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  1. Digital classics outside the echo-chamber
    teaching, knowledge exchange & public engagement
    Autor*in:
    Erschienen: 2016
    Verlag:  Ubiquity Press, London

    This volume, edited by the organizers of the Digital Classicist seminars series, presents research in classical studies, digital classics and digital humanities, bringing together scholarship that addresses the impact of the study of classical... mehr

    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
    uneingeschränkte Fernleihe, Kopie und Ausleihe
    Universität Potsdam, Universitätsbibliothek
    uneingeschränkte Fernleihe, Kopie und Ausleihe

     

    This volume, edited by the organizers of the Digital Classicist seminars series, presents research in classical studies, digital classics and digital humanities, bringing together scholarship that addresses the impact of the study of classical antiquity through computational methods on audiences such as scientists, heritage professionals, students and the general public. Within this context, chapters tackle particular aspects, from epigraphy, papyrology and manuscripts, via Greek language, linguistics and literature, to imaging and modelling of artefacts, architecture, and technologies and methods in digital classics research. The book is aimed for scholars in the various fields of history, classical studies, digital humanities and archaeology. It will also be of interest to researchers in library and information sciences, informatics and pedagogy. The chapters will be divided into three sections: Section 1: Teaching will discuss the contribution of digital humanities to pedagogy, teaching and learning in the classics, including the creation of classroom or online materials for the study of languages, texts or topics in ancient history and archaeology, and the teaching of digital humanities techniques such as text encoding and linguistic analysis. All of the chapters in this section acknowledge that the division between digital methods for teaching, and research into digital tools is a porous one, and that digital approaches are helping to break down the divide between the researcher and the student. Section 2: Knowledge Exchange will focus on digital research projects or activities that bring together scholars or practitioners from outside of the traditional disciplines classicists and digital humanists are used to working with, or from outside of academia at all. Collaborations with the medical sciences, with library and cultural heritage institutions, and with media and gaming industries all benefit both parties, with expertise and new insights into research questions moving in both directions. Section 3: Public Engagement will discuss issues such as crowd-sourcing or citizen science, which serves not only to harvest the expertise or enthusiasm of non-specialists on a large scale, but arguably even more profitably engages the crowd with scholarly materials in a way that they might never have considered before; also publications of classical material that are targeted at a non-academic audience: popular books, documentaries, games, open access publicatio ... The international perspectives on these issues are especially valuable in an increasingly connected, but still institutionally and administratively diverse world. The research addressed in several chapters in this volume includes issues around technical standards bodies like EpiDoc and the TEI, engaging with ways these standards are implemented, documented, taught, used in the process of transcribing and annotating texts, and used to generate publications and as the basis for advanced textual or corpus research. Other chapters focus on various aspects of philological research and content creation, including collaborative or community driven efforts, and the issues surrounding editorial oversight, curation, maintenance and sustainability of these resources. Research into the ancient languages and linguistics, in particular Greek, and the language teaching that is a staple of our discipline, are also discussed in several chapters, in particular for ways in which advanced research methods can lead into language technologies and vice versa and ways in which the skills around teaching can be used for public engagement, and vice versa. A common thread through much of the volume is the importance of open access publication or open source development and distribution of texts, materials, tools and standards, both because of the public good provided by such models (circulating materials often already paid for out of the public purse), and the ability to reach non-standard audiences, those who cannot access rich university libraries or afford expensive print volumes. Linked Open Data is another technology that results in wide and free distribution of structured information both within and outside academic circles, and several chapters present academic work that includes ontologies and RDF, either as a direct research output or as essential part of the communication and knowledge representation. Several chapters focus not on the literary and philological side of classics, but on the study of cultural heritage, archaeology, and the material supports on which original textual and artistic material are engraved or otherwise inscribed, addressing both the capture and analysis of artefacts in both 2D and 3D, the representation of data through archaeological standards, and the importance of sharing information and expertise between the several domains both within and without academia that study, record and conserve ancient objects. Almost without exception, the authors ref ...

