CFP: International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, Michigan
5-8 May 2005
The Digital Medievalist Project is sponsoring two sessions at Kalamazoo:
Text and Image in Digital Scholarship I: Focus on Text
Text and Image in Digital Scholarship II: Focus on Image
Colleagues from all medieval studies disciplines who are engaged in
digital scholarship are warmly invited to submit abstracts for either of
these sessions. Abstracts must be received by 15 September in order to
be considered, and must be accompanied by an Abstract Cover Sheet,
obtainable with the full Kalamazoo Call for Papers at
http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/40cfp/index.html as a
form-fillable PDF file.
For more information on the Digital Medievalist Project, our listserv
dm-l, and our journal DM: The Digital Medievalist, see
www.digitalmedievalist.org
Murray McGillivray
I know several people on this list are working with maps. Apologies for
cross posting.
-dan
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: encoding maps, graphics with text?
Date: Fri, 13 Aug 2004 07:25:48 -0700
From: Melissa Terras <melslists(a)YAHOO.COM>
Reply-To: Melissa Terras <melslists(a)YAHOO.COM>
To: TEI-L(a)LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU
Hi Everyone,
I used a mozilla program called Grava to encode images
of ancient documents, producing XML representations of
the strokes found in the images. This was software
originally developed to encode aerial satellite
imaging, and was constructed by Dr Paul Robertson,
formerly of the Robots Group, Dept of Engineering, Uni
of Oxford, now at CSAIL, MIT. We have a paper
detailing this in the next edition of LLC:
Terras, M. and Robertson, P. (Forthcoming 2004).
"Downs and Acrosses, Textual Markup on a Stroke Based
Level". Literary and Linguistic Computing, 19/3.
Paul says that anyone can have a copy of the software
to play with, should they wish.
Hope this helps
Melissa
--- Julia Flanders <Julia_Flanders(a)BROWN.EDU> wrote:
> Does anyone know of any projects which are using the
> TEI to encode
> materials that have substantial graphical content as
> well as text,
> e.g. maps, diagrams, that sort of thing? I'm
> interested in ways of
> making explicit linkages between specific locations
> in a digitized
> image and specific chunks of text in the encoded
> transcription.
>
> Many thanks! Julia
>
__________________________________
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--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
Associate Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Tel. (403) 329-2377
Fax. (403) 382-7191
E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>
FYI
---
Dr James Cummings, Oxford Text Archive, University of Oxford
James dot Cummings at oucs dot ox dot ac dot uk
CALL FOR PAPERS: Digital Medievalism (Kalamazoo) and
Early Drama (Leeds) see http://users.ox.ac.uk/~jamesc/cfp.html
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2004 12:09:37 EDT
From: Ralph Mathisen <N330009(a)VM.SC.EDU>
Reply-To: Medieval Texts - Philology Codicology and Technology
<MEDTEXTL(a)listserv.uiuc.edu>
To: MEDTEXTL(a)listserv.uiuc.edu
Subject: Computers and Medieval Studies
CONFERENCE REMINDER
CALL FOR PAPERS
ANCIENT STUDIES -- NEW TECHNOLOGY III
The third biennial conference on the topic of "Ancient
Studies -- New Technology: The World Wide Web and
Scholarly Research, Communication, and Publication in
Ancient, Byzantine, and Medieval Studies" will be held
December 3-5, 2004, at James Madison University,
Harrisonburg, VA. All topics relating to the use of the web,
the internet, and computer technology in scholarly and
pedagogical endeavors are welcome.
Sample topics of interest could include (but are not limited to)
1) the digital museum; 2) the digital classroom; 3) the digital
scholar; and 4) theoretical issues such as "knowledge
representation". 300-word electronic abstracts dealing with
these issues and with other ways in which the WEB can
help to promote classical, ancient, Byzantine, and medieval
studies may be directed to Ralph Mathisen, Program Chair,
at ralphwm(a)uiuc.edu and ruricius(a)msn.com (snail-mail:
Department of History, 309 Gregory Hall, University of
Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801). Deadline for receipt of
abstracts is August 31, 2004. Programs for previous
conferences may be consulted at http://www.roman-emperors.org/program.htm (2000 Conference) and
http://tabula.rutgers.edu/conferences/ancient_studies2002/
conf_program.html (2002 Conference).
The website for the upcoming conference is located at
http://www.cisat.jmu.edu/asnt3.
Ralph W. Mathisen
Department of History, University of Illinois
309 Gregory Hall, 810 S Wright ST, MC-466, Urbana IL 61801 USA
Phone: 217-244-2075, FAX: 217-333-2297
Director, Biographical Database for Late Antiquity
Administrator: LT-ANTIQ, NUMISM-L, PROSOP-L
EMAIL: ralphwm(a)uiuc.edu or ruricius(a)msn.com
Society for Late Antiquity Web Site: http://www.sc.edu/ltantsoc
Geography of Roman Gaul Site: http://www.sc.edu/ltantsoc/geogmain.htm
Field Site: http://www.history.uiuc.edu/areas/lateantiquity.html
Hi list,
This is a message I sent as a reply to James Cummings on TEI-L, but I think it may be of interest to folks on this list as well (some of whom, I expect, will know more than me - I haven't studied medieval music since college). His original query concerned including the Medieval Encoding Initiative (MEI, http://dl.lib.virginia.edu/bin/dtd/mei/) as a module in the TEI.
