing and Enriching Iraqi Artistic Expressions. 181-183 - Johannes Kepper:

A Data Model for Digital Musicology and its Current State - The Music Encoding Initiative. 184 - Lewis R. Lancaster:

From Text to Image to Analysis: Visualization of Chinese Buddhist Canon. 185-186 - Anouk Lang:

Crossing the Boundary: Exploring the Educational Potential of Social Networking Sites. 187-189 - Alexei Lavrentiev, Serge Heiden, Adrien Yepdieu:

Queste del Saint Graal: Textometry Platform on the Service of a Scholarly Edition. 190-191 - Bethany Nowviskie, Dot Porter:

The Graceful Degradation Survey: Managing Digital Humanities Projects Through Times of Transition and Decline. 192-193 - Lisa Lena Opas-Hänninen, Ilkka Juuso, William A. Kretzschmar Jr., Tapio Seppänen:

LAP, LICHEN, and DASS - Experiences combining data and tools. 194-195 - Christian-Emil Ore, Espen S. Ore:

Re-linking a Dictionary Universe or the Meta-dictionary Ten Years Later. 196-198 - Nuria Rodríguez-Ortega:

Digital Resources for Art-Historical Research: Critical Approach. 199-201 - Wendell Piez:

Towards Hermeneutic Markup: An architectural outline. 202-205 - Peter Robinson, Federico Meschini:

Works, Documents, Texts and Related Resources for Everyone. 206-207 - Geoffrey Rockwell, Stan Ruecker, Peter Organisciak, Megan Meredith-Lobay, Kamal Ranaweera, Stéfan Sinclair:

A Day in the Life of Digital Humanities. 208-210 - Dirk Roorda, Erik-Jan Bos, Charles van den Heuvel:

Letters, Ideas and Information Technology: Using digital corpora of letters to disclose the circulation of knowledge in the 17th century. 211-213 - Claire Ross, Melissa Terras, Claire Warwick, Anne Welsh:

Pointless Babble or Enabled Backchannel: Conference Use of Twitter by Digital Humanists. 214-216 - Joseph Rudman:

The State of Non-Traditional Authorship Attribution Studies - 2010: Some Problems and Solutions. 217-218 - Jan Rybicki, Maciej Eder:

Deeper Delta Across Genres and Languages: Do We Really Need the Most Frequent Words? 219-224 - Maxime B. Sainte-Marie, Jean-Guy Meunier, Nicolas Payette, Jean-François Chartier:

Reading Darwin Between the Lines: A Computer-Assisted Analysis of the Concept of Evolution in. 225-227 - Stephanie A. Schlitz:

The TEI's Extramural Journal Project: Exploring New Digital Environments and Defining a New Genre in Academic Publishing. 228-229 - Melanie Schlosser, H. Lewis Ulman:

The Specimen Case and the Garden: Preserving Complex Digital Objects, Sustaining Digital Projects. 230-231 - Lynne Siemens, Richard Cunningham, Wendy Duff, Claire Warwick:

A Tale of Two Cities: Implications of the Similarities and Differences in Collaborative Approaches within the Digital Libraries and Digital Humanities Communities. 232-234 - Natasha Smith, Robert C. Allen, Anne Whisnant, Kevin Eckhardt, Elise Moore:

Unfolding History with the Help of the GIS Technology: a Scholar-Librarian Quest for Creating Digital Collections. 235-237 - Malgorzata Sokól:

WW1 and WW2 on a Specialist E-forum. Applying Corpus Tools to the Study of Evaluative Language. 238 - Kingkarn Sookhanaphibarn, Ruck Thawonmas:

Visualization and Analysis of Visiting Styles in 3D Virtual Museums. 239-243 - C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, Yves Marcoux, Claus Huitfeldt:

Two representations of the semantics of TEI Lite. 244-245 - Joshua Sternfeld:

Thinking Archivally: Search and Metadata as Building Blocks for a New Digital Historiography. 246-248 - Lisa Swanstrom:

e-Vocative Cases: Digitality and Direct Address. 249-250 - Ségolène M. Tarte:

