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**With apologies for cross-posting**


The board of the Göttingen Dialog in Digital Humanities is pleased to 
announce the winners of this year’s dialog series award. The winner will 
be handed a *prize of €500 *and candidates in the second and third 
position will receive a *notable mention*.

The winner of the seminar series of 2015 is the paper:

*/Automated Pattern Analysis in Gesture Research: Similarity Measuring 
in 3D Motion Capture Models of Communicative Action/*

by

Daniel Schüller et al.

in combination with the presentation given by

Daniel Schüller, Christian Beecks & Irene Mittelberg

from RWTH Aachen University, Germany and University of Alberta, Canada

on 23^rd June

The prize is awarded on the basis of an evaluation of both the paper and 
the quality of the presentation, for which this candidate received 
85/100. “It was awesome”, “Valuable for studying the meaning of 
gestures”, are comments accompanying the scores, which were given for 
/content quality/, /significance for theory or practice/, /level of/ 
/innovation/ and /presentation style/ by the reviewers of the papers, 
and by the audience for the presentations.

The winner is closely followed by yet another worthy candidate with a 
paper entitled */Reconstructing a website’s lost past - Methodological 
issues concerning the history of www.unibo.it/*. The paper, written and 
presented by Federico Nanni from the University of Bologna (and visiting 
PhD student at the University of Mannheim), receives a notable mention 
for its high standard and originality. Nanni received great praise 
especially for his style of presentation; “I enjoyed it!”, “Very cool 
style” and “Great presentation” are just some of the immediate reactions 
of his audience. This candidate received a score of 81/100.

The second notable mention is awarded to the paper */Visualizing the 
Results of Search Queries on Ancient Text Corpora with Tag Pies/ *by 
Stephan Jänicke from the University of Leipzig, which closely followed 
Nanni’s score with 79/100. Jänicke’s paper was ranked very high and his 
presentation followed by comments, such as “Really original and 
innovative” and “This would have a broad appeal.”

_Evaluation Method_

In order to identify the winner, the board based its decision on the 
scores obtained from the combination of the points awarded by the 
reviewers of the submitted papers and the points given by the audience 
during the presentations. The final score for each candidate is the mean 
of all points summed together from both the paper and the presentation.

The categories of evaluation for the paper were: /content quality/, 
/significance for theory or practice/ and /level of/ /innovation. /The 
categories for the presentations were the same, with the addition 
of/presentation style. /It is important to note that the familiarity of 
the reviewer with the topic presented was taken into great 
consideration, lest reviewers be inaccurate in their judgment.

For questions regarding the evaluation method, please feel free to email 
us at gddh(at)gcdh(dot)de

On behalf of the board of the Göttingen Dialog in Digital Humanities 
2015, we would like to thank each and every participant for making this 
seminar series exactly what we wanted it to be - interesting and 
inspiring - and for bringing new ideas and DH expertise to Göttingen.*We 
look forward to the next series in 2016!*

**

The GDDH Board

Camilla Di Biase-Dyson (Georg August University Göttingen)
Marco Büchler (Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities)
Jens Dierkes (Göttingen eResearch Alliance)
Emily Franzini (Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities)
Greta Franzini (Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities)
Angelo Mario Del Grosso (ILC-CNR, Pisa, Italy)
Berenike Herrmann (Georg August University Göttingen)
Péter Király (Gesellschaft für wissenschaftliche Datenverarbeitung mbH 
Göttingen)
Gabriele Kraft (Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities)
Bärbel Kröger (Göttingen Academy of Sciences and Humanities)
Martin Langner (Archäologisches Institut Göttingen)
Maria Moritz (Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities)
Sarah Bowen Savant (Aga Khan University, London, UK)
Oliver Schmitt (Gesellschaft für wissenschaftliche Datenverarbeitung mbH 
Göttingen)
Sree Ganesh Thotempudi (Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities)
Jörg Wettlaufer (Göttingen Centre for Digital Humanities & Göttingen 
Academy of Sciences and Humanities)
Ulrike Wuttke (Göttingen Academy of Sciences and Humanities)


See also: 
http://etrap.gcdh.de/announcement-winner-of-the-gottingen-dialog-in-digital-humanities-gddh-award-2015/

-- 
Maria Moritz
Göttingen Center for Digital Humanities
Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
Georg-August-University Göttingen
Papendiek 16
D-37073 Göttingen, Germany

phone: +49 551 39-20479
eMail:[log in to unmask]
web: eTrap projecthttp://etrap.gcdh.de/