DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly
Author Biographies
Taylor Arnold Taylor Arnold is Assistant Professor of Statistics at the University of Richmond. His
research focuses on statistical computing, natural language process, and quantitative
applications in the humanities and social sciences.
Christian Beecks Christian Beecks is head of the Data Management and Analytics Group in the
Computer Science Department at the University of Münster. In addition, he is a
Senior Researcher in the User-Centered Ubiquitous Computing Group at the
Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Information Technology FIT. He received his
PhD in 2013 from RWTH Aachen University.
His research interests include Multimedia Data Engineering, Real-time Data
Management and Smart Data Analysis. He has authored more than 70 conference and
journal papers and won two best paper awards. In addition, he is a reviewer for
various international conferences and journals.
Yuri Bizzoni Yuri Bizzoni studied Classical Philology during his Bachelor programme
and Computational Linguistics for his Master's. He worked on tools for
literary translation alignment and diachronic translation analysis,
particularly on Homeric translations in Italian and French. Yuri is
currently a CLASP PhD student. His research focuses on figurative
language detection and interpretation in NLP, from a probabilistic
angle.
Mohamed Amine Boukhaled Mohamed-Amine Boukhaled is a temporary assistant professor at Paris-6
University. He pursued his PhD on computational stylistics at the
computer science laboratory of Paris-6 University (Laboratoire
d'Informatique de Paris 6). Before that, he graduated from Grenoble-1
University in 2013 with a Master degree in Artificial Intelligence. His
current research work lies in the areas of computational stylistics and
text mining. More specifically, he is working on modelling and
developing sequential data mining techniques for the extraction of
relevant syntactic patterns.
Bela Brenger Bela Brenger studied linguistics and computer science at RWTH Aachen
University. He graduated in 2015 with his interdisciplinary thesis analyzing
motion-capture data of head gestures in dialogues. Since 2016 he is part of the
scientific staff at the chair of Linguistics and Cognitive Semiotics and
manages the Natural Media Motion-Capture-Lab. Main interests are data-driven
analysis of multimodal communication with emphasis on methods to integrate
spatial gesture data and speech.
Daniel Burckhardt Daniel Burckhardt studied Mathematics and History of Science and
Technology. He built the content management systems for H-Soz-Kult and
H-ArtHist as well as the database for the federally funded project
Bildatlas – Kunst in der DDR (Pictorial
Atlas – Art in the GDR). He is currently a research assistant at the
Institute for the History of the German Jews in charge of the technical
infrastructure for the online-platform Key-Documents of German-Jewish
History.
Angelo Del Grosso Angelo Mario Del Grosso is a computer engineer with a Ph.D. in
information engineering. He obtained his degree in 2015 with a thesis
entitled “Designing a library of Component for Textual Scholarship” from
the University of Pisa. Since 2010, he has been working as a research
fellow at the Institute of Computational Linguistics “A. Zampolli” of
CNR (ILC-CNR). He has been involved in a number of different national
and international Digital Humanities projects. His main research
interests encompass: Object-Oriented approaches for modeling Abstract
Data Types characterizing, in general, the DH domain and, in particular,
the requirements of textual scholarship; Analysis, design and
development of software components for linguistic and philological
applications to process textual resources of ancient texts, medieval
tradition, printed tradition, and to handle modern and contemporary
authors.
Marian Dörk Marian Dörk is a Research Professor for Information Visualization at the
Urban Futures Institute for Applied Research of the University of
Applied Sciences Potsdam. In his research he is particularly interested
in the potential of visual interfaces to support new forms of data
exploration. Since Fall 2014 he leads a 3-year research project on
visualizing cultural collections and since January 2015 he has been
co-directing the Urban Complexity Lab, a transdisciplinary research
space at the intersection between information visualization and urban
transformation.
Chloe Edmondson Chloe Summers Edmondson is a PhD candidate in the Department of French
and Italian at Stanford University. She works on French literary and
cultural history of the long eighteenth century. In spring 2017, she
completed the Graduate Certificate in the Digital Humanities, offered by
the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis (CESTA), with her research
project on eighteenth-century French salons. She also holds a B.A. with
Honors and Distinction in French and an M.A. in Communication and Media
Studies from Stanford University.