     

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  2. Digital classics outside the echo-chamber
    teaching, knowledge exchange and public engagement
    Autor*in:
    Erschienen: 2016
    Verlag:  Ubiquity Press, London

    This volume, edited by the organizers of the Digital Classicist seminars series, presents research in classical studies, digital classics and digital humanities, bringing together scholarship that addresses the impact of the study of classical... mehr

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    Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin - Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Haus Unter den Linden
    uneingeschränkte Fernleihe, Kopie und Ausleihe
    Universität Potsdam, Universitätsbibliothek
    uneingeschränkte Fernleihe, Kopie und Ausleihe

     

    This volume, edited by the organizers of the Digital Classicist seminars series, presents research in classical studies, digital classics and digital humanities, bringing together scholarship that addresses the impact of the study of classical antiquity through computational methods on audiences such as scientists, heritage professionals, students and the general public. Within this context, chapters tackle particular aspects, from epigraphy, papyrology and manuscripts, via Greek language, linguistics and literature, to imaging and modelling of artefacts, architecture, and technologies and methods in digital classics research. The book is aimed for scholars in the various fields of history, classical studies, digital humanities and archaeology. It will also be of interest to researchers in library and information sciences, informatics and pedagogy. The chapters will be divided into three sections: Section 1: Teaching will discuss the contribution of digital humanities to pedagogy, teaching and learning in the classics, including the creation of classroom or online materials for the study of languages, texts or topics in ancient history and archaeology, and the teaching of digital humanities techniques such as text encoding and linguistic analysis. All of the chapters in this section acknowledge that the division between digital methods for teaching, and research into digital tools is a porous one, and that digital approaches are helping to break down the divide between the researcher and the student. Section 2: Knowledge Exchange will focus on digital research projects or activities that bring together scholars or practitioners from outside of the traditional disciplines classicists and digital humanists are used to working with, or from outside of academia at all. Collaborations with the medical sciences, with library and cultural heritage institutions, and with media and gaming industries all benefit both parties, with expertise and new insights into research questions moving in both directions. Section 3: Public Engagement will discuss issues such as crowd-sourcing or citizen science, which serves not only to harvest the expertise or enthusiasm of non-specialists on a large scale, but arguably even more profitably engages the crowd with scholarly materials in a way that they might never have considered before; also publications of classical material that are targeted at a non-academic audience: popular books, documentaries, games, open access publicatio ... The international perspectives on these issues are especially valuable in an increasingly connected, but still institutionally and administratively diverse world. The research addressed in several chapters in this volume includes issues around technical standards bodies like EpiDoc and the TEI, engaging with ways these standards are implemented, documented, taught, used in the process of transcribing and annotating texts, and used to generate publications and as the basis for advanced textual or corpus research. Other chapters focus on various aspects of philological research and content creation, including collaborative or community driven efforts, and the issues surrounding editorial oversight, curation, maintenance and sustainability of these resources. Research into the ancient languages and linguistics, in particular Greek, and the language teaching that is a staple of our discipline, are also discussed in several chapters, in particular for ways in which advanced research methods can lead into language technologies and vice versa and ways in which the skills around teaching can be used for public engagement, and vice versa. A common thread through much of the volume is the importance of open access publication or open source development and distribution of texts, materials, tools and standards, both because of the public good provided by such models (circulating materials often already paid for out of the public purse), and the ability to reach non-standard audiences, those who cannot access rich university libraries or afford expensive print volumes. Linked Open Data is another technology that results in wide and free distribution of structured information both within and outside academic circles, and several chapters present academic work that includes ontologies and RDF, either as a direct research output or as essential part of the communication and knowledge representation. Several chapters focus not on the literary and philological side of classics, but on the study of cultural heritage, archaeology, and the material supports on which original textual and artistic material are engraved or otherwise inscribed, addressing both the capture and analysis of artefacts in both 2D and 3D, the representation of data through archaeological standards, and the importance of sharing information and expertise between the several domains both within and without academia that study, record and conserve ancient objects. Almost without exception, the authors ref ...

     

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    Hinweise zum Inhalt
    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Beteiligt: Bodard, Gabriel (HerausgeberIn); Romanello, Matteo (HerausgeberIn)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 1909188484; 1909188611; 190918862X; 1909188476; 1909188468; 9781909188488; 9781909188617; 9781909188624; 9781909188471; 9781909188464
    Weitere Identifier:
    9781909188488
    9781909188464
    Schlagworte: Classical philology; Civilization, Classical; Civilization, Classical; Digital humanities; Learned institutions and societies; Open access publishing; Scholarly publishing; Classical philology; 3D graphics and modelling; Ancient (Classical) Greek; Ancient history: to c 500 CE; Ancient World; Archaeology by period ; region; Archaeology; Classical Greek and Roman archaeology; Computer science; Computing and information technology; Empires and historical states; Graphical and digital media applications; Hellenic languages; History; History: earliest times to present day; Humanities; Image processing; Indo-European languages; Other geographical groupings, oceans and seas; EDUCATION ; General; HISTORY ; Ancient ; Greece; Digital humanities; Learned institutions and societies ; Publishing; Open access publishing; Scholarly publishing
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (xii, 221 pages), illustrations (chiefly color)
    Bemerkung(en):

