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Insights into the Labour’s Memory Project Infrastructure

Raphaela Heil1Theo Erbenius1Isto Huvila2Eva Pettersson3Örjan Simonson1Olle Sköld2

1: Popular Movements’ Archive Uppsala, Sweden; 2: Department of ALM, Uppsala University, Sweden; 3: Department of Linguistics and Philology, Uppsala University, Sweden


 

Letter Collections – from Word to Web

Senka Drobac1, Hanna-Leena Paloposki2, Ilona Pikkanen2

1: University of Helsinki, Finland; 2: The Finnish Literature Society, Finland


 

Large language models to supercharge digital humanities

Andres Karjus1,2

1: Tallinn University; 2: Estonian Business School


 

Social Media Analysis of Public Reactions to the Israel-Gaza War: Insights from Facebook and Instagram

Wajdi Zaghouani2, Anissa Jrad1

1: HBKU, Qatar; 2: HBKU, Qatar


 

Uppsala Runestaff Database

Michael Dunn

Uppsala University, Sweden


 

Using ChatGPT for (semi-) automatic subject indexing of different document types

Johannes Widegren1Koraljka Golub1Jue Wang2

1: Linnaeus University, Sweden; 2: University of Chinese Academy of Science


 

A new resource of Icelandic sagas: Digitizing normalized scholarly editions and enhancing textual data

Ellert Þór Jóhannsson1, Þórður Ingi Guðjónsson2, Finnur Ágúst Ingimundarson1

1: Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic studies, Iceland; 2: Old Icelandic Text Society


 

404 Not Found. Dire Straits and Safe Havens for Digital Scholarly Editions in Norway

Annika Rockenberger, Johanne Emilie Christensen, Federico Aurora

University of Oslo Library, Norway


 

Archaeological Artefact Database of Finland (AADA)

Petro Pesonen1,2,3, Ulla Moilanen2Meeli Roose2, Jarkko Saipio1,2, Jasse Tiilikkala2,3, Usman Sanwal2, Visa Immonen4Outi Vesakoski2, Päivi Onkamo2

1: Finnish Heritage Agency, Finland; 2: University of Turku, Finland; 3: University of Helsinki, Finland; 4: University of Bergen, Norway


 

Latvian Prose Counter: from digitized books to data visualizations

Anda Baklāne, Valdis Saulespurēns

National Library of Latvia, Latvia


 

Digital tools, citizen engagement and vulnerable cultural heritage

Eiríkur Smári Sigurðarson1Skúli Björn Gunnarsson2, Alan Miller3

1: University of Iceland, Iceland; 2: Gunnar Gunnarsson Institute, Iceland; 3: St. Andrews University, Scotland


 

Jubileumsportalen – contextualizing 1923’s jubilee exhibition using digital methods

Siska Humlesjö, Johan Åhlfeldt, Anders Strinnholm

University of Gothenburg, Sweden


 

Representing the Íslendinga Saga As Knowledge Graphs of Events and Social Relationships: Developing Workflows Based on a Pilot Case

Shintaro YAMADA1, Jun OGAWA2, Ikki OHMUKAI1

1: The University of Tokyo, Japan; 2: ROIS-DS Center for Open Data in the Humanities, Japan


 

MARSAD Observatory: Monitoring and Analyzing Social Networks Topics in the MENA Region

Wajdi Zaghouani

Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Qatar


 

Display, Ontology and Database for Exhibition Documentation

Emmanuel Château-Dutier, Lena Krause, David Valentine, Zoë Renaudie

Université de Montréal


 

Runoregi: A User Interface for Exploring Text Similarity in Oral Poetry

Maciej Michał Janicki1, Kati Kallio1,2, Mari Sarv3, Eetu Mäkelä1

1: University of Helsinki, Finland; 2: Finnish Literature Society; 3: Estonian Literary Museum


 

Towards Standards in Digital Editions of Old Norse Prose: A Case Study

Sebastian Pohland

University of Oslo, Norway


 

Digital Datasets Created from Archival Sources: The Problem of Data Quality in the Study of Private Letters