Jürgen Enge Jürgen Enge is head of the Centre for Digital Matter at the Academy of
Art and Design (FHNW) Basel. Between 2012 and 2016 he was head of the
Center for Information, Media and Technology at HAWK Hildesheim
Holzminden Goettingen and before he directed the research field "Digital Memory" at HfG Karlsruhe. In addition
to the management and coordination of IT-Services and departments at art
schools in Zurich, Karlsruhe and Hildesheim, he investigated in numerous
case studies, research and EU projects in the context of media, art and
technology. He worked in the field of preservation of complex digital
objects, were he is responsible for the computer science curriculum of
the graduate program MAS Preservation of Digital Art and Cultural
Heritage (PDACH) at Bern University of the Arts (BFH).
Francesca Frontini Francesca Frontini obtained a PhD the University of Pavia with a thesis
on corpus linguistics; later she joined the Institute for Computational
Linguistics in Pisa, working on several European projects with a focus
on computational lexicography and natural language processing. Her
current research interests lie in Named Entity Recognition and textual
classification; in particular she has worked on NLP methods for the
analysis of literary texts and literary criticism. In addition, she has
published extensively on issues relating to language resource
documentation, preservation and standardisation, and was involved in the
development of the Italian consortium of the CLARIN infrastructure.
Today, she is maître de conferences (associate professor) of
Linguistique Informatique at the Université Paul-Valéry in Montpellier.
Jean-Gabriel Ganascia Jean-Gabriel Ganascia is Professor (outstanding class) of Computer
Science at the University Pierre and Marie Curie (UPMC). He pursues his
research activities in the LIP6 (Laboratory of Computer Science of the
UPMC), where he heads the ACASA team. He is also deputy director of the
OBVIL Laboratory of Excellence, in which the humanists of the Paris
Sorbonne University cooperate with the computer scientists of the UPMC
on the literary side of Digital Humanities. Jean-Gabriel Ganascia is a
EurAI fellow, a senior member of the Institut Universitaire de France,
and the chairman of the COMETS that is the CNRS ethical committee. His
current research activities are focused on Artificial Intelligence,
Machine Learning, Computational Philosophy, Computer Ethics and Digital
Humanities.
Katrin Glinka Katrin Glinka is a research associate and lecturer at the Potsdam
University of Applied Sciences. She combines approaches from art
history, sociology and museum studies with an interest in digital
cultural heritage and visualization research. She studied cultural
sciences with a focus on art theory, visual culture, sociology and
philosophy and holds an M. A. degree from Leuphana University Lüneburg.
Since 2014 she has been working on her doctoral thesis on digitization
and visualization in the cultural feld and their means and potentials
for curation, critical and interventionist approaches and visitor
orientation in museums. Correspondence e-mail: glinka@fh-potsdam.de
Marwan Hassani Marwan Hassani is an assistant professor in the architecture of information
systems group at Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands.
Previously, he acted as a postdoc researcher and associate teaching assistant
at the data management and data exploration group at the RWTH Aachen
University, Germany. His research interests include stream data mining,
sequential pattern mining of multiple streams, stream process mining, efficient
anytime clustering of big data streams and exploration of evolving graph data.
Marwan received hid PhD (2015) from RWTH Aachen University. He received an
equivalence Master in Computer Science from RWTH Aachen University (2009). He
coauthored more than 42 scientific publications and serves on several program
committees.
Gerhard Heyer Gerhard Heyer has studied at Cambridge University and the University of
the Ruhr, where he received his Ph.D. After research on AI based natural
language processing at the University of Michigan he has worked in
industry for several years. He holds the chair on Natural Language
Processing at the computer science department of the University of
Leipzig. His field of research is focused on automatic semantic
processing of natural language text with applications in the area of
information retrieval and search as well as knowledge management. He is
a member of the IEEE Computer Society.