    Includes bibliographical references

    Resource simultaneously available in PDF, EPUB format, and MOBI format

    Stella Dee, Maryam Foradi, and Filip Šarić: Learning by doing : learning to implement the TEI guidelines through digital classics publication

    Simon Mahony: Open education and open educational resources for the teaching of classics in the UK

    Gabriel Bodard and Simona Stoyanova: Epigraphers and encoders : strategies for teaching and learning digital epigraphy

    Jeff Rydberg-Cox: An open tutorial for beginning Ancient Greek

    Francesco Mambrini: The Ancient Greek dependency treebank : linguistic annotation in a teaching environment

    Ségolène M. Tarte: Of features and models : a reflexive account of interdisciplinarity across image processing, papyrology, and trauma surgery

    Alberto Campagnolo, Alejandro Giacometti, Lindsay MacDonald, Simon Mahony, Melissa Terras, and Adam Gibson: Cultural heritage destruction : experiments with parchment and multispectral imaging

    Valeria Vitale: Transparent, multivocal, cross-disciplinary : the use of linked open data and a community-developed RDF ontology to document and enrich 3D visualisation for cultural heritage

    Bridget Almas and Marie-Claire Beaulieu: The Perseids platform : scholarship for all!

    James Brusuelas: Engaging Greek : ancient lives

    Silvia Orlandi.: Ancient inscriptions between citizens and scholars : the double soul of the EAGLE project

  3. Visual Information Retrieval using Java and LIRE
    Autor*in: Lux, Mathias
    Erschienen: [2013]; © 2013
    Verlag:  Morgan & Claypool Publishers, [San Rafael]

    Visual information retrieval (VIR) is an active and vibrant research area, which attempts at providing means for organizing, indexing, annotating, and retrieving visual information (images and videos) from large, unstructured repositories. The goal... mehr

    Universität Potsdam, Universitätsbibliothek
    uneingeschränkte Fernleihe, Kopie und Ausleihe

     

    Visual information retrieval (VIR) is an active and vibrant research area, which attempts at providing means for organizing, indexing, annotating, and retrieving visual information (images and videos) from large, unstructured repositories. The goal of VIR is to retrieve matches ranked by their relevance to a given query, which is often expressed as an example image and/or a series of keywords. During its early years (1995- 2000), the research efforts were dominated by content-based approaches contributed primarily by the image and video processing community. During the past decade, it was widely recognized that the challenges imposed by the lack of coincidence between an image's visual contents and its semantic interpretation, also known as semantic gap, required a clever use of textual metadata (in addition to information extracted from the image's pixel contents) to make image and video retrieval solutions efficient and effective. The need to bridge (or at least narrow) the semantic gap has been one of the driving forces behind current VIR research. Additionally, other related research problems and market opportunities have started to emerge, offering a broad range of exciting problems for computer scientists and engineers to work on. In this introductory book, we focus on a subset of VIR problems where the media consists of images, and the indexing and retrieval methods are based on the pixel contents of those images--an approach known as content-based image retrieval (CBIR). We present an implementation-oriented overview of CBIR concepts, techniques, algorithms, and figures of merit. Most chapters are supported by examples written in Java, using Lucene (an open-source Java-based indexing and search implementation) and LIRE (Lucene Image REtrieval), an open-source Java-based library for CBIR 2. Information retrieval: selected concepts and techniques -- 2.1 Basic concepts and document representation -- 2.1.1 Vector retrieval model -- 2.2 Retrieval evaluation -- 2.3 Text information retrieval with Lucene -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1 Design challenges -- 1.2 Getting started with LIRE -- 1.2.1 Java setup -- 1.2.2 Downloading, unpacking, and running LireDemo -- 1.2.3 Indexing an image collection -- 1.2.4 Browsing the index, selecting an image, and performing a search -- 3. Visual features -- 3.1 Digital imaging in a nutshell -- 3.1.1 Digital imaging in Java -- 3.2 Global features -- 3.2.1 Color features -- 3.2.2 Texture features -- 3.2.3 Combining color and texture -- 3.3 Local features -- 3.3.1 Scale-invariant feature transform (SIFT) -- 3.3.2 Speeded-up robust features (SURF) -- 3.4 Metrics, normalization, and distance functions -- 3.5 Evaluation of visual features -- 3.5.1 Figures of merit -- 3.5.2 Datasets -- 3.5.3 Challenges -- 3.6 Feature extraction using LIRE -- 4. Indexing visual features -- 4.1 Indexing: the nai͏̈ve approach -- 4.1.1 Basic indexing and linear search in LIRE -- 4.2 Nearest-neighbor search -- 4.3 Hashing -- 4.3.1 Locality sensitive hashing -- 4.3.2 Metric spaces approximate indexing -- 4.4 Bag of visual words -- 4.4.1 Bag of visual words using LIRE -- 5. LIRE: an extensible Java CBIR library -- 5.1 Architecture and low-level features -- 5.2 Indexing and searching -- 5.3 Advanced features -- 5.3.1 Bag of visual words -- 5.3.2 Result re-ranking and filtering -- 5.4 How to apply LIRE -- 5.4.1 Scenario investigation -- 5.4.2 Benchmarking -- 5.4.3 Deployment tests and performance optimization -- 6. Concluding remarks -- 6.1 Research directions, challenges, and opportunities -- 6.2 Resources -- Bibliography -- Authors' biographies Preface -- Acknowledgments --

