*Call for talk proposals: Centre for e-Research Seminar Series, Autumn 2013*
The Centre for e-Research (CeRch) http://www.kcl.ac.uk/innovation/groups/cerch/index.aspx at the Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London runs an interdisciplinary seminar programme on alternate Tuesday evenings during term time.
We now invite proposals for presentations in the Autumn Term 2013 CeRch seminar series. Seminars can cover any topic within CeRch's areas of interest and expertise, including applied and theoretical papers and presentation of early results. See below for more details or visit the seminars web page http://www.kcl.ac.uk/innovation/groups/cerch/research/seminars/index.aspx.
The call is open to all, including people at any stage in their academic career and those working outside academia, with the possibility to facilitate remote speakers. Seminars will be streamed live and published as online video after the event, unless the speaker requests otherwise. Reasonable travel expenses can be met, along with one night's accommodation in London if necessary.
Please submit an abstract of up to 400 words to Anna Jordanous, via email to cerch@kcl.ac.uk by /Thursday 1st August 2013/. Seminars will take place on Tuesday 6.15pm-7.30pm, provisionally on 1st, 15th, 29th October, 12th, 26th November, 10th December 2013. Please indicate your availability for these dates in your submission email.* * We look forward to hearing from you. Regards, Anna Jordanous (CeRch)*
*PS Apologies for any unwanted cross posting. Please do forward this to any people or groups you think may be interested. If you have any questions, please contact Anna Jordanous via the cerch@kcl.ac.uk email.
--- *Centre for e-Research Seminar Series
*The CeRch seminars provide a venue for discussion and engagment of a range of projects, applications, methods and theories spanning the Centre's academic interests in computing, library and archives research, digital culture, information science and digital scholarship.
With viewpoints from many disciplines including the sciences, social sciences and humanities, the series' primary focus is to stimulate discussion and provide new and innovative insight into the design, development and use of digitally-based methods and technologies, especially where they interact with a range of other fields. Previous topics have included digital manuscript studies, visualisation, webometrics, computer art, motion data, and network analysis, among many others (details of recent seminars in this series can be seen at http://www.kcl.ac.uk/innovation/groups/cerch/research/seminars/.)
The series invites contributions for talks engaging with innovative e-research questions or applications. The series provides excellent networking opportunities, and will be of interest to anyone interested in debates around computing technologies.
Seminars are held fortnightly on Tuesdays during term time at 6.15pm (unless otherwise stated) in the Anatomy Theatre & Museum, at King's College London, Strand Campus (http://www.kcl.ac.uk/cultural/spaces/anatomy-museum.aspx). Seminars are followed by drinks and nibbles.
/Twitter: @KingsCeRch hashtag: #cerchseminars/