Workshop jointly hosted by CARARE and Europeana which took place at the University of Leiden, Faculty of Archaeology on 14 June 2017. The theme of the workshop was Archaeology and Architecture in Europeana.
Workshop jointly hosted by CARARE and Europeana which took place at the University of Leiden, Faculty of Archaeology on 14 June 2017. The theme of the workshop was Archaeology and Architecture in Europeana.
Culture Untapped: inspirational content & fresh ideas for your gamesMilena Popova
Games are often brain- and resource-intensive projects. Why not save precious time and exploit untapped, powerful sources of inspiration and material? Discover Europeana, a digital platform for culture giving access to over 43 million records of great thematic and media variety, coming from 3300 heritage organizations and available in 31 languages.
This presentation shows how this huge database can help game creation process with fresh ideas and “building blocks” of diverse and high-quality digital content. Game developers will look at inspiring content picks, learn more about technical tools and services to access and use the digital material and see some real-life examples of creative re-use of cultural content in educational and tourism games.
#Europeana4Education: final teachers’ workshop (February, 2017)Europeana
On 27-28 February 2017, European Schoolnet (EUN), the international network of European Ministries of Education, hosted the final Europeana validation pilot workshop for teachers in Brussels. 19 teachers from 10 EU countries came together to test pedagogical scenarios and develop learning activities using Europeana content.
Workshop jointly hosted by CARARE and Europeana which took place at the University of Leiden, Faculty of Archaeology on 14 June 2017. The theme of the workshop was Archaeology and Architecture in Europeana.
Culture Untapped: inspirational content & fresh ideas for your gamesMilena Popova
Games are often brain- and resource-intensive projects. Why not save precious time and exploit untapped, powerful sources of inspiration and material? Discover Europeana, a digital platform for culture giving access to over 43 million records of great thematic and media variety, coming from 3300 heritage organizations and available in 31 languages.
This presentation shows how this huge database can help game creation process with fresh ideas and “building blocks” of diverse and high-quality digital content. Game developers will look at inspiring content picks, learn more about technical tools and services to access and use the digital material and see some real-life examples of creative re-use of cultural content in educational and tourism games.
#Europeana4Education: final teachers’ workshop (February, 2017)Europeana
On 27-28 February 2017, European Schoolnet (EUN), the international network of European Ministries of Education, hosted the final Europeana validation pilot workshop for teachers in Brussels. 19 teachers from 10 EU countries came together to test pedagogical scenarios and develop learning activities using Europeana content.
Address to the conference ‘Museums in the Digital Sphere: Opportunities and Challenges’ held on 6 October 2017 at the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Germany.
The event provided an opportunity to analyse the needs and wishes of museum visitors in the 21st century and to open up topics such as digital collections, transparency, and open access to public discussion. It addressed technical restrictions (databases, structures, resources) and legal limitations (copyright, image rights) as well as the opportunities created by interlinking multiple collections in comprehensive platforms such as the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek (German Digital Library – DDB), ‘bavarikon’, Europeana and introduce initiatives such as #openGLAM.
Douglas presented Europeana, a unique digital resource where thousands of cultural institutions – from regional archives to national museums – share their collections online. Douglas emphasised the benefits of working with Europeana's community of 1700+ digital heritage and tech experts to expand and improve access to our shared cultural heritage. He outlined the opportunities for cultural institutions to showcase their collections with Europeana and to engage citizens within and beyond Europe.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
Europeana4Education at Open Education Week 2017 - webinar slidesEuropeana
Europeana4Education: discover how digital cultural heritage collections can enrich your educational resources and inspire learners. 29 March 2017.
These slides introduce:
- The diversity of digitised cultural heritage content that can be found on Europeana, and its educational value.
- The free tools Europeana provides to enable access our content (including our manual download and the Europeana APIs).
- The financial support Europeana can offer in the development of educational resources featuring our content.
Workshop presentation to Sharing is Caring - Hamburg Extension
at Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg, 20 April 2017.