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Beteiligt: Marques, Oge (VerfasserIn)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781608459193
    Weitere Identifier:
    RVK Klassifikation: ST 274
    Schriftenreihe: Synthesis Lectures on Information Concepts, Retrieval, and Services ; #25
    Schlagworte: Java (Computer program language); Lucene Image REtrieval; Image processing; Picture archiving and communication systems
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (114 Seiten)
    Bemerkung(en):

    Description based upon print version of record

    Also available in print.

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  4. Digital classics outside the echo-chamber
    teaching, knowledge exchange & public engagement
    Autor*in:
    Erschienen: 2016
    Verlag:  Ubiquity Press, London

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  5. Visual Information Retrieval using Java and LIRE
    Autor*in: Lux, Mathias
    Erschienen: [2013]; © 2013
    Verlag:  Morgan & Claypool Publishers, [San Rafael]

    Visual information retrieval (VIR) is an active and vibrant research area, which attempts at providing means for organizing, indexing, annotating, and retrieving visual information (images and videos) from large, unstructured repositories. The goal... mehr

    Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Hamburg Carl von Ossietzky
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    Visual information retrieval (VIR) is an active and vibrant research area, which attempts at providing means for organizing, indexing, annotating, and retrieving visual information (images and videos) from large, unstructured repositories. The goal of VIR is to retrieve matches ranked by their relevance to a given query, which is often expressed as an example image and/or a series of keywords. During its early years (1995- 2000), the research efforts were dominated by content-based approaches contributed primarily by the image and video processing community. During the past decade, it was widely recognized that the challenges imposed by the lack of coincidence between an image's visual contents and its semantic interpretation, also known as semantic gap, required a clever use of textual metadata (in addition to information extracted from the image's pixel contents) to make image and video retrieval solutions efficient and effective. The need to bridge (or at least narrow) the semantic gap has been one of the driving forces behind current VIR research. Additionally, other related research problems and market opportunities have started to emerge, offering a broad range of exciting problems for computer scientists and engineers to work on. In this introductory book, we focus on a subset of VIR problems where the media consists of images, and the indexing and retrieval methods are based on the pixel contents of those images--an approach known as content-based image retrieval (CBIR). We present an implementation-oriented overview of CBIR concepts, techniques, algorithms, and figures of merit. Most chapters are supported by examples written in Java, using Lucene (an open-source Java-based indexing and search implementation) and LIRE (Lucene Image REtrieval), an open-source Java-based library for CBIR 2. Information retrieval: selected concepts and techniques -- 2.1 Basic concepts and document representation -- 2.1.1 Vector retrieval model -- 2.2 Retrieval evaluation -- 2.3 Text information retrieval with Lucene -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1 Design challenges -- 1.2 Getting started with LIRE -- 1.2.1 Java setup -- 1.2.2 Downloading, unpacking, and running LireDemo -- 1.2.3 Indexing an image collection -- 1.2.4 Browsing the index, selecting an image, and performing a search -- 3. Visual features -- 3.1 Digital imaging in a nutshell -- 3.1.1 Digital imaging in Java -- 3.2 Global features -- 3.2.1 Color features -- 3.2.2 Texture features -- 3.2.3 Combining color and texture -- 3.3 Local features -- 3.3.1 Scale-invariant feature transform (SIFT) -- 3.3.2 Speeded-up robust features (SURF) -- 3.4 Metrics, normalization, and distance functions -- 3.5 Evaluation of visual features -- 3.5.1 Figures of merit -- 3.5.2 Datasets -- 3.5.3 Challenges -- 3.6 Feature extraction using LIRE -- 4. Indexing visual features -- 4.1 Indexing: the nai͏̈ve approach -- 4.1.1 Basic indexing and linear search in LIRE -- 4.2 Nearest-neighbor search -- 4.3 Hashing -- 4.3.1 Locality sensitive hashing -- 4.3.2 Metric spaces approximate indexing -- 4.4 Bag of visual words -- 4.4.1 Bag of visual words using LIRE -- 5. LIRE: an extensible Java CBIR library -- 5.1 Architecture and low-level features -- 5.2 Indexing and searching -- 5.3 Advanced features -- 5.3.1 Bag of visual words -- 5.3.2 Result re-ranking and filtering -- 5.4 How to apply LIRE -- 5.4.1 Scenario investigation -- 5.4.2 Benchmarking -- 5.4.3 Deployment tests and performance optimization -- 6. Concluding remarks -- 6.1 Research directions, challenges, and opportunities -- 6.2 Resources -- Bibliography -- Authors' biographies Preface -- Acknowledgments --

