Antwerp Spring Academy in DH 2014

S.R.213 Rodestraat 14 (via ingang Lange Winkelstraat), Antwerpen, Antwerpen, Belgium

Python

The focus is on text analysis using the popu­lar scrip­ting language Python, which is rapidly becoming the standard program­ming language for computa­tional text ana­lysis in digi­tal Humani­ties.

Covered topics include: basic text proces­sing tasks; using text-mining tool­kits such as Pattern and NLTK; applications of text proces­sing (e.g., sentiment mining, topic classi­fication, auto­matic clustering); XML parsing (e.g., TEI-XML) in Python.

For the work­shop, the instruc­tors will make use of a so-called Python note­book – a success­ful and enga­ging teaching for­mat. Python notebooks are a course book and coding ‘sandbox’ at once. Experience with previous EADH and DARIAH-DE Summer Schools in Nijmegen and Göttingen has shown that this format is extremely engaging for resear­chers who have had no signi­ficant expo­sure to digi­tal methods yet.

€100

Beckett Digital Manuscript Project Workshop

S.D.014 Prinsstraat 13, Antwerpen, Antwerpen, Belgium

A Workshop on Digital Scholarly Editing, sponsored by the European Research Council (ERC), the Digital Scholarly Editions Initial Training Network DiXiT (Marie Curie ITN), and the University of Antwerp.

Lecture Series: John Ashley Burgoyne

S.A.107 Prinsstraat 13, Antwerpen, België, Belgium

How to Make it Stick: A Study of Long-Term Musical Memorability Using Citizen Science.

Psycholinguist Steven Pinker once described music as being ‘auditory cheesecake’, similar to pornography and alcohol. Indeed, human beings do not seem to get enough of it. Music can be enchanting, annoying and intriguing. It helps us to concentrate or forget, it can make us jubilant or melancholic. Some songs, the so-called ‘earwigs’, can haunt us for days. These earwigs in particular are the subject of the upcoming talk. Our speaker will discuss what makes songs stick (i.e. what makes them ‘catchy’) by computationally analysing song structure and music recognition patterns by humans.

Lecture Series: Barbara Bordalejo

S.R.213 Rodestraat 14 (via ingang Lange Winkelstraat), Antwerpen, Antwerpen, Belgium

The Future of the Book and the Books of the Future.

In her talk, Bordalejo will discuss issues relating to publishing, eReaders and multimedia books.

DH Benelux 2015

Hof van Liere Prinsstraat 13, Antwerpen, Belgium

The DHBenelux conference welcomes contributions and participants from all areas of research and teaching in Digital Humanities. While the conference has a focus on recent advances in Belgium, The Netherlands, and Luxembourg, we do warmly welcome contributions from outside the Benelux. The language of the conference is international English. We hope that we may welcome many scholars to the European scientific meeting platform that DHBenelux will constitute in summer 2015 for the Digital Humanities.