As digitisation has become a major task for the cultural heritage sector, more and more cultural institutions are providing access to their digitised collections. But sharing is not only about creating online access, it is about sharing the authority to interpret the digitised assets and to create value by opening them up for reuse. How can opening up result in a mutual benefit for institutions as well as for their audiences and society? And what are the challenges on the way like copyright, institutional policies and not to forget the expectation of the users?
Douglas introduced Europeana to a workshop audience with a special focus on re-use of digital cultural heritage in educational contexts.
A guide to using Europeana for education Europeana
This guide introduces the basic principles of searching for and using Europeana’s content in education. It covers topics like copyright and licenses that allow educational reuse, and how you should credit Europeana content when you use it. It also gives an introduction to the Europeana APIs. It is of use to educators across all subjects, students and lifelong learners, developers of educational resources and educational publishers. Find out more: http://pro.europeana.eu/use-our-data/education
Europeana at Ten: insights from our first decadeDouglas McCarthy
Presentation to Open GLAM México, 6 September 2018, Mexico City. This event linked numerous institutions to encourage dialogue around the Open GLAM movement and was jointly organised by the Ministry of Culture, the National Institute of Fine Arts, the Cultural Center of Spain in Mexico and Wikimedia México.
The aims of Open GLAM México were:
• Socialise good practices and policies generated by GLAM institutions to distribute data and digital objects, in national and international context.
• Promote the opening of digital collections in public and private institutions in Mexico.
• Establish an open dialogue on copyright issues focused on the use, reuse and appropriation of digital collections of cultural heritage.
Beyond the space: the LoCloud Historical Place Names microservicelocloud
Presentation given by Rimvydas Laužikas, Justinas Jaronis and Ingrida Vosyliūtė
Vilnius University Faculty of Communication, Lithuania
LoCloud Conference
Sharing local cultural heritage online with LoCloud services
Amersfoort, Netherlands
5 February 2016
Small, smaller and smallest: working with small archaeological content provid...locloud
Presentation given by Holly Wright
Archaeology Data Service University of York, UK
LoCloud Conference
Sharing local cultural heritage online with LoCloud services
Amersfoort, Netherlands
5 February 2016
Slide 2 - 66: Shaping innovatin in education with cultural heritage by Fred Truyen, Steven Stegers, Evita Tasiopoulou and Marco Neves
Slides 67 - 152: Multilingual access and machine translation by Andy Neale, Antoine Isaac, Pavel Kats, Alex Raginsky and Sergiu Gordea
Slides 155 - 164: How to implement the FAIR principles in digital culture by Sara Di Giorgio, Saskia Scheltjens and Makx Dekkers, Seamus Ross, Franco Niccolucci and Erzsébet Tóth-Czifra
Slide 166: EuropeanaTech Unconference by Clemens Neudecker
Europeana 2019 - Connect Communities - Pitch your projectEuropeana
Slides 3 - 10: The GIFT Box: Helping museums make richer digital experiences for their visitors by Anders Sundnes Lovlie
Slides 11 - 18: Between people and things - Transfer of knowledge at SHMH by Elisabeth Böhm
Slides 19 - 30: Automated recognition of historical image content by Tino Mager
Slides 31 - 51: 50s in Europe: Kaleidoscope by Sofie Taes
Slides 52 - 63: CrowdHeritage: Crowdsourcing Platform for Enriching Europeana Metadata by Vassilis Tzouvaras
Slides 64 - 73: One by One: developing digital literacy in museums by Anra Kennedy
Slides 74 - 85: HeritageMaps.ie - Ireland's One-Stop Heritage Portal by Patrick Reid
Slides 86 - 90: Open GLAM now! - Sharing knowledge openly online by Larissa Borck
Slides 91 - 103: Endangered Archives Programme the world's most diverse online archive by Tristan Roddis
Slides 104 - 109: We transform the world with culture - Our impact on climate change by Barbara Fischer, Killian Downing and Peter Soemers
Address to the conference ‘Museums in the Digital Sphere: Opportunities and Challenges’ held on 6 October 2017 at the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Germany.