********************
James (and list),
There are at least two other prospective XML schemas for encoding music - Music Markup Language (http://www.musicmarkup.info/) and MusicXML (http://www.musicxml.org/xml.html). I can't speak to the technical pros and cons of including music markup as a part of TEI. I do think that it is something to consider, especially for, as you say, liturgical manuscripts (or other early manuscripts that include musical notation).
Having looked briefly at all three of these markup schemas, though, it appears that all are designed specifically for modern Western musical notation - notes of determined length on a standard staff. This would be fine for encoding something like a 18th century hymnal, but less useful for 13th or 14th century notation (which might be on a staff, but rhythm is not always clear), and not useful at all for the earliest notation (basically squiggles written over the lyrics). It would be great to be able to describe these sorts of early notation beyond simply noting that they're there, but it doesn't appear that these schemas are designed with early notation in mind (at least not publically, yet).
Does anyone on the list know more? Is anyone interested in pursuing some sort of notation extension/module to TEI?
Dot
***************************************
Dorothy Carr Porter, Program Coordinator
Collaboratory for Research in Computing for Humanities
University of Kentucky
351 William T. Young Library
Lexington, KY 40506
dporter(a)uky.edu 859-257-9549
***************************************
Another piece of news beginning to show up on other mailing lists. Sorry
for the cross posting to those who have received it multiple times.
While this is a reasonable change in focus, I'll miss the old CHum, I
must say. There were interesting markup articles every couple of issues
(including, for example, one on metre last year and one in the latest
issue on an "intertextual" tag and using multiple dtds).
-dan
***************************************************
LANGUAGE RESOURCES AND EVALUATION
***************************************************
Editors-in-chief:
Nancy Ide, Department of Computer Science, Vassar College, USA
Nicoletta Calzolari, Isitiuto di Linguistica Computazionale, CNR,
Italy
Published by Springer (formerly Kluwer Academic Publishers and Springer
Verlag)
We are pleased to announce that as of Volume 39 for 2005, Computers and the
Humanities will be changing its name to Language Resources and Evaluation.
Language Resources and Evaluation is the first publication devoted to the
creation, annotation, and exploitation of language resources for use in
language processing applications, corpus linguistics and linguistic studies
generally, as well as evaluation of language processing methods and
results. These areas have seen a dramatic increase in activity over the
past decade, as evidenced by the growing attendance at the four Language
Resources and Evaluation Conferences (LREC) held since 1998.
Language resources include language data and descriptions in machine
readable form used to assist and augment language processing applications
and linguistic studies, such as written or spoken corpora and lexica,
multimodal resources, grammars, terminology or domain specific databases
and dictionaries, ontologies, multimedia databases, etc., as well as basic
software tools for their acquisition, preparation, annotation, management,
customization, and use. Evaluation of language resources concerns assessing
the state-of-the-art for a given technology, comparing different approaches
to a given problem, assessing the availability of resources and
technologies for a given application, benchmarking, and assessing system
usability and user satisfaction.
Articles are solicited on the following topics:
Design, construction and use of Language Resources (LRs):
· Guidelines, standards, specifications, models, and best practices
for LRs,
· Methods, tools and procedures for the acquisition, creation,
annotation, management, access, distribution and use of LRs
· Methods for the extraction and acquisition of knowledge (e.g. terms,
lexical information, language modeling data) from LRs
· Organizational and legal issues in the construction, distribution,
access and use of LRs
· Availability and use of generic vs. task/domain specific LRs
· Monolingual and multilingual LRs
· Multimedia and multimodal LRs and integration of various media and
modalities (speech, vision, language)
· Documentation and archiving of languages, including minority and
endangered languages,
· Ontologies and knowledge representation
· Tools and methodologies for terminology and ontology building, term
extraction, and creation of specialized dictionaries
· LRs for linguistic research in human-machine communication
· Exploitation of LRs in different types of applications (information
extraction, information retrieval, speech dictation, translation,
summarization, web services, semantic web, etc.),
· Exploitation of LRs in different types of interfaces (dialog
systems, natural language and multimodal/multisensorial interactions, etc.)
· Metadata descriptions of LRs
· Open architectures for LRs
Human Language Technologies Evaluation:
· Evaluation, validation, quality assurance of LRs
· Evaluation methodologies, protocols and measures
· Benchmarking of systems, resources for benchmarking and evaluation,
blackbox, glassbox and diagnostic evaluation of systems
· Evaluation in written language processing (document production and
management, text retrieval, terminology extraction, message understanding,
text alignment, machine translation, morphosyntactic tagging, parsing,
semantic tagging, word sense disambiguation, text understanding,
summarization, question answering, etc.)
· Evaluation in spoken language processing (speech recognition and
understanding, voice dictation, oral dialog, speech synthesis, speech
coding, speaker and language recognition, spoken translation, etc.)
