Archives, Access and Artificial Intelligence : : Working with Born-Digital and Digitized Archival Collections / / Lise Jaillant.
Digital archives are transforming the Humanities and the Sciences. Digitized collections of newspapers and books have pushed scholars to develop new, data-rich methods. Born-digital archives are now better preserved and managed thanks to the development of open-access and commercial software. Digita...
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Superior document: | Digital humanities research |
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VerfasserIn: | |
Place / Publishing House: | Bielefeld : : Bielefeld University Press,, 2022. |
Year of Publication: | 2022 |
Language: | English |
Series: | Digital humanities research.
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (224 pages). |
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Table of Contents:
- Introduction;
- Artificial Intelligence and Discovering the Digitized Photoarchive;
- Web Archives and the Problem of Access: Prototyping a Researcher Dashboard for the UK Government Web Archive;
- Design Thinking, UX and Born-digital Archives: Solving the Problem of Dark Archives Closed to Users;
- Towards Critically Addressable Data for Digital Library User Studies;
- Reviewing the Reviewers: Training Neural Networks to Read Peer Review Reports;
- Supervised and Unsupervised: Approaches to Machine Learning for Textual Entities;
- Inviting AI into the Archives: The Reception of Handwritten Recognition Technology into Historical Manuscript Transcription;
- AFTERWORD: Towards a new Discipline of Computational Archival Science (CAS);
- Authors (by order of appearance in the volume).