     

    Export in Literaturverwaltung   RIS-Format
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    Hinweise zum Inhalt
    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Beteiligt: Marques, Oge (VerfasserIn)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9781608459193
    Weitere Identifier:
    RVK Klassifikation: ST 274
    Schriftenreihe: Synthesis Lectures on Information Concepts, Retrieval, and Services ; #25
    Schlagworte: Java (Computer program language); Lucene Image REtrieval; Image processing; Picture archiving and communication systems
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (114 Seiten)
    Bemerkung(en):

    Description based upon print version of record

    Also available in print.

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  6. Axis detection of cylindrical objects in 3-D images
    Erschienen: 2008
    Verlag:  HAL CCSD ; SPIE and IS&T

    International audience ; This paper introduces an algorithm dedicated to the detection of the axes of cylindrical objects in a 3-D block. The proposed algorithm performs the 3-D axis detection without prior segmentation of the block. This approach is... mehr

     

    International audience ; This paper introduces an algorithm dedicated to the detection of the axes of cylindrical objects in a 3-D block. The proposed algorithm performs the 3-D axis detection without prior segmentation of the block. This approach is specifically appropriate when the grey levels of the cylindrical objects are not homogeneous and thus difficult to distinguish from the background. The method relies on gradient and curvature estimation and operates in two main steps. The first one selects candidate voxels for the axes and the second one refines the determination of the axis of each cylindrical object. Applied to fiber reinforced composite materials, this algorithm allows detecting the axes of fibers in order to obtain the geometrical characteristics of the reinforcement. Knowing the reinforcement characteristics is an important issue in the quality control of the material but also in the prediction of the thermal and mechanical performance. In this paper, the various steps of the algorithm are detailed. Then, some results are presented, obtained with both synthetic blocks and real data acquired by synchrotron X-ray micro tomography on carbon-fiber reinforced carbon composites.

     

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    Quelle: BASE Fachausschnitt Germanistik
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Aufsatz aus einer Zeitschrift
    Format: Online
    Übergeordneter Titel: ISSN: 1017-9909 ; EISSN: 1560-229X ; Journal of Electronic Imaging ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00326703 ; Journal of Electronic Imaging, SPIE and IS&T, 2008, 17 (3), pp.0311081-0311089
    Schlagworte: Cylinder; axis detection; Image processing; [SPI.SIGNAL]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Signal and Image processing; [INFO.INFO-TS]Computer Science [cs]/Signal and Image Processing
    Lizenz:

    info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess

  7. Multimodality in Language and Speech Systems
    Autor*in:
    Erschienen: 2002
    Verlag:  Springer Netherlands, Dordrecht

    This book is based on contributions to the Seventh European Summer School on Language and Speech Communication that was held at KTH in Stockholm, Sweden, in July of 1999 under the auspices of the European Language and Speech Network (ELSNET). The... mehr

    Universität der Bundeswehr München, Universitätsbibliothek
    uneingeschränkte Fernleihe, Kopie und Ausleihe

     