· Evaluation of multimedia document retrieval and search systems
(including detection, indexing, filtering, alert, question answering, etc)
· Evaluation of multimodal systems
· Moving from evaluation to standardization
Language Resources and Evaluation is the official journal of the European
Language Resources Association (ELRA), sponsor of the bi-annual LREC
conference. The first number of LRE in 2005 will be a special issue
dedicated to the memory of Antonio Zampolli.
For information about this new title, aims and scope, manuscript
submission, and subscription, please contact the publisher:
Mrs. Jolanda Voogd, Associate Publishing Editor
Humanities Unit - Linguistics
Springer
P.O. Box 17, 3300 AA Dordrecht,
The Netherlands
Telephone: +31-(0)78 - 6576116 (direct)
Fax: +31-(0)78 - 6576350
E-mail: Jolanda.Voogd(a)springer-sbm.com
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
Associate Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Tel. (403) 329-2377
Fax. (403) 382-7191
E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>
Hello all,
Thanks to Dan for cross-posting the announcement of the C11 database.
All of us at MANCASS would be very interested to receive comments on
the database from members of this group. Any very technical comments
should be directed to the programmer, Dan Smith
(daniel.p.smith(a)man.ac.uk), other comments to Don or myself.
Best,
Kathryn
Kathryn Powell
Research Fellow
Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies
University of Manchester
Oxford Road
Manchester M13 9PL
UK
(+44) 0161 275 3157
kathryn.e.powell(a)man.ac.uk
http://homepage.mac.com/kapowe
On 4 Aug 2004, at 17:46, Daniel O'Donnell wrote:
> Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for
> papers: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm
> ----------------
> Hello all,
> I don't think this has been posted on dm-l yet:
>
> The Manchester Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies is pleased to announce
> the availability of the MANCASS C11 Database, a tool for studying
> scripts and spellings in eleventh-century England. The database is now
> accessible at:
>
> http://www.art.man.ac.uk/english/mancass/ data/index.htm
>
> or visit http://www.man.ac.uk and search for ‘MANCASS’, then follow
> the link to the ‘C11 Database’. The database is the outcome of a
> three-year AHRB-funded research project headed by Professor Donald
> Scragg with Dr Alex Rumble. This freely accessible database allows
> users to search a body of material from eleventh-century manuscripts
> for particular spellings and spelling variants and to determine when
> and in what context they were used. It also contains searchable
> information about scribes and hands found in eleventh-century
> manuscripts. The version of the database currently available is a
> public beta version; please report any errors to the site's webmaster
> via a link provided on the site. In the coming months, we will
> continue to upload more eleventh-century material into the database
> and will also add more material to the website providing guidance on
> its contents and use. In the meantime, if you have questions or
> comments, don't hesitate to contact either Don Scragg
> (don.scragg(a)man.ac.uk) or myself (kathryn.e.powell(a)man.ac.uk). We hope
> you will find the database a useful resource.
>
> On behalf of the project team,
>
> Kathryn Powell
> Research Fellow
> Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies
> University of Manchester
> Oxford Road
> Manchester M13 9PL
> UK
> (+44) 0161 275 3157
> kathryn.e.powell(a)man.ac.uk
> http://homepage.mac.com/kapowe
>
> --
> Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
> Associate Professor of English
> University of Lethbridge
> Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
> Tel. (403) 329-2377
> Fax. (403) 382-7191
> E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
> Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Project web site: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
> dm-l mailing list
> dm-l(a)uleth.ca
> http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
>
Hello all,
I don't think this has been posted on dm-l yet:
The Manchester Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies is pleased to announce the
availability of the MANCASS C11 Database, a tool for studying scripts
and spellings in eleventh-century England. The database is now
accessible at:
http://www.art.man.ac.uk/english/mancass/ data/index.htm
or visit http://www.man.ac.uk and search for ‘MANCASS’, then follow the
link to the ‘C11 Database’. The database is the outcome of a three-year
AHRB-funded research project headed by Professor Donald Scragg with Dr
Alex Rumble. This freely accessible database allows users to search a
body of material from eleventh-century manuscripts for particular
spellings and spelling variants and to determine when and in what
context they were used. It also contains searchable information about
scribes and hands found in eleventh-century manuscripts. The version of
the database currently available is a public beta version; please report
any errors to the site's webmaster via a link provided on the site. In
the coming months, we will continue to upload more eleventh-century
material into the database and will also add more material to the
website providing guidance on its contents and use. In the meantime, if
you have questions or comments, don't hesitate to contact either Don
Scragg (don.scragg(a)man.ac.uk) or myself (kathryn.e.powell(a)man.ac.uk). We
hope you will find the database a useful resource.
On behalf of the project team,
Kathryn Powell
Research Fellow
Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies
University of Manchester
Oxford Road
Manchester M13 9PL
UK
(+44) 0161 275 3157
kathryn.e.powell(a)man.ac.uk
http://homepage.mac.com/kapowe
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
Associate Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Tel. (403) 329-2377
Fax. (403) 382-7191
E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>