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services:seminars:presentations2019 [2019/09/17 08:59] – [Collections and Networks] leffertsservices:seminars:presentations2019 [2019/09/17 11:31] – [Collections and Networks] lefferts
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 **9:15** Welcome, Kristian Jensen, CERL Chairman and Wolfram Horstmann, SUB Göttingen\\ **9:15** Welcome, Kristian Jensen, CERL Chairman and Wolfram Horstmann, SUB Göttingen\\
  
-Moderator: tbc\\+Moderator: Alexander Jahnke, Data Conversion Group, Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek, Göttingen\\
 **9:45** Uwe Sikora, SUB Göttingen, 'Interlinked! The TEI-XML Markup of Maya Hieroglyphic Texts Aided by a Digital Sign Catalogue'\\ **9:45** Uwe Sikora, SUB Göttingen, 'Interlinked! The TEI-XML Markup of Maya Hieroglyphic Texts Aided by a Digital Sign Catalogue'\\
  
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   * Leo Lahti is Adjunct Professor and research group leader in applied mathematics at University of Turku, Finland. He obtained PhD in statistical machine learning and bioinformatics from Aalto University (2010), and has subsequently carried out data-intensive research in areas ranging from machine learning and molecular life sciences to digital humanities. He has also published popular open research software, is the founder and first coordinator of Open Knowledge Finland Open Science work group, and a scientific advisor in data science for various companies. His key research themes cover methods and applications of modern statistical data analysis in emerging application fields such as computational history. For more information, see: http://www.iki.fi/Leo.Lahti   * Leo Lahti is Adjunct Professor and research group leader in applied mathematics at University of Turku, Finland. He obtained PhD in statistical machine learning and bioinformatics from Aalto University (2010), and has subsequently carried out data-intensive research in areas ranging from machine learning and molecular life sciences to digital humanities. He has also published popular open research software, is the founder and first coordinator of Open Knowledge Finland Open Science work group, and a scientific advisor in data science for various companies. His key research themes cover methods and applications of modern statistical data analysis in emerging application fields such as computational history. For more information, see: http://www.iki.fi/Leo.Lahti
  
-Moderator: tbc\\ +Moderator: Dr. Maria Georgopoulou, The Gennadius Library American School of Classical Studies at Athens  
 +\\
 **13:45** Howard Hotson, 'Reassembling the Republic of Letters: current projects and future prospects'\\ **13:45** Howard Hotson, 'Reassembling the Republic of Letters: current projects and future prospects'\\
   * Short bio: [[https://www.history.ox.ac.uk/people/professor-howard-hotson|Howard Hotson]] is Professor of Early Modern Intellectual History at the University of Oxford. Amongst his central interests is the possibility of rewriting aspects of transnational intellectual and cultural exchange 'from the ground up' by rooting institutions, traditions and ideas in 'intellectual geographies' created by different combinations of physical, economic, social, political, cultural and religious conditions. These interests have drawn him into the social as well as technical problems of devising sustainable digital infrastructure to support large-scale, collaborative research during the next generation. Much of his thinking has been conditioned by directing since 2009 the Mellon-funded research project, [[http://www.culturesofknowledge.org/|Cultures of Knowledge]] in Oxford, responsible for creating the collaboratively populated union catalogue, [[http://emlo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/home|Early Modern Letters Online]]. Between 2014 and 2018 he also chaired the COST Action [[http://www.republicofletters.net/|Reassembling the Republic of Letters]], the findings of which have just been published by the [[https://www.univerlag.uni-goettingen.de/handle/3/isbn-978-3-86395-403-1?locale-attribute=en|Göttingen University Press]]. He is also currently the PI on the AHRC-funded project, [[https://networkingarchives.org/|Networking Archives]].   * Short bio: [[https://www.history.ox.ac.uk/people/professor-howard-hotson|Howard Hotson]] is Professor of Early Modern Intellectual History at the University of Oxford. Amongst his central interests is the possibility of rewriting aspects of transnational intellectual and cultural exchange 'from the ground up' by rooting institutions, traditions and ideas in 'intellectual geographies' created by different combinations of physical, economic, social, political, cultural and religious conditions. These interests have drawn him into the social as well as technical problems of devising sustainable digital infrastructure to support large-scale, collaborative research during the next generation. Much of his thinking has been conditioned by directing since 2009 the Mellon-funded research project, [[http://www.culturesofknowledge.org/|Cultures of Knowledge]] in Oxford, responsible for creating the collaboratively populated union catalogue, [[http://emlo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/home|Early Modern Letters Online]]. Between 2014 and 2018 he also chaired the COST Action [[http://www.republicofletters.net/|Reassembling the Republic of Letters]], the findings of which have just been published by the [[https://www.univerlag.uni-goettingen.de/handle/3/isbn-978-3-86395-403-1?locale-attribute=en|Göttingen University Press]]. He is also currently the PI on the AHRC-funded project, [[https://networkingarchives.org/|Networking Archives]].
 services/seminars/presentations2019.txt · Last modified: 2019/11/01 13:29 by lefferts

 

 

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