    This book is based on contributions to the Seventh European Summer School on Language and Speech Communication that was held at KTH in Stockholm, Sweden, in July of 1999 under the auspices of the European Language and Speech Network (ELSNET). The topic of the summer school was "Multimodality in Language and Speech Systems" (MiLaSS). The issue of multimodality in interpersonal, face-to-face communication has been an important research topic for a number of years. With the increasing sophistication of computer-based interactive systems using language and speech, the topic of multimodal interaction has received renewed interest both in terms of human-human interaction and human-machine interaction. Nine lecturers contri­ buted to the summer school with courses on specialized topics ranging from the technology and science of creating talking faces to human-human communication, which is mediated by computer for the handicapped. Eight of the nine lecturers are represented in this book. The summer school attracted more than 60 participants from Europe, Asia and North America representing not only graduate students but also senior researchers from both academia and industry

     

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  8. Digital classics outside the echo-chamber
    teaching, knowledge exchange and public engagement
    Autor*in:
    Erschienen: 2016
    Verlag:  Ubiquity Press, London

    This volume, edited by the organizers of the Digital Classicist seminars series, presents research in classical studies, digital classics and digital humanities, bringing together scholarship that addresses the impact of the study of classical... mehr

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    This volume, edited by the organizers of the Digital Classicist seminars series, presents research in classical studies, digital classics and digital humanities, bringing together scholarship that addresses the impact of the study of classical antiquity through computational methods on audiences such as scientists, heritage professionals, students and the general public. Within this context, chapters tackle particular aspects, from epigraphy, papyrology and manuscripts, via Greek language, linguistics and literature, to imaging and modelling of artefacts, architecture, and technologies and methods in digital classics research. The book is aimed for scholars in the various fields of history, classical studies, digital humanities and archaeology. It will also be of interest to researchers in library and information sciences, informatics and pedagogy. The chapters will be divided into three sections: Section 1: Teaching will discuss the contribution of digital humanities to pedagogy, teaching and learning in the classics, including the creation of classroom or online materials for the study of languages, texts or topics in ancient history and archaeology, and the teaching of digital humanities techniques such as text encoding and linguistic analysis. All of the chapters in this section acknowledge that the division between digital methods for teaching, and research into digital tools is a porous one, and that digital approaches are helping to break down the divide between the researcher and the student. Section 2: Knowledge Exchange will focus on digital research projects or activities that bring together scholars or practitioners from outside of the traditional disciplines classicists and digital humanists are used to working with, or from outside of academia at all. Collaborations with the medical sciences, with library and cultural heritage institutions, and with media and gaming industries all benefit both parties, with expertise and new insights into research questions moving in both directions. Section 3: Public Engagement will discuss issues such as crowd-sourcing or citizen science, which serves not only to harvest the expertise or enthusiasm of non-specialists on a large scale, but arguably even more profitably engages the crowd with scholarly materials in a way that they might never have considered before; also publications of classical material that are targeted at a non-academic audience: popular books, documentaries, games, open access publicatio ... The international perspectives on these issues are especially valuable in an increasingly connected, but still institutionally and administratively diverse world. The research addressed in several chapters in this volume includes issues around technical standards bodies like EpiDoc and the TEI, engaging with ways these standards are implemented, documented, taught, used in the process of transcribing and annotating texts, and used to generate publications and as the basis for advanced textual or corpus research. Other chapters focus on various aspects of philological research and content creation, including collaborative or community driven efforts, and the issues surrounding editorial oversight, curation, maintenance and sustainability of these resources. Research into the ancient languages and linguistics, in particular Greek, and the language teaching that is a staple of our discipline, are also discussed in several chapters, in particular for ways in which advanced research methods can lead into language technologies and vice versa and ways in which the skills around teaching can be used for public engagement, and vice versa. A common thread through much of the volume is the importance of open access publication or open source development and distribution of texts, materials, tools and standards, both because of the public good provided by such models (circulating materials often already paid for out of the public purse), and the ability to reach non-standard audiences, those who cannot access rich university libraries or afford expensive print volumes. Linked Open Data is another technology that results in wide and free distribution of structured information both within and outside academic circles, and several chapters present academic work that includes ontologies and RDF, either as a direct research output or as essential part of the communication and knowledge representation. Several chapters focus not on the literary and philological side of classics, but on the study of cultural heritage, archaeology, and the material supports on which original textual and artistic material are engraved or otherwise inscribed, addressing both the capture and analysis of artefacts in both 2D and 3D, the representation of data through archaeological standards, and the importance of sharing information and expertise between the several domains both within and without academia that study, record and conserve ancient objects. Almost without exception, the authors ref ...

