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  • Designing a Deck of Timeline Cards for Tabletops and Tabletop Simulator

    EN
    This lesson demonstrates how to use nanDECK to design and publish your own deck of printed or digital playing cards, and use them to test a group's knowledge of historical events through a Timeline-like game mechanic. This lesson will also highlight best practices for handling digitized historical objects.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Mita Williams
    • Rolando Rodriguez
  • Digitisation Methods for Material Culture

    EN
    This resource is an introduction to Digitisation Methods for Material Culture. The resource explores basic topics with regards to the study of material culture, while also looking at types of media as means to communicate and share information about it, as well as digitisation methods to capture material culture data.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Karina Rodriguez Echavarria
    • Myrsini Samaroudi
    • Nicola Schiavottiello
  • Diamond Publication and Open Science at ULiège

    EN
    In this video, presented as part of the Friday Frontiers series, Bernard Pochet traces the evolution of Open Science at the University of Liège in the early 2000s, focusing on Open Access and the implementation of a Diamond Open Access journal publishing platform (PoPuPS) and an institutional repository (ORBi).
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Bernard Pochet
    • Vicky Garnett
  • Bridging the Sensory Gaps

    EN
    How would you as a person with deafblindness navigate the world – a world filled with navigation and mobility challenges, inaccessible information, and technologies that rely on the senses of sight and hearing? In this talk, Nasrine Olson (PhD, Associate Professor) introduces the idea behind the formation of the Centre for Inclusive Studies at University of Borås and presents a few projects that have explored ways in which technology can be leveraged to level the playing field.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Nasrine Olson
    • Vicky Garnett
  • Displaying a Georeferenced Map in KnightLab's StoryMap JS

    EN
    In this lesson from Programming Historian, you will learn how to display a georeferenced map from Map Warper in KnightLab's StoryMap JS, an interactive web-based map and storytelling platform.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Erica Y Hayes
    • Mia Partlow
    • Alex Wermer-Colan
  • Finding Places in Text with the World Historical Gazetteer

    EN
    Researchers often need to be able to search a corpus of texts for a defined list of terms and historians are often interested in certain places named in a text or texts. This lesson details how to programmatically search documents for a list of terms, including place names and then how to obtain coordinates and map historical place names with the World Historical Gazetteer.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Susan Grunewald
    • Andrew Janco
    • Anna-Maria Sichani
  • How to Learn and Love Digital Text in Four Easy Steps

    EN
    Is ChatGPT unsettling you? Are you annoyed to always land on the same webportal when googling for a specific book? Do you hate it when just the one page you need to consult is nowhere to be found on the internet? This presentation by Anne Baillot is for you!
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Anne Baillot
    • Vicky Garnett
  • FAIR Data in SSH Training

    EN
    This training event from the TRIPLE Project was devoted specifically to FAIR Data in SSH and provided answers to the following questions, among others: How is research data defined in SSH; Why are FAIR principles important for the management of research data in SSH; How can FAIR principles be implemented in SSH.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Elena Giglia
    • Arnaud Gingold
    • Iraklis Katsaloulis
  • Research Data Management Bootcamp

    EN
    The SSHOC-DARIAH Train-the-Trainer Research Data Management Bootcamp ('Research Data Management Bootcamp' for short) took place over two half-day workshops that gave access to experts in the field and allowed for real-time activities between the sessions. It was co-organised by the SSHOC project and the DARIAH 'Research Data Management' Working Group.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Joy Davidson
    • Kerstin Helbig
    • Annalisa Montesanti
  • Crowdsourcing Methods with Cultural Heritage

    EN
    In this lecture from the Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities and Cultural Heritage (ACDH-CH), Victoria Van Hyning explores the possibilities of crowdsourcing as "cultural heritage co-creation" or "commons-based peer production", expanding on the need for further comparative analysis of design and engagement strategies for crowdsourcing projects, their resulting data and possible applications for these data in Machine Learning training sets.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Victoria Van Hyning
    • Laura Still
    • Florian Wiencek
  • DARIAH-DE Collection Registry Tutorial

    EN
    This tutorial explains the fundamentals and usage of the DARIAH-DE Collection Registry, a tool that allows you to describe and index data collections. The manual gives an overview of the usability and functionalities of the Collection Registry and introduces best practice recommendations.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • DARIAH-DE
  • Using Digital Archives for Geographical and Archaeological Research

    EN
    This video recording is of 'Using Digital Archives for Geographical and Archaeological Research', the second webinar in a three-part public lecture series hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI), aimed at early career researchers. The webinar showcases the rich research resources contained in digital archival collections that can be used to advance geographical and archaeological research.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Digital Repository of Ireland
    • Barbara McCormack
    • Jennifer Moore
  • Using Digital Archives for Historical Research

    EN
    This video recording is of 'Using Digital Archives for Historical Research', the first webinar in a three-part public lecture series hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI) aimed at early career researchers. The webinar showcases the rich research resources contained in digital archival collections that can be used to advance historical research.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Digital Repository of Ireland
    • Ciarán Wallace
    • Siobhán Doyle
  • Using Digital Archives for Social Sciences Research

    EN
    This video recording is of 'Using Digital Archives for Social Sciences Research', the third and final webinar in a three-part public lecture series hosted by the Digital Repository of Ireland (DRI), aimed at early career researchers. The webinar showcases the rich research resources contained in digital archival collections that can be used to advance social sciences research.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Digital Repository of Ireland
    • Aileen O'Carroll
    • David Landy
  • DARIAH-DE Publikator Tutorial

    EN
    This tutorial explains the fundamentals of the DARIAH-DE Publikator, a tool which allows you to prepare, manage, and finally import your collections into the DARIAH-DE Repository using your favourite internet browser. The Repository provides the ability to store research data and enrich them with metadata. Through the use of persistent identifiers, a permanent machine-readable reference is ensured and findable via a generic search. The tutorial contains guides for users as well as technical documentation.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • DARIAH-DE
  • Shaping new approaches to data management in arts and humanities

    EN
    The DESIR Winter School provided a unique opportunity to learn about how to maximize the potential of scholarly resources and to take practical steps in opening up research in ethically and legally responsible ways.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Iñes Castaña
    • Antonia Correia
    • Javier de la Rosa
  • Intellectual Property Rights in Ethically Open Science

    EN
    In this lecture, Teresa Scassa examines the complex role of intellectual property(IP) rights in the creation and advancement of academic knowledge. While IP rights can create barriers to access, reuse and transparency, she argues, they can also further creativity and innovation by providing revenue, and by protecting other values such as privacy/confidentiality, and integrity/authenticity. IP rights can also, in some circumstances, protect against the exploitation of individuals and communities. Framing IP rights in terms of a sometimes complex web of relationships, this presentation asks what role IP rights should play in ethically open science.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Teresa Scassa
  • DARIAH Winter School 2016: 'Open Data Citation'

    EN
    The DARIAH Winter School 'Open Data Citation for Social Sciences and Humanities' brought together researchers, professionals with various backgrounds, and students from 15 countries. In total 38 people met in Prague, Czech Republic, to learn about various aspects of open access and open data, as well as many other subjects on digital research.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Pierre Mounier
    • Matthew Munson
    • Simon
  • Open Data Citation for Social Science and Humanities

    EN
    DARIAH Winter School 2016 explored the evolution of publication issues in social sciences and humanities in a context of Open Access, with the underlying goal of promoting open science through the question of open data citation.
    Authors, editors, and contributors
    • Anne Baillot
    • Marjorie Burghart
    • Christopher W. Blackwell