Spatial Relationships in Text as Data A one-day workshop at The Alan Turing Institute, London. Monday 28th October 2019 How can Qualitative Spatial Representation (QSR) be used in digital humanities? How can qualitative spatial relationships (e.g. next to, alongside, overlapping, inside, etc) in text be processed as data? How can documents where layout in space contributes meaning (e.g. poetry, multimodal documents) be processed to make use of the spatial aspect? This workshop is based around interaction among participants with interest in these topics. It continues discussions initiated by the AHRC-funded research network: Space and Narrative in the Digital Humanities. The event is open to all, but the number of places is limited. For more details, and to participate, please see: https://www.turing.ac.uk/events/spatial-relationships-text-data Organisers: John Stell, School of Computing, University of Leeds, UK Ian Gregory, Department of History, Lancaster University, UK Tony Cohn, School of Computing, University of Leeds, UK The workshop is supported by funding from: AHRC through the Research Network: Space and Narrative in the Digital Humanities. The Alan Turing Institute. ######################################################################## To unsubscribe from the DIGITALCLASSICIST list, click the following link: https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=DIGITALCLASSICIST&A=1