     

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    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Beteiligt: Bodard, Gabriel (HerausgeberIn); Romanello, Matteo (HerausgeberIn)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 1909188484; 1909188611; 190918862X; 1909188476; 1909188468; 9781909188488; 9781909188617; 9781909188624; 9781909188471; 9781909188464
    Weitere Identifier:
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    9781909188464
    Schlagworte: Classical philology; Civilization, Classical; Civilization, Classical; Digital humanities; Learned institutions and societies; Open access publishing; Scholarly publishing; Classical philology; 3D graphics and modelling; Ancient (Classical) Greek; Ancient history: to c 500 CE; Ancient World; Archaeology by period ; region; Archaeology; Classical Greek and Roman archaeology; Computer science; Computing and information technology; Empires and historical states; Graphical and digital media applications; Hellenic languages; History; History: earliest times to present day; Humanities; Image processing; Indo-European languages; Other geographical groupings, oceans and seas; EDUCATION ; General; HISTORY ; Ancient ; Greece; Digital humanities; Learned institutions and societies ; Publishing; Open access publishing; Scholarly publishing
    Umfang: 1 Online-Ressource (xii, 221 pages), illustrations (chiefly color)
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    Includes bibliographical references

    Resource simultaneously available in PDF, EPUB format, and MOBI format

    Stella Dee, Maryam Foradi, and Filip Šarić: Learning by doing : learning to implement the TEI guidelines through digital classics publication

    Simon Mahony: Open education and open educational resources for the teaching of classics in the UK

    Gabriel Bodard and Simona Stoyanova: Epigraphers and encoders : strategies for teaching and learning digital epigraphy

    Jeff Rydberg-Cox: An open tutorial for beginning Ancient Greek

    Francesco Mambrini: The Ancient Greek dependency treebank : linguistic annotation in a teaching environment

    Ségolène M. Tarte: Of features and models : a reflexive account of interdisciplinarity across image processing, papyrology, and trauma surgery

    Alberto Campagnolo, Alejandro Giacometti, Lindsay MacDonald, Simon Mahony, Melissa Terras, and Adam Gibson: Cultural heritage destruction : experiments with parchment and multispectral imaging

    Valeria Vitale: Transparent, multivocal, cross-disciplinary : the use of linked open data and a community-developed RDF ontology to document and enrich 3D visualisation for cultural heritage

    Bridget Almas and Marie-Claire Beaulieu: The Perseids platform : scholarship for all!

    James Brusuelas: Engaging Greek : ancient lives

    Silvia Orlandi.: Ancient inscriptions between citizens and scholars : the double soul of the EAGLE project

  9. Formal Grammar
    22nd International Conference, FG 2017, Toulouse, France, July 22-23, 2017, Revised Selected Papers
    Autor*in:
    Erschienen: 2018
    Verlag:  Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg

    Edited in collaboration with FoLLI, the Association of Logic, Language and Information, this book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Formal Grammar, FG 2017, collocated with the European Summer School in... mehr

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    Edited in collaboration with FoLLI, the Association of Logic, Language and Information, this book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Formal Grammar, FG 2017, collocated with the European Summer School in Logic, Language and Information in July 2017. The 9 contributed papers were carefully reviewed and selected from 14 submissions. The focus of papers are as follows:      Formal and computational phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics      Model-theoretic and proof-theoretic methods in linguistics      Logical aspects of linguistic structure      Constraint-based and resource-sensitive approaches to grammar      Learnability of formal grammar      Integration of stochastic and symbolic models of grammar      Foundational, methodological and architectural issues in grammar and linguistics      Mathematical foundations of statistical approaches to linguistic analysis Binding Domains: Anaphoric and Pronominal Pronouns in Categorial Grammar.- Morphological agreement in Minimalist Grammars.- A Model-Theoretic Reconstruction of Type-Theoretic Semantics forAnaphora.- Logical Entity Level Sentiment Analysis.- Reforming AMR.- The Logic of Ambiguity: The Propositional Case -- Advantages of constituency: computational perspectives on Samoanword prosody.- Modelling derivational morphology: A case of pre x stacking in Russian.- On generalized noun phrases -- Correction Note to: The Proper Treatment of Linguistic Ambiguity in Ordinary Algebra. 