Digitizing the Act of Papyrological Interpretation: Negotiating Spurious Exactitude and Genuine Uncertainty. 251-253 - Toma Tasovac:

Reimagining the Dictionary, or Why Lexicography Needs Digital Humanities. 254-256 - Alejandro Toledo, Ruck Thawonmas:

Contexts, Narratives, and Interactive Visual Analysis of Names in the Japanese Hyohanki Diary. 257-259 - John A. Walsh, Pin Sym Foong

, Kshitiz Anand, Vignesh Ramesh:
"Quivering Web of Living Thought": Mapping the Conceptual Networks of Swinburne's. 260-261 - John A. Walsh, Wally Hooper:

"It's Volatile": Standards-Based Research & Research-Based Standards Development. 262-263 - Corinne Welger-Barboza:

Quelques réflexions sur l'effet propédeutique des catalogues des collections des musées en ligne. 264-266 - Kris West, Clare Llewellyn, John Burns:

"Any more Bids?": Automatic Processing and Segmentation of Auction Catalogs. 267-270 - Christian Wittern:

Mandoku - An Incubator for Premodern Chinese Texts - or How to Get the Text We Want: An Inquiry into the Ideal Workflow. 271-272 - Jichen Zhu:

Towards a Computational Narration of Inner World. 273-278
Posters
- Biligsaikhan Batjargal, Garmaabazar Khaltarkhuu, Fuminori Kimura, Akira Maeda:

An Approach to Ancient-to-modern and Cross-script Information Access for Traditional Mongolian Historical Collections. 279-281 - Marcus Bingenheimer, Jen-Jou Hung:

A Digital Archive of Buddhist Temple Gazetteers. 282-283 - Tobias Blanke, Eric Haswell:

Preparing the DARIAH e-Infrastructure. 284 - James Brown, Howard Hotson, Neil Jefferies:

Cultures of Knowledge: An Intellectual Geography of the Seventeenth-Century Republic Letters. 285-286 - George Buchanan, Helen Dodd:

Supporting User Search for Discovering Collections of Interest. 287-289 - Janet Marie Bunde, Deena Engel:

An Inter-Disciplinary Approach to Web Programming: A Collaboration Between the University Archives and the Department of Computer Science. 290-291 - Teresa Dobson, Michael Eberle-Sinatra, Stan Ruecker, Shannon Lucky:

Citation Rhetoric Examined. 292-293 - Christopher W. Forstall, Sarah L. Jacobson, Walter J. Scheirer:

Evidence of Intertextuality: Investigating Paul the Deacon's. 294-295 - Susan Garfinkel, Jurretta Jordan Heckscher:

Historical Interpretation through Multiple Markup: The Case of Horatio Nelson Taft's Diary, 1861-62. 296-298 - Frédéric Glorieux, Olivier Canteaut, Vincent Jolivet:

Diple, modular methodology and tools for heterogeneous TEI corpora. 299-300 - Wayne Graham:

A New Spatial Analysis of the Early Chesapeake Architecture. 301-302 - Brett D. Hirsch, Meagan Timney:

The Importance of Pedagogy: Towards a Companion to Teaching Digital Humanities. 303 - Alpo Honkapohja:

A Bilingual Digital Edition of Trinity College Cambridge MS O.1.77. 304-305 - David L. Hoover:

The Craig Zeta Spreadsheet. 306-308 - Masahiro Hori, Osamu Imahayashi, Tomoji Tabata, Miyuki Nishio:

The Dickens Lexicon and its Practical Use for Linguistic Research. 309-310 - Marius Hug, Christian Kassung, Sebastian Meyer:

Dingler-Online - The Digitized "Polytechnisches Journal" on Goobi Digitization Suite. 311-312 - Claus Huitfeldt, C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, Yves Marcoux:

The MLCD Overlap Corpus (MOC). 313-316 - Steven E. Jones, Peter Shillingsburg, George K. Thiruvathukal:

Creative Engagement with Creative Works: a New Paradigm for Collaboration. 317-318 - Patrick Juola:

Distant Reading and Mapping Genre Space via Conjecture-based Distance Measures. 319 - Patrick Juola:

Psycholinguistically Plausible Events and Authorship Attribution. 320 - Heli Kautonen, Tapani Sainio, Mikael Vakkari:

National Digital Library of Finland: Putting the Resources of Culture, Science and Teaching at Everyone's Fingertips. 321-323 - Hussein Keshani:

Towards Digital Built Environment Studies: An Interface Design for the Study of Medieval Delhi. 324-326 - Piroska Lendvai, Thierry Declerck, Sándor Darányi, Scott A. Malec:

Propp Revisited: Integration of Linguistic Markup into Structured Content Descriptors of Tales. 327-330 - Harald Lüngen, Henning Lobin:

Extracting domain knowledge from tables of contents. 331-334 - Marie-Madeleine Martinet, Liliane Gallet-Blanchard:

Museums of the virtual future. 335-336 - Elli Mylonas, Heidi Wendts, John Bodel:

Discursive Metadata and Controlled Vocabularies. 337-338 - Brent Nelson:

The Digital Ark: From Taxonomy to Ontology in 17th-century Collections of Curiosities. 339-340 - Bethany Nowviskie:

"Inventing the Map: " from 19th-century Pedagogical Practice to 21st-century Geospatial Scholarship. 341-343 - Shin Ohno, Shinya Saito, Mitsuyuki Inaba:

An Open Source Toolkit for Flexible Browsing of Historical Maps on the Web. 344-346 - Takaaki Okamoto:

Text-Image linking of Japanese historical documents: Sharing and exchanging data by using text-embedded image file. 347-349 - Ernesto Priani, Isabel Galina, Alí Martínez, Guillermo Chávez:

Knowledge and Conservation - Creating the Digital Library of New Hispanic Thought. 350-352 - Doug Reside:

Digital Forensics, Textual Criticism, and the Born Digital Musical. 353 - Jennifer Roberts-Smith, Teresa Dobson, Sandra Gabriele, Stan Ruecker, Stéfan Sinclair, Matthew Bouchard, Shawn DeSouza-Coelho, Annemarie Kong, David Lam, Omar Rodriguez-Arenas, Karen Taylor:

Literary Theory and Theatre Practice: A Comparative Study of Watching the Script and the Simulated Environment for Theatre. 354-355 - Torsten Roeder:

The Person Data Repository. 356-359 - Matteo Romanello:

Structured and Unstructured: Extracting Information from Classics Scholarly Texts. 360-362 - Jan Rybicki:

Original, Translation, Inflation. Are All Translations Longer than Their Originals? 363-364 - Shinya Saito, Shin Ohno, Mitsuyuki Inaba:

A Platform for Cultural Information Visualization Using Schematic Expressions of Cube. 365-367 - Seiya Tsuruta, Woong Choi, Kozaburo Hachimura:

Generation of Emotional Dance Motion for Virtual Dance Collaboration System. 368-371 - Natasha Smith, Hugh Cayless:

"You don't have to be famous for your life to be history": The Dusenbery Journal and img2xml. 372 - Lisa M. Snyder, Scott Friedman:

Delivering virtual reality: a proposal for facilitating pedagogical use of three-dimensional computer models of historic urban environments. 373-376 - Kathryn Tomasek, Zephorene L. Stickney:

Digitizing Ephemera and Parsing an 1862 European Itinerary. 377-379 - Raffaele Viglianti:

Critical Editing of Music in the Digital Medium: an Experiment in MEI. 380-382 - Wybo Wiersma:

LogiLogi: The Quest for Critical Mass. 383-385 - Christopher York, Whitney Anne Trettien:

Software Demonstration, "Emergent Time" timeline tool. 386 - Heather Zwicker, Maureen Engel:

Putting Edmonton on the (Google) Map. 387-389 - Amélie Zöllner-Weber:

Text Encoding and Ontology - Enlarging an Ontology by Semi-Automatic Generated Instances. 390-391

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