Excuse the cross-post from the Humanist/Antiquist lists but this event
looks like a good chance to hear about projects implementing linked
data in the real world.
Cheers, Mia
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http://openobjects.org.uk/
http://twitter.com/mia_out
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Date: Thu, 18 Oct 2012 16:47:09 +0100
From: "Lorna M. Hughes" <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Data Publication and Linked Data in the Humanities
Data Publication and Linked Data in the Humanities
November 12th, 2012, 09:30-16:30
Council Chamber, National Library of Wales
About the event
Leading figures from the digital humanities, libraries and archives
community will address the major challenges in transferring recent
developments in the Semantic Web from research laboratories into the
real world of humanities research. The term "linked data" covers a set
of principles and approaches for publishing, sharing and linking data
over the Web, in particular by using semantic web technologies.
Humanities researchers have access to a great deal of digital material,
whether produced by other researchers or by digitisation programmes in
archives and museums. However, even when these resources are accessible
over the Web, they are often held in dispersed, individual silos that
are difficult to access in an integrated fashion because of the variety
of formats, vocabularies and standards employed to represent them. Such
resources would be much more useful to scholars if they could be linked
up and explored as a single rich data landscape.
The seminar will investigate how linked data could serve the digital
arts and humanities by bringing together international experts in the
semantic web to discuss existing approaches in the digital arts and
humanities.
This workshop is co-organised by the National Library of Wales and
King’s College, London, and funded by JISC.
There is no charge to attend the workshop, however, registration is
essential by sending e-mail to Angharad Medi Lewis at NLW: [log in to unmask]
Programme
09:30 Coffee and arrival
10:00 Welcome by the Lorna Hughes, NLW and Mark Hedges, KCL
10:10 Jane Stevenson, University of Manchester
10:30 Dominic Oldman, British Museum
11:00 Christian Emil Ore, University of Oslo
11:30 Coffee
12:00 Leif Isaksen, University of Southampton
12:30 Discussion
13:00 Lunch
14:00 Sebastian Rahtz, University of Oxford
14:30 Mark Hedges, King’s College, London
15:00 Gill Hamilton, National Library of Scotland
15:30 Discussion
16:30 Tea
--
Professor Lorna M. Hughes
University of Wales Chair in Digital Collections
Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru National Library of Wales
[log in to unmask] Ffôn / Phone 01970 632 499
http://www.llgc.org.uk/
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