The event provided an opportunity to analyse the needs and wishes of museum visitors in the 21st century and to open up topics such as digital collections, transparency, and open access to public discussion. It addressed technical restrictions (databases, structures, resources) and legal limitations (copyright, image rights) as well as the opportunities created by interlinking multiple collections in comprehensive platforms such as the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek (German Digital Library – DDB), ‘bavarikon’, Europeana and introduce initiatives such as #openGLAM.
Douglas presented Europeana, a unique digital resource where thousands of cultural institutions – from regional archives to national museums – share their collections online. Douglas emphasised the benefits of working with Europeana's community of 1700+ digital heritage and tech experts to expand and improve access to our shared cultural heritage. He outlined the opportunities for cultural institutions to showcase their collections with Europeana and to engage citizens within and beyond Europe.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
Europeana4Education at Open Education Week 2017 - webinar slidesEuropeana
Europeana4Education: discover how digital cultural heritage collections can enrich your educational resources and inspire learners. 29 March 2017.
These slides introduce:
- The diversity of digitised cultural heritage content that can be found on Europeana, and its educational value.
- The free tools Europeana provides to enable access our content (including our manual download and the Europeana APIs).
- The financial support Europeana can offer in the development of educational resources featuring our content.
Workshop presentation to Sharing is Caring - Hamburg Extension
at Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg, 20 April 2017.
As digitisation has become a major task for the cultural heritage sector, more and more cultural institutions are providing access to their digitised collections. But sharing is not only about creating online access, it is about sharing the authority to interpret the digitised assets and to create value by opening them up for reuse. How can opening up result in a mutual benefit for institutions as well as for their audiences and society? And what are the challenges on the way like copyright, institutional policies and not to forget the expectation of the users?
Douglas introduced Europeana to a workshop audience with a special focus on re-use of digital cultural heritage in educational contexts.
A guide to using Europeana for education Europeana
This guide introduces the basic principles of searching for and using Europeana’s content in education. It covers topics like copyright and licenses that allow educational reuse, and how you should credit Europeana content when you use it. It also gives an introduction to the Europeana APIs. It is of use to educators across all subjects, students and lifelong learners, developers of educational resources and educational publishers. Find out more: http://pro.europeana.eu/use-our-data/education
Europeana at Ten: insights from our first decadeDouglas McCarthy
Presentation to Open GLAM México, 6 September 2018, Mexico City. This event linked numerous institutions to encourage dialogue around the Open GLAM movement and was jointly organised by the Ministry of Culture, the National Institute of Fine Arts, the Cultural Center of Spain in Mexico and Wikimedia México.
The aims of Open GLAM México were:
• Socialise good practices and policies generated by GLAM institutions to distribute data and digital objects, in national and international context.
• Promote the opening of digital collections in public and private institutions in Mexico.
• Establish an open dialogue on copyright issues focused on the use, reuse and appropriation of digital collections of cultural heritage.
