1 |
The CEDAR Project: Harmonizing the Dutch Historical censuses in the Semantic Web |
Ashkan Ashkpour and Albert Meroño-Peñuela |
2 |
TIME CAPSULE: making digital cultural heritage data accessible and applicable for humanities research |
Wouter Klein, Peter van den Hooff, Frans Wiering and Toine Pieters |
3 |
Studying variation in folk songs |
Berit Janssen and Peter van Kranenburg |
4 |
Modeling music and memory using information retrieval techniques and games with a purpose |
Jan van Balen, Themistoklis Karavellas, John Ashley Burgoyne, Frans Wiering, Dimitrios Bountouridis and Henkjan Honing |
5 |
Studying induced musical emotion via a corpus of annotations collected through crowd-sourcing |
Anna Aljanaki, Frans Wiering and Remco Veltkamp |
6 |
Coding the Humanities |
Jan Hein Hoogstad and Marijn Koolen |
7 |
In search for patterns. Analyzing syntactic diversity in the Hebrew Bible |
Wido van Peursen |
8 |
Preliminaries to a Digitally Carried Out Philosophy |
Niels-Oliver Walkowski |
9 |
Language adaptability and performance evaluation of historical text |
Iris Hendrickx and Martin Reynaert |
10 |
The text of the document. Image-text linking in the Beckett Digital Manuscript Project |
Wout Dillen |
11 |
Patterns of reception: analyzing the artistic reception of early nineteenth-century British genre painting with phylogenetic systematics |
Sophie Kruijssen |
12 |
Digital Architecture and the Role of the Editor: Mapping Invention in Writing |
Elli Bleeker |
13 |
Talk of Europe – Linking European Parliament Proceedings |
Max Kemman and Astrid van Aggelen |
14 |
An exploration of computational stylistics as applied to encyclopaedic and polemical literature |
Gunther Martens |
15 |
Linking the STCN and performing big data queries in the humanities |
Wouter Beek, Rinke Hoekstra, Fernie Maas, Albert Meroño-Peñuela and Inger Leemans |
16 |
LAF-Fabric: a data analysis tool for Linguistic Annotation Framework with an application to the Hebrew Bible |
Dirk Roorda |
17 |
Defragmenting digitized manuscripts sources: A unified portal to medieval manuscripts |
Giulio Menna and Marjolein de Vos |
18 |
Talking numbers? What could they tell the literary historian? |
Toos Streng |
19 |
Chordify: Chord transcription for the masses |
Bas de Haas, José Pedro Magalhães, Dion ten Heggeler, Gijs Bekenkamp and Tijmen Ruizendaal |
20 |
Demonstrating “RemBench: A Digital Workbench for Rembrandt Research” |
Suzan Verberne and Rudie van Leeuwen |
21 |
Sailing Networks: Mapping Colonial Relations with Suriname’s Seventeenth-century Sailing Letters |
Mark Opmeer |
22 |
Data, Tools and a Lab for Researchers at the Koninklijke Bibliotheek |
Steven Claeyssens and Clemens Neudecker |
23 |
Computer automated collation with CollateX and Python |
Ronald Haentjens Dekker |
24 |
Nodegoat: a new web based research and visualisation platform, or how to receive academic credit for hybrid micropublications |
Pim van Bree and Geert Kessels |
25 |
Connecting the ‘webs’: Building interoperability into online services for stemmatology |
Tara Andrews, Simo Linkola, Teemu Roos and Joris van Zundert |
26 |
Oral History Today – Exploring Oral History Collections |
Max Kemman, Stef Scagliola, Franciska de Jong and Roeland Ordelman |