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Alan Liu presents: “The Meaning of the Digital Humanities” | HASTAC.
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“With shallower administrative hierarchies and less institutional inertia, liberal-arts colleges can innovate relatively rapidly and at lower cost. They usually have more collegiality across disciplines and divisions, and between faculty and staff members. It’s easier to build coalitions and to organize project teams at small colleges.”
People new to text mining are often disillusioned when they figure out how it’s actually done — which is still, in large part, by counting words. They’re willing to believe that computers have developed some clever strategy for finding patterns in language — but think “surely it’s something better than that?“
Our goal
The DH Community is a program of Wake Forest's Humanities Institute. We are faculty from across campus interested in investigating the emergence of digital humanities as a field of study, and its relevance and usefulness as a research and teaching tool in the humanities.Join the conversation!
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Tag Cloud
Ada Lovelace advocacy Alan Turing Artificial Intelligence big data careers crowdsourcing culturomics database design digital collections digital curation digital pedagogy digital scholarship digitization distant reading history humanities data curation internet italy language liberal arts libraries manuscripts mapping methods multimodal omega peer review quantitative analysis resource resources sentiment analysis southern history spatial analysis Stanford DH statistics teaching textual analysis THATCamp timelines transcription Turing Test undergraduate education venice word frequency