     

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    Volltext (Lizenzpflichtig)
    Quelle: Verbundkataloge
    Beteiligt: Foret, Annie (HerausgeberIn); Muskens, Reinhard (HerausgeberIn); Pogodalla, Sylvain (HerausgeberIn)
    Sprache: Englisch
    Medientyp: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 9783662563434
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    RVK Klassifikation: ES 965 ; SS 4800
    Schriftenreihe: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 10686
    Theoretical Computer Science and General Issues ; 10686
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    Schlagworte: Computer science; Text processing (Computer science); Computational linguistics; Image processing; Computer Science; Mathematical logic; Data mining; Application software; Optical data processing.; Natural language processing (Computer science).
    Umfang: Online-Ressource (XI, 157 p. 41 illus, online resource)
  10. Digital classics outside the echo-chamber
    teaching, knowledge exchange & public engagement
    Autor*in:
    Erschienen: 2016
    Verlag:  Ubiquity Press, London

    This volume, edited by the organizers of the Digital Classicist seminars series, presents research in classical studies, digital classics and digital humanities, bringing together scholarship that addresses the impact of the study of classical... mehr

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    This volume, edited by the organizers of the Digital Classicist seminars series, presents research in classical studies, digital classics and digital humanities, bringing together scholarship that addresses the impact of the study of classical antiquity through computational methods on audiences such as scientists, heritage professionals, students and the general public. Within this context, chapters tackle particular aspects, from epigraphy, papyrology and manuscripts, via Greek language, linguistics and literature, to imaging and modelling of artefacts, architecture, and technologies and methods in digital classics research. The book is aimed for scholars in the various fields of history, classical studies, digital humanities and archaeology. It will also be of interest to researchers in library and information sciences, informatics and pedagogy. The chapters will be divided into three sections: Section 1: Teaching will discuss the contribution of digital humanities to pedagogy, teaching and learning in the classics, including the creation of classroom or online materials for the study of languages, texts or topics in ancient history and archaeology, and the teaching of digital humanities techniques such as text encoding and linguistic analysis. All of the chapters in this section acknowledge that the division between digital methods for teaching, and research into digital tools is a porous one, and that digital approaches are helping to break down the divide between the researcher and the student. Section 2: Knowledge Exchange will focus on digital research projects or activities that bring together scholars or practitioners from outside of the traditional disciplines classicists and digital humanists are used to working with, or from outside of academia at all. Collaborations with the medical sciences, with library and cultural heritage institutions, and with media and gaming industries all benefit both parties, with expertise and new insights into research questions moving in both directions. Section 3: Public Engagement will discuss issues such as crowd-sourcing or citizen science, which serves not only to harvest the expertise or enthusiasm of non-specialists on a large scale, but arguably even more profitably engages the crowd with scholarly materials in a way that they might never have considered before; also publications of classical material that are targeted at a non-academic audience: popular books, documentaries, games, open access publicatio ... The international perspectives on these issues are especially valuable in an increasingly connected, but still institutionally and administratively diverse world. The research addressed in several chapters in this volume includes issues around technical standards bodies like EpiDoc and the TEI, engaging with ways these standards are implemented, documented, taught, used in the process of transcribing and annotating texts, and used to generate publications and as the basis for advanced textual or corpus research. Other chapters focus on various aspects of philological research and content creation, including collaborative or community driven efforts, and the issues surrounding editorial oversight, curation, maintenance and sustainability of these resources. Research into the ancient languages and linguistics, in particular Greek, and the language teaching that is a staple of our discipline, are also discussed in several chapters, in particular for ways in which advanced research methods can lead into language technologies and vice versa and ways in which the skills around teaching can be used for public engagement, and vice versa. A common thread through much of the volume is the importance of open access publication or open source development and distribution of texts, materials, tools and standards, both because of the public good provided by such models (circulating materials often already paid for out of the public purse), and the ability to reach non-standard audiences, those who cannot access rich university libraries or afford expensive print volumes. Linked Open Data is another technology that results in wide and free distribution of structured information both within and outside academic circles, and several chapters present academic work that includes ontologies and RDF, either as a direct research output or as essential part of the communication and knowledge representation. Several chapters focus not on the literary and philological side of classics, but on the study of cultural heritage, archaeology, and the material supports on which original textual and artistic material are engraved or otherwise inscribed, addressing both the capture and analysis of artefacts in both 2D and 3D, the representation of data through archaeological standards, and the importance of sharing information and expertise between the several domains both within and without academia that study, record and conserve ancient objects. Almost without exception, the authors ref ...

     

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