Marin LaakKadri Vider, Neeme Kahusk, Mari Sarv

Estonian Literary Museum, Estonia


 

Capitalizing on experience to experiment and innovate: feedback and reflection on the future of the Huma-Num research infrastructure

Antoine Silvestre de SacyStéphane Pouyllau

IR* Huma-Num (UAR 3598), CNRS, France


 

Visualizing quire structures on Handrit.is

Beeke Stegmann

Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies, Iceland


 

Understanding researchers’ needs by surveying to support them

Liisa Näpärä

National Library of Finland, Finland


 

Uralic Historical Atlas (URHIA): Interactive web app for spatial data

Meeli Roose1, Tua Nylén1Petro Pesonen2, Harri Tolvanen1, Outi Vesakoski1

1: University of Turku, Finland; 2: Finnish Heritage Agency (Museovirasto)


 

Examples from the Translocalis: Cultural Heritage, Narratives, Emotions, Perceptions and Voices of the Finnish Media, People, and Soldiers on the Imperial War.

Aytac Yurukcu

University of Eastern Finland Karelian Institute


 

Automation of Linguistic Annotation in Historical Lithuanian Corpus

Mindaugas ŠinkūnasIgnas Rudaitis

Institute of the Lithuanian Language, Lithuania


 

Text Recognition, Network Analysis, and Spatial Analysis: Approaching 17th-Century Court Records from a New Perspective.

Ville-Pekka Iivari Kääriäinen

University of Helsinki, Finland


 

Historical Farm and People Registry – Turning static list entries into network nodes

Eiríkur Smári Sigurðarson1Pétur Húni Björnsson2

1: University of Iceland, Iceland; 2: Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies


 

Collecting streaming services

Andreas Lenander Ægidius1, Mads Møller Tommerup Andersen2

1: The Royal Danish Library, Denmark; 2: University of copenhagen, Denmark


 

Collaborative Infrastructure as a Disruptive Force for Interdisciplinary Digital Scholarship, Illustrated by Use Cases of the Transkribus Stakeholder Platform

Andy Stauder1, Annika Rockenberger2, Minna Kaukonen3, Bragi Þorgrímur Ólafsson4, Unnar Ingvarsson5, Therese Foldvik6Johanne Emilie Christensen2

1: READ-COOP SCE, Austria; 2: University of Oslo Library; 3: National Library of Finland; 4: National and University Library of Iceland; 5: National Archives of Iceland; 6: University of Oslo


 

Three 3D scanners and 13 institutions,

Hrönn Konráðsdóttir

National Museum of Iceland, Iceland


 

Exploring Existentialist Design in Digital Humanities: A Case Study of User Experience at the National Library of Norway

Jana Sverdljuk

National Library of Norway, Norway


 

Digitized language variation for computational dialectology: The Dialect Atlas of Finnish by Lauri Kettunen (1940)

Jenni Santaharju1, Terhi Honkola1, Perttu Seppä2, Kaj Syrjänen1, Unni Leino3, Outi Vesakoski1,4

1: University of Turku, Finland; 2: University of Helsinki, Finland; 3: Tampere University, Finland; 4: Turku Institute of Advanced Studies


 

Revisiting Icelandic Literary History: Digital Humanities and the Challenges of Distant Reading

Benedikt HjartarsonJón Karl Helgason

University of Iceland, Iceland


 

Using BERT to Study Semantic Variations of Climate Change Keywords in Danish News Articles

Florian Meier

Aalborg University, Denmark


 

From Miðgarð to Marvel: Norse Mythology, Augmented Heritage and the Prose Edda

Alan Thomas Searles

University of Iceland, Iceland


 

Towards Humanistic AI: Mapping an Emergent Field of DH Practices

Mats Fridlund1, Daniel Brodén1, David Alfter1, Ashely Green1, Aram Karimi1, Gustaf Nelhans2, Cecilia Lindhé1

1: University of Gothenburg, Sweden; 2: University of Borås, Sweden


 

Og að mér lifanda lifir enn hans hamingja — Rare syntactic phenomena in parsed historical corpora

Ingunn Hreinberg IndriðadóttirÞórhallur Eyþórsson

University of Iceland, Iceland