Beyond the space: the LoCloud Historical Place Names microservicelocloud
Presentation given by Rimvydas Laužikas, Justinas Jaronis and Ingrida Vosyliūtė
Vilnius University Faculty of Communication, Lithuania
LoCloud Conference
Sharing local cultural heritage online with LoCloud services
Amersfoort, Netherlands
5 February 2016
Small, smaller and smallest: working with small archaeological content provid...locloud
Presentation given by Holly Wright
Archaeology Data Service University of York, UK
LoCloud Conference
Sharing local cultural heritage online with LoCloud services
Amersfoort, Netherlands
5 February 2016
Slide 2 - 66: Shaping innovatin in education with cultural heritage by Fred Truyen, Steven Stegers, Evita Tasiopoulou and Marco Neves
Slides 67 - 152: Multilingual access and machine translation by Andy Neale, Antoine Isaac, Pavel Kats, Alex Raginsky and Sergiu Gordea
Slides 155 - 164: How to implement the FAIR principles in digital culture by Sara Di Giorgio, Saskia Scheltjens and Makx Dekkers, Seamus Ross, Franco Niccolucci and Erzsébet Tóth-Czifra
Slide 166: EuropeanaTech Unconference by Clemens Neudecker
Europeana 2019 - Connect Communities - Pitch your projectEuropeana
Slides 3 - 10: The GIFT Box: Helping museums make richer digital experiences for their visitors by Anders Sundnes Lovlie
Slides 11 - 18: Between people and things - Transfer of knowledge at SHMH by Elisabeth Böhm
Slides 19 - 30: Automated recognition of historical image content by Tino Mager
Slides 31 - 51: 50s in Europe: Kaleidoscope by Sofie Taes
Slides 52 - 63: CrowdHeritage: Crowdsourcing Platform for Enriching Europeana Metadata by Vassilis Tzouvaras
Slides 64 - 73: One by One: developing digital literacy in museums by Anra Kennedy
Slides 74 - 85: HeritageMaps.ie - Ireland's One-Stop Heritage Portal by Patrick Reid
Slides 86 - 90: Open GLAM now! - Sharing knowledge openly online by Larissa Borck
Slides 91 - 103: Endangered Archives Programme the world's most diverse online archive by Tristan Roddis
Slides 104 - 109: We transform the world with culture - Our impact on climate change by Barbara Fischer, Killian Downing and Peter Soemers
Slides of the presentations gives as part of the Europeana Research panel "Cultural Heritage Data for Research: A Europeana Research Panel" at DH Benelux 2017 in Utrecht.
Speech presentation at Northeast Normal University ( Changchun, China)Γιώργος Ζάχος
Παρουσίαση σε ομιλία στο Συνέδριο “New Trends in Scholarly Communication System and the Transformation of Research Libraries”, Πανεπιστήμιο Northeast Normal University, Changchun, Κίνα, 20 -23 Σεπτεμβρίου 2016.
=======================
Presentation of my speech at the Conference "
New Trends in Scholarly Communication System and the Transformation of Research Libraries”, Northeast Normal University, Changchun, China, 20 -23 Σεπτεμβρίου 2016.
Digital cultural heritage as humanities data: a labs approachSally Chambers
This presentation was given on 17th April 2020 as part of a #DH Hangout (during the Corona Virus) instigated by Lancaster University Digital Humanities Hub and Co-Organised by the Ghent Centre of Digital Humanities and the Digital Humanities Lab (DH_Lab) associated with NOVA-FCSH of Universidade NOVA de Lisboa.
PARTHENOS Webinar: Boost Your eHumanities and eHeritage Research with Researc...Parthenos
This webinar was part of the PARTHENOS eHumanities and eHeritage webinar series. It took place on 24 April 2018. Trainers were Darja Fišer (University of Ljubljana) & Ulrike Wuttke (University of Applied Sciences Potsdam, Germany). A wrap up and more material can be found here, http://training.parthenos-project.eu/sample-page/ehumanities-eheritage-webinar-series/webinar-boost-your-ehumanities-and-eheritage-research-with-research-infrastructures/
Digital Cultural Heritage and the new EU Framework Programmelocloud
2nd LoCloud CY Awareness Event at the Ministry of Education and Culture.
Presentation delivered by Marinos Ioannides, Cyprus University of Technology
Cyprus
5 March 2014
The European (Digital) Library - Overview and OutlookOlaf Janssen
The European Library (www.theeuropeanlibrary.org) is a multilingual portal offering integrated access to the tens of millions of resources (books, magazines, journals...) of 18 national libraries in Europe. It offers free searching and delivers both digital and non-digital objects. It provides a vast virtual collection of mate-rials from all disciplines. The European Library is currently being expanded with the holdings of the national libraries of the 10 EU New Member States. From September 2006 onwards the remaining EU and EFTA na-tional libraries will be connected to TheEuropeanLibrary.org, bringing the total number of participating na-tional libraries to ±35 by the end of 2008.
