Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Quantifying the American Tract Society: Using Library Catalog Data for Historical Research

The American Antiquarian Society was generous enough to offer me a fellowship this summer, so I took a month to research in the AAS’s wonderful collections. A fair bit of my time was spent reading through the nearly complete print run of American Tract Society pamphlets from the early to mid-nineteenth century. I wanted to […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Announcing Serendip-o-matic from One Week | One Tool

After five days and nights of intense collaboration, the One Week | One Tool digital humanities team has unveiled its web application: Serendip-o-matic <http://serendipomatic.org>. Unlike conventional search tools, this “serendipity engine” takes in any text, such as an article, song lyrics, or a bibliography. It then extracts key terms, delivering similar results from the vast […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: If We Share Data, Will Anyone Use Them? Data Sharing and Reuse in the Long Tail of Science and Technology

Research on practices to share and reuse data will inform the design of infrastructure to support data collection, management, and discovery in the long tail of science and technology. These are research domains in which data tend to be local in character, minimally structured, and minimally documented. We report on a ten-year study of the […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Making Digital: Visual Approaches to the Digital Humanities

The Making History Project is an attempt by artists and archaeologists based within the University of Southampton to collaboratively develop innovative uses for 3D technologies. Techniques such as high resolution data capture and 3D printing represent a new era in digital imaging. As these technologies become increasingly affordable they are coming to play a more […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Disembodying the Past to Preserve It

(What follows is a keynote I gave at the Digital Preservation 2013 conference on July 23, 2013. If you’re curious, there’s a video up of the talk and the Q & A as well and a pdf of the slides I showed (some of which vary from what I’ve shown here). “Disembodying the past to preserve it” I am, as you’ve […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Digital Humanities 2013 Roundup

Digital Humanities 2013, by Geoffrey Rockwell Notes: These conference notes are being written live. I will get all sorts of things wrong and there will be gaps when I’m bored or interested (or skipping.) These conference notes are about the Digital Humanities 2013 conference at Lincoln Nebraska. Digital Humanities 2013: hooks in the 21st Century: Feminist Pedagogy in […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: AHA Recommendations Embargoing Completed History PhD Dissertations Roundup

AHA Statement on Policies Regarding the Embargoing of Completed History PhD Dissertations. The American Historical Association strongly encourages graduate programs and university libraries to adopt a policy that allows the embargoing of completed history PhD dissertations in digital form for as many as six years.  Because many universities no longer keep hard copies of dissertations […]