Jennifer Hinnell Jennifer Hinnell is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Linguistics at
the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada. Her research centers around
communication in interaction. She uses multimodal corpus data, 3D motion
capture data, and experimental methods to explore how people use their bodies,
in conjunction with semantic and syntactic structures in speech, to create and
convey meaning. Jennifer enjoys fruitful research partnerships with Little Red
Hen Distributed Learning Lab (UCLA) and the Natural Media Lab at the RWTH
Aachen, Germany.
Susanne Holl Susanne Holl, M.A. phil., is legal heiress to Friedrich Kittler and forms
part of the advisory board of the edition of Kittler’s Collected Writings.
Jean-Roch Houllier Jean-Roch Houllier, PMP, IPMA Level B certified, MGP, SSCBB, FFP,
Executive Coach Certified HEC Paris, is a graduate of HEC Business
School and SUPAERO. He is currently THALES Université International Learning Director, the Corporate
University of THALES Group. He benefits from more than 15 years of
project management experience in multicultural environments. His
expertise covers various types of projects including research and
development, operations and maintenance as well as subcontracting.
Jean-Roch is passionate about teaching and professional learning; he
likes to share his experiences and encourage his students. He is a
lecturer, teacher and Professional Thesis Director for HEC Business
School in project management and the Academic Development Director of
the PMI-France, developing contacts and partnerships with various
schools around project management, making bridges between academic and
professional universes.
Patrick Jähnichen Patrick Jähnichen is a postdoctoral researcher at the machine learning
group at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. He received his PhD from
Leipzig University in 2016 for his dissertation on modeling topics
dynamically over time. He graduated with an MSc degree in computer
science from Leipzig University after having received a bachelor’s
degree from the University of Cooperative Education in Stuttgart. His
main research interests are Bayesian mixture models and their dynamics
applied to natural language texts, stochastic processes to steer the
dynamics, and statistical inference in these models. At the time of
writing, the author was affiliated with the Natural Language Processing
Group, Leipzig University, Germany.
Heinz WernerKramski Heinz Werner Kramski is head of the Group of Scientific Data Processing
at the German Literature Archive Marbach (DLA). As a member of the
Nestor Format Recognition Working Group he is part of the Network of
Expertise in long-term Storage and availability of digital Resources in
Germany (Nestor).
Christoph Kuras Christoph Kuras received his M.Sc. degree in Business Information Systems
from the University of Leipzig in 2013. Currently, he is a researcher in
the Natural Language Processing group at the Computer Science Department
of the University of Leipzig. He is part of the team at the CLARIN-D
centre Leipzig and also engaged in the text corpus creation and
archiving processes for the Leipzig Corpora Collection (LCC). His
research focuses on the application of business process management in
NLP-based research environments.
James Lee James Lee is Assistant Professor of English, and Co-Director of the
Digital Scholarship Center at the University of Cincinnati. His work has
been published in Studies in Philology
(2016), New Literary History (2013), Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery (2001), and
by the Korea Foundation (2012). His research has been supported by the
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the University of Iowa’s Obermann Center
for Advanced Studies, and the Intel Corporation.
Jason Lee Jason Lee is a software engineer experienced with the tools of the
internet, analytics, and big data. He has worked in a spectrum of
industries and is currently in financial services.
Tom Liebmann Tom Liebmann received his Master's degree in Computer Science in 2014
from Leipzig University, Germany. He currently is a scientific employee
at the same institution with focus of reasearch on the analysis and
visualization of the topology of uncertain scalar fields.
Anke Lüdeling Anke Lüdeling is a professor for corpus linguistics at
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. After studying linguistics and computer
science, she worked in several linguistic and computational linguistic
projects at Heidelberg, Stuttgart and Osnabrück before joining the
Humboldt-Universität. She is interested in language change processes as
well as language variation and language acquisition. She has been
involved in the construction of several deeply annotated corpora of
German.
Stacey Maples Stacey is the Geospatial Manager at the Stanford Geospatial Center. He formerly
served as the GIS Specialist & Instruction Coordinator at the Yale University
Library.
Irene Mittelberg Irene Mittelberg is Professor of Linguistics and Cognitive Semiotics at the
Institute of English, American and Romance Studies at RWTH Aachen University.