In the beginning of 2006 the EC expressed support for The European Library to evolve into a much bigger European Digital Library (EDL), including access to the digital collections of other major cultural heritage institutions, such as museums and archives. The EDL is planned to include the holdings of all European na-tional libraries and a minimum of 2M digital works by the end of 2008. By 2010 the EDL needs to have ex-panded to include collections of archives, museums and other libraries, with a minimum of 6M digital works.
The European Library aims to remain a major player in the European cultural heritage field and is already strengthening its cooperation with other relevant key initiatives, such as MACS, DELOS, MICHAEL, BRICKS and MINERVA.
Janssen, O.D. (2006), “The European (Digital) Library - Overview and Outlook”, in: The e-volution of Information Communication Technology in Cultural Heritage, Joint event CIPA/VAST/EG/EuroMed, Project papers, M. Ioannides, D. Arnold, F. Niccolucci, K. Mania (Eds.), EPOCH publication, 2006, pp. 189-193 (and on CD-ROM)
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
Slides 2 - 39:Europeana Network Association General Assembly by Marco de Niet, Georgia Angelaki, Erwin Verbruggen, Fred Truyen and Sara Di Giorgio
Slide 40: Keynote Frédéric Kaplan
Slide 41: State Secretary Angela Ferreira
Slide 42: Wrap up day one by Marco de Niet
Slide 45: Welcome by Marco de Niet
Slide 46: Welcome by Maria Ines Cordeiro
Slide 47: Europeana Strategy 2020+ by Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak
Slides 48 - 142: Developments at Europeana by Harry Verwayen
Slides 143 - 147: Welcome & Introduction to the conference programme by Marco de Niet
Slides 149 - 191: The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Ina Blümel, Johan Oomen, Sara Di Giorgio, Lorna Hughes, Pedro Santos and Andy Neale
Slides 193 - 194: Introduction of the afternoon programme by Fred Truyen
Slides 195 - 231: We transform the world with culture by Harry Verwayen, Elisabeth Niggemann, Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak, Katherine Heid and Merete Sanderhoff
Slides 232 - : The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Gregory Markus, Chris Dijkshoorn, Maarten Dammers and Harald Sack
Slide 285: Pitch your project (See pitch your project presentation slides)
Slides 286 - 290: Unsung Heroes by Marco de Niet
Slides 291 - 292: Wrap up and closure of day two by Sara Di Giorgio
Slides 2 - 6: Introduction to the programme by Georgia Angelaki
Slides 7 - 9: Keynote Michael Edson
Slides 10 - 40: Europeana Aggregators Forum by Marco Rendina
Slides 42 - 75: Promoting Cultural Heritage with digital invasion by Altheo Valentini-Egina and Marianna Marcucci
Slides 77 - 97: Opportunities for digital cultural heritage and the public domain, under the EU Copyright Rules by Paul Keller, Steven Stegers, Jurga Gradauskaite, Antje Schmidt, Sebastiaan ter Burg and Harry Verwayen
Slides 98 - 101: Climate Call for Action: Outcomes by Barbara Fischer
Slides 102 - 114: Wrap up and closure by Marco de Niet
Slides 2 - 35: Introduction to Impact Workshop by Dafydd Tudur, Maja Drabczyk, Julia Fallon and Simon Tanner
Slides 36 - 68: Music to my ears: Making rights understandable by Juozas Markauskas and Jurga Gradauskaite
Slides 70 - 92: Achieving inclusivity & diversity in the Europeana Network by Killian Downing, Larissa Borck and Tola Dabiri
Slides 94 - 123: Communicating the value of digital culture to stakeholders by Susan Hazan, Eleanor Kenny and Katherine Heid
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Understanding the Challenges of Street ChildrenSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
Presentation by Jared Jageler, David Adler, Noelia Duchovny, and Evan Herrnstadt, analysts in CBO’s Microeconomic Studies and Health Analysis Divisions, at the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists Summer Conference.
