We are pleased to invite you to:
High Throughput Humanities
A satellite meeting at the European Conference on Complex Systems
Lisbon University Institute ISCTE in Lisbon, Portugal
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Abstract:
The High Throughput Humanities satellite event at ECCS'10 establishes a
forum for high throughput approaches in the humanities and social
sciences, within the framework of complex systems science. The symposium
aims to go beyond massive data aquisition and to present results beyond
what can be manually achieved by a single person or a small group.
Bringing together scientists, researchers, and practitioners from
relevant fields, the event will stimulate and facilitate discussion,
spark collaboration, as well as connect approaches, methods, and ideas.
The main goal of the event is to present novel results based on analyses
of Big Data (see NATURE special issue 2009), focusing on emergent
complex properties and dynamics, which allow for new insights,
applications, and services.
With the advent of the 21st century, increasing amounts of data from the
domain of qualitative humanities and social science research have become
available for quantitative analysis. Private enterprises (Google Books
and Earth, Youtube, Flickr, Twitter, Freebase, IMDb, among others) as
well as public and non-profit institutions (Europeana, Wikipedia,
DBPedia, Project Gutenberg, WordNet, Perseus, etc) are in the process of
collecting, digitizing, and structuring vast amounts of information, and
creating technologies, applications, and services (Linked Open Data,
Open Calais, Amazon's Mechanical Turk, ReCaptcha, ManyEyes, etc), which
are transforming the way we do research.
Utilizing a complex systems approach to harness these data, the
contributors of this event aim to make headway into the territory of
traditional humanities and social sciences, understanding history, arts,
literature, and society on a global-, meso- and granular level, using
computational methods to go beyond the limitations of the traditional
researcher.
Programme:
In addition to a number of keynotes we are looking for a number of TED
style contributions spanning a wide spectrum of fields in relation to
High Throughput Humanities. A podium style scientific discussion will
conclude the day.
Important Dates:
The deadline for submissions is April 30, 2010.
Notification of acceptance will be sent out by May 31, 2010.
The meeting takes place on September 15, 2010 in Lisbon, Portugal.
Submissions:
Proposals may be submitted using the EasyChair system at
https://www.easychair.org/login.cgi?conf=htheccs2010
The submission should be a one page PDF, consisting of an abstract, not
exceeding 300 words, your most striking figure, and preferably a link to
a relevant website.
Organizing Committee:
Maximilian Schich, CCNR Northeastern University, USA.
Sune Lehmann, IQSS Harvard, USA.
Riley Crane, MIT Media Lab, USA.
Gourab Ghoshal, CCNR Northeastern University / DFCI Harvard, USA.
Confirmed Programme Committee Members:
Albert-László Barabási, CCNR Northeastern University, USA.
Guido Caldarelli, INFM-CNR Rome, Italy.
Gregory Crane, Tufts University, USA.
Lars Kai Hansen, Technical University of Denmark.
Bernardo Huberman, HP Laboratories, USA.
Martin Kemp, Trinity College, Oxford, UK.
Roger Malina, Leonardo/ISAST, France.
Franco Moretti, Stanford University, USA.
Didier Sornette, ETH Zurich, Switzerland.
Links:
High Throughput Humanities http://hth.eccs2010.eu
ECCS2010 http://www.eccs2010.eu
Registration:
Attendees must register for ECCS'10 -- European Conference on Complex
Systems at http://www.eccs2010.eu.
Contact:
You can contact us via mail. If you would like to be added to the list
of interested people, please drop us a mail with the subject "Please add
me to the High Throughput Humanities list" at hth.eccs2010.eugmail.com
Quellennachweis:
CFP: High Throughput Humanities (ECCS, Lisbon, 15 Sep 10). In: ArtHist.net, 11.02.2010. Letzter Zugriff 20.10.2025. <https://arthist.net/archive/32290>.