Computational Humanities

 

Workshop at the 10th International Conference on Computational Science

 ICCS 2010, Amsterdam

Koninklijk Instituut voor de Tropen

Mauritskade 63, Amsterdam

Room: Claus

 

June 1st  2010, 14.30-16.10h

Link to the workshop list of ICCS 2010

 

Workshop Organizer:

Rens Bod

 

 

Workshop description

 

Computational Humanities is a new, largely unexplored, field which is situated at the interface between the humanities and the (exact) sciences, in particular information science. The humanities differ from the sciences in their concern with expressions of the human mind, such as language, literature, music, art and history. While computational approaches to the humanities exist since the 1960s, it is only during the last decade or so that digitized data have become available in such quantities that we can observe the emergence of a new overarching field. One of the major aims of this field is to automatically detect novel patterns and concepts in historical, musical, textual and artistic data that are (practically) impossible to find by hand. While initial work in computational humanities focused on local and low-level patterns, there is a shift towards unraveling more complex, higher-level patterns such as the notion of theme in literature, style in painting and music, and long-term relations in history. The goal of this workshop is (1) to give an introduction to this upcoming field, and (2) to investigate to what extent computational humanities share models and techniques with other areas of computational science.

 

 

Program

 

Chair: Frans Willekens (Netherlands Interdiciplinary Demographic Institute)

 

Rens Bod (University of Amsterdam)

“Introduction to computational humanities: modeling literature, music, art and history”

 

Lambert Schomaker (University of Groningen)

“High-level patterns in historical document analysis”

 

Eric Postma (Tilburg University)

“The automatic modeling of painting style”

 

Karina van Dalen-Oskam (Huygens Instituut KNAW)

“How to distinguish authors from copyists: Machine learning of authorship attribution”

 

Antal van den Bosch (Tilburg University)

“Modeling by example: The power of analogy over instances”