ZGB - The Role of Generative AI in Government transformation.pdfSaeed Al Dhaheri
This keynote was presented during the the 7th edition of the UAE Hackathon 2024. It highlights the role of AI and Generative AI in addressing government transformation to achieve zero government bureaucracy
Russian anarchist and anti-war movement in the third year of full-scale warAntti Rautiainen
Anarchist group ANA Regensburg hosted my online-presentation on 16th of May 2024, in which I discussed tactics of anti-war activism in Russia, and reasons why the anti-war movement has not been able to make an impact to change the course of events yet. Cases of anarchists repressed for anti-war activities are presented, as well as strategies of support for political prisoners, and modest successes in supporting their struggles.
Thumbnail picture is by MediaZona, you may read their report on anti-war arson attacks in Russia here: https://en.zona.media/article/2022/10/13/burn-map
Links:
Autonomous Action
http://Avtonom.org
Anarchist Black Cross Moscow
http://Avtonom.org/abc
Solidarity Zone
https://t.me/solidarity_zone
Memorial
https://memopzk.org/, https://t.me/pzk_memorial
OVD-Info
https://en.ovdinfo.org/antiwar-ovd-info-guide
RosUznik
https://rosuznik.org/
Uznik Online
http://uznikonline.tilda.ws/
Russian Reader
https://therussianreader.com/
ABC Irkutsk
https://abc38.noblogs.org/
Send mail to prisoners from abroad:
http://Prisonmail.online
YouTube: https://youtu.be/c5nSOdU48O8
Spotify: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/libertarianlifecoach/episodes/Russian-anarchist-and-anti-war-movement-in-the-third-year-of-full-scale-war-e2k8ai4
A process server is a authorized person for delivering legal documents, such as summons, complaints, subpoenas, and other court papers, to peoples involved in legal proceedings.
Many ways to support street children.pptxSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
What is the point of small housing associations.pptxPaul Smith
Given the small scale of housing associations and their relative high cost per home what is the point of them and how do we justify their continued existance
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
2. Europeana Research
The key value proposition for Europeana Research is to connect
quality data available from the cultural heritage sector with the
digital humanities.
Recognising the importance and value of cultural heritage data
for research we aim to:
● Bring DH researchers to Europeana
● Bring Europeana to DH researchers
● Build a community
● Improve access to cultural heritage for research
CC BY-SA
Europeana Research
3. Making cultural
heritage work for
research
The British Museum: the reading
room under construction.
Wood engraving by J. Brown after
C.W. Sheeres, 1855. Wellcome
Library, London, UK, CC-BY.
4. Europeana Research
Europeana
- Europeana Collections
- Europeana API
Europeana Research
Europeana Research
- Highlighting collections in the Europeana
dataset of specific interest to researchers
(featured collections and datasets)
- Europeana Research Grants Programme
- Blogs, news, interviews, DH developments,
grants announcement, case studies
CC BY-SA
Europeana Research
8. Bringing Europeana
to DH researchers
Students looking through
microscopes in a laboratory.
Philadelphia College of Pharmacy
and Science, c.1933,
Wellcome library, London, UK,
CC-BY
9. Europeana Research
Grants Programme
One of the key activities of the Europeana Research team was a grants
programme for early career scholars. The programme was launched in
September 2016. We were looking for individual research projects which
make use of Europeana Collections for research purposes: employing state
of the art tools and methods in the Digital Humanities to address a specific
research question.
