Report from Dagstuhl Seminar 14301 Creative Commons BY 3.0 Unported license

Chris Biemann, Gregory Crane, Christiane Fellbaum, Alexander Mehler, Chris Biemann, Gregory Crane, Christiane Fellbaum, Alexander License, Chris Biemann, Gregory Crane, Christiane Fellbaum, Alexander Mehler
unpublished
Research in the field of Digital Humanities, also known as Humanities Computing, has seen a steady increase over the past years. Situated at the intersection of computing science and the humanities, present efforts focus on making resources such as texts, images, musical pieces and other semiotic artifacts digitally available, searchable and analysable. To this end, computational tools enabling textual search, visual analytics, data mining, statistics and natural language processing are
more » ... d to support the humanities researcher. The processing of large data sets with appropriate software opens up novel and fruitful approaches to questions in the traditional humanities.
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