As a humanities student with bachelor’s degrees in History and German Studies, a master’s in Medieval Studies, and now a Master’s of Library and Information Science (MLIS), I have seen the ...
Digital humanities scholars called on researchers to follow human-centered approaches to data science at an Oct. 14 event. Lauren Klein, a professor of data and decision sciences at Emory University, ...
The University of Chicago’s Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures has launched a new initiative, which brings together data science, AI and the humanities to transform how scholars study the ...
As Nigeria embraces the digital revolution in education, Digital Humanities (DH) is rapidly becoming a cornerstone of academic transformation. This shift is especially evident in the humanities, where ...
Methods are shifting in a rapidly growing field, as the recent exponential growth of AI, digital mapping, distant reading, digital visualizations, large language modeling, data scraping, and a myriad ...
The Connecticut State Library has received a $249,194 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to continue ...
Three researchers from the Faculty of Humanities, Communication and Documentation at the Carlos III University of Madrid ...
T he digital humanities disappeared right when we needed it most. The last real fight about “DH” happened in 2019. In that year, the literary scholar Nan Z. Da published an audit of “computational ...
Books with maps are like Captain Flint's buried loot in Robert Louis Stevenson's "Treasure Island"—a rare find, according to new Cornell research. Digital humanities scholars from the Cornell Ann S.
A new hub at Wolverhampton University has been set up to look at how Virtual Reality (VR) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) ...
A 2008 article in the Chronicle of Higher Education described the annual Digital Humanities Summer Institute as “Summer Camp for Digital Humanists”. This is a slightly fancier term than what fellow ...
Stories about the Virgin Mary “have been told by more people, over more centuries, in more countries, and in more languages” than stories about “anyone else ever,” says Wendy Laura Belcher, professor ...