CC BY-SA
Europeana Research
10. Percentage of Computer and
Information Sciences compared
to other disciplines represented
in the sample. N=156
Europeana Research
Grants Programme
CC BY-SA
Europeana Research
12. Meet our Grants Winners
Nanna Thylstrup, University of Copenhagen
Mapping colonial Copenhagen
Three projects have been awarded a Europeana Research Grant:
‘With the generous funding that the Europeana research grant has provided, I have been able to
undertake a project which aims to change the way people understand poetry. More importantly,I hope
to make some contribution to promoting public engagement with archival materials - in this case the
Europeana Sounds archives. I am sure that, discovering a small corner of the Europeana Collection
can lead to bigger things, so the first task is to hook people in. ‘
Caroline Ardrey, University of Birmingham
Visualising voice: Analysing spoken performances of nineteenth-century French poetry
Timothy Duguid, University of
Glasgow Interdisciplinary Metadata
Frameworks: The MuSO Project
CC BY-SA
Europeana Research
13. Europeana Research
Advisory Board
• Lorna Hughes, Professor of Digital Humanities, University of Glasgow (Chair)
• Greg Crane, Alexander von Humboldt Professor of Digital Humanities, University of Leipzig
• Costis Dallas, Assistant Professor of Cultural Heritage Management and Advanced
Technologies, Panteion University, Athens ; Associate professor, Faculty of Information,
University of Toronto
• Leif Isaksen, Senior Lecturer in History (Digital Humanities), Lancaster University
• Franciska de Jong, Executive Director, CLARIN ERIC
• Marianne Ping Huang, Associate Professor, Academic Officer for Cultural Collaborations and
Digital Humanities at Faculty of Arts, Aarhus University
• Pier Luigi Sacco, Professor of Cultural Economics, IULM University, Milan and Visiting
Professor of Applied Humanities, Harvard University
• Seamus Ross, Dean and Professor Faculty of Information, University of Toronto and Professor
School of Humanities, University of Glasgow
• Toma Tasovac, Director, Belgrade Center for Digital Humanities
• Christophe Verbruggen, Department of History, Ghent University
• Milena Zic Fuchs, Professor of Linguistics, English Department, Faculty of Humanities and
Social Sciences, University of Zagreb; Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts; Academia
Europaea
CC BY-SA
Europeana Research
14. CLARIN
Title here
Subtitle here
Business Plan 2016
CC-BY-SA
CC-BY-SA
CC BY-SA
Europeana Research
Data-sharing with third-parties
1. Datasets relevant to CLARIN’s community are selected to be ‘harvested’;
2. Inclusion of obtained metadata in CLARIN’s search portal, the Virtual
Language Observatory (VLO) after conversion from Europeana’s EDM
format to CLARIN’s CMDI;
3. Selection of tools from CLARIN’s infrastructure to be included in a
processing workflow based on Europeana resources;
4. Adaptation of the CLARIN infrastructure for increased load (expected
increase in number of harvested and indexed metadata records) where
necessary;
5. Potential actions to increase the visibility and ease of access of Europeana
and its data within the CLARIN community and vice versa:
● Inclusion of Europeana APIs of potential interest to CLARIN’s target
audience CLARIN’s “language resource and tool inventory”;
● Using CLARIN and Europeana’s communication channels (e.g. blog,
newsletter) to increase bilateral awareness.
15. Conferences
Title here
Subtitle here
Business Plan 2016
CC-BY-SA
CC-BY-SA
Digital Humanities Congress 2016, Sheffield, UK (8-10 Sept 2016)
Paper: Lost in the Flood: finding and using digital cultural heritage for research
Agiatis Benardou and Lorna Hughes
DARIAH Winter School "Open Data Citation for Social Sciences and
Humanities", Prague, Czech Republic (24-28 Oct 2016)
Paper: Case Studies on digital content reuse, Eliza Papaki
DANS Seminar Linked Data in Research and Cultural Heritage, The
Hague, The Netherlands (1 May 2017) Presentation: Europeana: New approaches
for data acquisition at Europeana: IIIF, Sitemaps and Schema.org, Nuno Freire and Valentine
Charles
DPASSH 2017, Sussex, United Kingdom (14-15 June 2017)
Expert panel with our 3 Grants winners: Exploring the public value of Europeana
DH Benelux 2017, Utrecht, The Netherlands (3-5 July 2017)
Europeana Research Panel (Nienke van Schaverbeke, Marjolein de Vos, Christophe Verbruggen,
Agiati Benardou, Caroline Ardrey)
CC BY-SA
Europeana Research