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Professor Andrew Prescott, King’s College London, AHRC Digital Transformations Theme Leader Fellow
Research Opportunities and Themes in Digital Scholarship
AHRC Digital Transformations Theme
• Exploring the transformative potential of digital technologies in arts and humanities research
• Developing flagship activities to exemplify the possibilities
• Ensuring that arts and humanities research contributes to wider agendas around such issues as big data, the digital and creative economy, intellectual property, identity, privacy and security
AHRC Digital Transformations Theme
• Research fellowships and networks under highlight calls• Research Development Awards• Large grants• Community co-creation awards (with RCUK Connected
Communities theme)• Big data research grants• Future opportunities to be announced over the next few
months • Collaboration with institutions like The British Library and
the British Museum, as well as with university libraries, archives and museums, at heart of theme’s development
Manuscript of Peter of Capua’s Distinctiones Theologicae, 13th cent.: University of Wales Trinity St David, MS. 1
Distinctiones intended to help preachers locate texts more quickly; among earliest experiments in alphabetisation
Biblical concordance in a 14th-century manuscript from Rochester: British Library, Royal MS 4 E.V
The Biblical Concordance: an innovation in
information handling
• Team working: compiled by c. 500 Dominicans under direction of Hugh of St Cher
• Radical approach to a sacred text, providing more rapid ways of locating and juxtaposing information
• Reflects recent intellectual developments (Langton on numbering of bible; use of logic in canon law and elsewhere)
• An enormous scholarly achievement in itself, but seen as a tool
• Wide-ranging in its impact and significance, but difficult to pin down
Long-standing tradition of quantitative analysis using computing by scholars such as the economic historian Roderick Floud working in the 1960s and 1970s
www.janeausten.ac.uk
Online Chopin Variorum Edition: www.ocve.org.uk
Electronic Beowulf
What is Changing?
• No longer an easily defined set of methods• Wide variety of formats: not just text but sound, image, moving
image, animation, visualisation, making• Recycling: visualising, linking, mash-up• Cannot be confined within single disciplinary practice or structures• More experimental and ad hoc• Stronger cross-connections with practice-led research of different
types, particularly in arts• Requires fresh appoaches to initiating and conceiving research • Reflects increasing availability of born-digital data; digitisation no
longer at centre of agenda
Letter of Gladstone to Disraeli, 1878: British
Library, Add. MS. 44457, f. 166
The political and literary papers of Gladstone
preserved in the British Library comprise 762
volumes containing approx. 160,000 documents
George W. Bush Presidential Library:200 million e-mails
4 million photographs
Analysis of 11,616 SIGACT (“significant action”) reports relating to the war in Iraq from December 2006:
jonathanstray.com
Blue=‘criminal event’
Green= ‘enemy incident’
Visualisation of languages used in tweets in London in Summer 2012: Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, UCL:
http://mappinglondon.co.uk/2012/londons-twitter-tongues/
Visualising milllions of books: The Industrial Revolution in the Ngram Viewer
Mapping Metaphor Project: University of Glasgowhttp://blogs.arts.gla.ac.uk/metaphor/
www.connectedhistories.org
www.oldbaileyonline.org
A Thousand Words: Advanced Visualisation in the Humanities
Texas Advanced Computing Center
Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kvOuJ2RwBTA
Michael Takeo Magruder, Data Sea: www.takeo.org
Jekyll 2.0: A React Hub project. Collaboration between Slingshot (Pervasive Game Developers) and Dr Anthony
Mandal, Cardiff University: http://www.react-hub.org.uk/books-and-print-sandbox/proj
ects/2013/jekyll-20/
Available at: http://mith.umd.edu/sharedhorizons/resources/
Data objects developed by Ian Gwilt, Sheffield Hallam University: http://www.shu.ac.uk/research/c3ri/projects/data-objects
www.bareconductive.com
www.productresearch.ac.uk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cCYn7oQlLiA
Eduardo Kac, Lagoglyph Sound System