She directs the Natural Media Lab at Human Technology Centre (HumTec) and the
Center for Sign Language and Gesture (SignGes). After gaining an M.A. in French
linguistics and art history from Hamburg University, she completed an M.A. and
a Ph.D. in Linguistics and Cognitive Studies at Cornell University. Combining
embodiment research with classic semiotic theories (e.g. C.S. Peirce, R.
Jakobson), Mittelberg’s cross-disciplinary research on language, gesture,
space, embodied cognition and the visual arts has emphasized the role of
metonymy, metaphor, frames, constructions, and image schemas in multimodal
communication. Moreover, Mittelberg and her research team have developed tools
and methods to use optical motion-capture technology for empirical gesture
research at the juncture of linguistics, semiotics, architectural design,
computer science, social neuroscience, and digital humanities.
Federico Nanni Federico Nanni is a final year PhD Student in Digital Humanities at the
University of Bologna, under the supervision of Maurizio Matteuzzi and
Simone Paolo Ponzetto. Since May 2016, he is also a researcher at the
Data and Web Science Group of the University of Mannheim, working with
Laura Dietz and Nikolay Marinov. Historian by training, Federico is
exploring the intersections between digital humanities, internet studies
and natural language processing.
Patrick Oesterling Patrick Oesterling received his Master's degree in Computer Science in
2009 from the University of Leipzig, Germany. In 2016 he received his
PhD from the Department of Computer Science at the University of
Leipzig, where his research focused on computer graphics, information
visualization and visual analytics.
Christopher Pietsch Christopher Pietsch is a versatile information visualization researcher
for the Urban Complexity Lab at the University of Applied Sciences
Potsdam. He blends art, design, and technology to create interactive
experiences and spaces to explore novel types of visualization
metaphors. He studied Computer Science at the HTW Berlin and Interaction
Design at the University of Applied Sciences Potsdam. His bachelor’s
thesis is an experimental attempt on Brain-Computer-Interfaces that
discusses the multidisciplinary mysteries of human visual perception.
His current research circles around aesthetic interfaces in order to
enable profound new forms of data exploration.
Gérald Péoux Gérald Péoux is an assistant professor at the Université Paris Ouest
Nanterre La Défense, where he gives lectures in computer science, and a
researcher in the history of Science at IHMC (Institut d’Histoire
Moderne et Contemporaine). Before joining the university, he had a
position as an engineer in supercomputers in private American
companies.
Marianne Reboul Marianne Reboul is a PhD candidate in France in Comparative Literature,
currently working in Digital Humanities at the Sorbonne. She has a
Masters Degree and Agrégation in Classics, and is a self-taught
programmer in several languages, such as Java and Python. Her Master's
thesis was a dynamic digitized translation and explanation of the IXth
book of Homer’s Odyssey, and her PhD is entitled «Automatic comparison
of French translations of Homer’s Odyssey, from 1541 to 2008»
Jamie Peter Redgate Jamie Peter Redgate is a PhD candidate in English Literature at the
University of Glasgow. His AHRC-funded project is titled "Cognition, Consciousness, and Dualism in the Fiction
of David Foster Wallace." He is a member of Glasgow’s David
Foster Wallace Research Group (
https://davidfosterwallaceresearch.wordpress.com/).
Peter Robinson Peter Robinson is interested in three areas of research: the works of
Geoffrey Chaucer; the study of large textual traditions; and the impact
of the digital medium on how we communicate with each other. All three
intersect in his work on Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, where he tries to
use digital and other quantitative methods to make sense of the more
than 80 manuscript and print versions surviving from before 1500. His
research interests have led him in many directions. He has developed
methods for encoding scholarly editions in digital form, particularly as
a contributor, work-group leader and board member of the Text Encoding
Initiative. He has created tools for preparation of edition materials
(the widely-used collation tool Collate) and for the digital publication
of editions (the the Anastasia and SDPublisher systems). With others, he
has pioneered the application of phylogenetic methods from evolutionary
biology to the exploration of manuscript relations. He has also worked
on many other editorial projects, notably on the cluster of New
Testament editions based in Birmingham, UK and Münster, Germany; on
Dante’s Monarchia and Commedia; the Spanish Cancioneros: on the Leiden
Armenian Lexical Textbase; the Laures Virtual Library of pre-1650
Japanese Books; and the Parliament Rolls of Medieval England. He is
currently focussed on the making of ‘textual communities. This is a
web-based environment which will allow scholars and readers everywhere
to collaborate in the making of a scholarly edition in electronic form.
