AHLib is a collection of 183 Slovene books from the XIX. century.
The books were digitised in the scope of the project
Deutsch-slowenische/kroatische Übersetzung 1848–1918 with
the aim of conducting a linguistic study of Slovene books translated
from German in this period. The project was financed by the Austrian
Academy of Sciences and led by prof. Erich Prunč, from the
Karl-Franzens University in Graz.
AHLib is there available in a digital library and under a concordancer
Araucaria is a software tool for analysing arguments. The software also supports argumentation schemes, and provides a user-customisable set of schemes with which to analyse arguments.
Il progetto AITER (Archivio Italiano Tradizione Epistolare in Rete), che coinvolge cinque unità di ricerca (Università degli Studi di Pavia; Università per Stranieri di Siena; Università degli Studi di Roma "La Sapienza"; Università degli Studi di Cassino; Università degli Studi di Milano), si propone di avviare la creazione di un modello di banca dati di corpora epistolografici dal Medioevo al Novecento, basato su un'interfaccia web per la lettura dei testi, consultabile attraverso un motore di ricerca.
ARK the Archaeological Recording Kit is an opensource, standards compliant, web-delivered system for the creation, storage, manipulation and publication of archaeological data and media.
“Consider a future device … in which an individual stores all his books, records, and communications, and which is mechanized so that it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility. It is an enlarged intimate supplement to his memory.”
Atomic philology and parallel philology – some implications of the CITE architecture. A paper for the workshop Digital Classics III: Re-thinking Text Analysis, Heidelberg, May 2017
Biblissima — Bibliotheca bibliothecarum novissima — est un observatoire du patrimoine écrit du Moyen Âge et de la Renaissance, construit grâce au programme Équipements d’excellence des Investissements d’avenir.
Carneades is an argument mapping application, with a graphical user interface, and a software library for building applications supporting various argumentation tasks.
Ziel des Projektes Codices Electronici Sangallenses (Digitale Stiftsbibliothek St. Gallen) ist es, die mittelalterlichen Handschriften der Stiftsbibliothek St. Gallen durch eine virtuelle Bibliothek zu erschliessen.
1.° Albii Tibulli elegiarum libri quatuor. — 2.° Sexti Aurelii Propertii elegiarum libri quatuor. — 3.° Valerii Catulli , Veronensis, liber epigrammatum variorumque poëmatum. — 4.° Epistola Sapphus ad Phaonem. — 5.° Petronii Arbitri fragmenta, quae edita sunt. — 6.° Moretum, carmen quod Virgilio tribuitur. — 7.° Claudiani carmen de phoenice - 1401-1500 - manuscrits
R. Schreibman, and J. Unsworth (Eds.) Blackwell, (2004)TOC
Notes on contributors
Foreword: Roberto Busa
Introduction: Susan Schreibman, Ray Siemens and John Unsworth
Part I: History:
1. The History of Humanities Computing: Susan Hockey (University College London)
2. Archaeology: Nick Eiteljorg
3. Art History: Michael Greenhalgh (Australian National University)
4. Classics: Greg Crane
5. History: Will Thomas (University of Virginia)
6. Lexicography: Russ Wooldridge (University of Toronto)
7. Linguistics: Jan Hajic (Charles University)
8. Literary Studies: Thomas Rommel (International University Bremen)
9. Music: Ichiro Fujinaga (McGill University) & Susan Weiss (Johns Hopkins University)
10. New Media: Geoff Rockwell (McMaster University) and Andrew Mactavish (McMaster University)
11. Performing Arts: David Saltz, UGA
12. Philosophy and Religion: Charles Ess (Drury University)
Part II: Principles:
13. How Computers Work: Andrea Laue (University of Virginia)
14. Classification and its structures: Michael Sperberg McQueen
15. Databases: Steve Ramsay (University of Georgia)
16. What is Already Encoded by the Text: Jerry McGann (University of Virginia)
17. Text Encoding: Allen Renear
18. Perspectives and Communities: Perry Willett (Indiana University)
19. Models: Willard McCarty (King's College London)
Part III: Applications:
20. Analysis and Authorship Studies: Hugh Craig (University of Newcastle, NSW)
21. Preparation and Analysis of Linguistic Corpora: Nancy Ide (Vassar College)
22. Electronic Scholarly Editing: Martha Nell Smith (Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities)
23. Textual Analysis: John Burrows
24. Thematic Research Collections: Carole Palmer (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
25. Print Scholarship and Digital Resources: Claire Warwick (University College London)
26. Digital Media and the Analysis of Film: Bob Kolker
27. Cognitive Stylistics and the Literary Imagination: Ian Lancashire (University of Toronto)
28. Multivariant Narratives: Marie-Laure Ryan
29. Speculative Computing: Aesthetic Provocations in Humanities Computing: Johanna Drucker (University of Virginia) & Bethany Nowviskie (University of Virginia)
30. Robotic Poetics: Bill Winder (University of British Columbia)
Part IV: Production, Dissemination, Archiving:
31. Project Design: Daniel Pitti (University of Virginia)
32. Conversion of Primary Sources: Marilyn Deegan (Oxford University) & Simon Tanner (Kings College London)
33. Text Tools: John Bradley (Kings College London)
34. Interface, Aesthetics, and Usability: Matt Kirschenbaum (University of Maryland, College Park)
35. Electronic Publishing: Michael Jensen
36. Digital Libraries in the Humanities: Howard Besser (New York University)
37. Preservation: Abby Smith
Index.
C. Bary, P. Berck, and I. Hendrickx. Proceedings of the 2Nd International Conference on Digital Access to Textual Cultural Heritage, page 91--95. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2017)
B. McGillivray. Proceedings of the ACL 2010 Student Research Workshop, page 73--78. Stroudsburg, PA, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2010)
J. Serrano, M. del Castillo, A. Iglesias, and J. Oliva. Neural Networks, 2008. IJCNN 2008. (IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence). IEEE International Joint Conference on, (June 2008)