征文|Graph Technologies in the Humanities 2020(Vienna,2.21-22)
The conference will take place at the University of Vienna on 21 – 22 Feburary 2020
Modelling the Scholarly Process
Call for Papers
Key topics arising from the main theme Modelling the Scholarly Process include:
1. Provenance and source criticism – While Linked Open Data, in the form of RDF, has (outside of textual criticism) become something of a standard for repositories of humanities data, there is a certain hesitation around its reuse outside of the project in which it was created. The perception is that the RDF data will not be complete enough, accurate enough, or nuanced enough for use outside its original context. How can we address these questions of source critique, making the data maximally useful, either in an RDF-based project or in any other form of linked data?
2. Validation – One of the points of resistance to the adoption of graph models more widely in the humanities is the lack of a validation framework as well-known as XML schemas. Insofar as validation is a necessary part of the scholarly process, how do we do this with graph models?
3. Visualization – One of the acknowledged strengths of networked models is that they lend themselves very easily to visualization, which is a pivotal part of explaining the results and the scholarly process to our peers; at the same time, the“hairball” of a densely-connected network graph has become something of a cliché within the digital humanities. The urgent question thus arises: which visualization methods there are beyond the “hairball”? How can visualization techniques support the analytic richness of graph complexity while at the same time reduce it to the point of comprehensibility? Which modes are there to interact with graph data and how can visualization contribute to manipulation and editing of graph data?
We welcome proposals for theoretical papers that engage substantially with any of these key topics, as well as for practice-based papers that describe the practical application of graph technologies to humanities research work and/or present practical engineering solutions and approaches to these key questions or related topics such as:
Graph-based data models, theoretical and practical explorations
Applications of graph technologies in the humanities
Solutions for query and comparison of different graph models
Strategies for, or demonstration of, various kinds of (computational) access to humanities data and information represented as graphs
Graph representation of specific networks of persons, objects, and information relating to humanities research questions
Interacting with graphs and graph interaction design
Graphs as a solution for information and data annotation in the humanities
Graphs as models for representation of provenance and transmission of information
Graphs as models for historical data and information, above and beyond social network analysis
Engineering solutions to analysis, traversal, querying graph structure data in specific humanities research contexts
The comparison and interpretation of graphs, subgraphs, and traversals
Submission Details
Program Committee
Prof. Dr. Tara Andrews (University of Vienna)
Franziska Diehr (Prussian Heritage Foundation, Berlin)
Dr. Thomas Efer (University of Leipzig)
Dr. Andreas Kuczera (Academy of Science and Literature, Mainz/Gießen)
Drs. Joris van Zundert (Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands, Amsterdam)
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