It is now been used by several major editorial projects, notably the
Canterbury Tales Project.
Daniele Salvoldi Daniele Salvoldi (1982) holds a PhD in Egyptology from the University of
Pisa (2011) with a thesis about traveller and early epigraphist
Alessandro Ricci (1794-1834). He got his MA in Languages and Cultures of
the Ancient Near East (Egyptology) from the same University (2007) and
his BA in History and Archaeology of the Ancient World (Egyptology) from
University of Milan (2004). In 2011 he catalogued the large drawings
collection of William J. Bankes in Dorchester, UK, as part of a grant
awarded by the Accademia dei Lincei, Rome. His field of specialization
is History of Egyptology and Egyptological Archives.
Gerik Scheuermann Gerik Scheuermann received the master’s degree in mathematics in 1995 and
the PhD degree in Computer Science in 1999, both from the Technical
University of Kaiserslautern. He is a full professor at the University
of Leipzig since 2004. He is a co-author of more than 120 reviewed book
chapters, journal or conference papers. His current research interests
focus on visualization with a focus on topology-based methods, flow
visualization, visualization for life sciences, and visualization of
text collections. He has served as paper co-chair for Eurovis 2008, IEEE
Visualization 2011, IEEE Visualization 2012 and as General Chair of
Eurovis 2013.
Christof Schöch Christof Schöch is a Research Associate at the Department for Literary Computing,
University of Würzburg, Germany, where he leads the junior researcher group
Computational Literary Genre Stylistics (CLiGS). For more information, see
christof-schoech.de/en .
Daniel Schüller Daniel Schüller studied philosophy, linguistics and history at
Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn and RWTH Aachen University, focusing on
philosophy of science and logic as well as on philosophy of language. In 2013
he graduated with an M.A. thesis in which he comparatively investigated the use
and heuristics of fictional models in history and physics. Since 2014, he is a
research assistant and doctoral student at the chair of Linguistics and
Cognitive Semiotics and the Natural Media Lab at RWTH Aachen University. His
main research interests include linguistic and semiotic theory – with special
emphases on sign processes in co-speech gesture, semiotics in and of gesture
research, motion-capture technology, and the field of digital humanities in
general.
Thomas Seidl Thomas Seidl is Professor of Computer Science at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
München (LMU Munich), Germany.
Uwe Springmann Uwe Springmann currently works as a digital humanist at LMU Munich and
Humboldt University Berlin. After earning a PhD in Astrophysics he spent
several years in the IT and Telecommunications industry before returning
to academia with the idea to make our cultural heritage data embodied in
printed books available as electronic text and machine-actionable data
for further research, thus helping to realize the idea of the universal
library in its fullest extent.
Lauren Tilton Lauren is Visiting Assistant Professor of Digital Humanities at the University of
Richmond. Her interests include 20th century U.S. history, participatory media and
digital, public humanities. wwww.laurentilton.com
Ted Underwood Ted Underwood is Professor of English and Information Sciences at the
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He is the author of two books
about literary history, including most recently Why
Literary Periods Mattered (Stanford, 2013). His articles
have appeared in PMLA, Representations, MLQ, and
Cultural Analytics. He is currently
collaborating with HathiTrust Research Center, and finishing a book to
be called The Curved Horizon of Literary
History.
Laura Wexler Laura Wexler is Professor of American Studies, Professor of Women's, Gender and
Sexuality Studies, Director of The Photographic Memory Workshop at Yale, and
Co-coordinator of the Public Humanities Program at Yale University. She is also Chair
of the university-wide Digital Humanities Committee. A historian of race, gender and
photography, she is a scholar and theorist of visual culture and has published widely
on American photographs.