DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly
Author Biographies
Christoph Aurnhammer Christoph Aurnhammer is a doctoral researcher in psycholinguistics at the
special research group Information Density and Linguistic Encoding at
the Department of Language Science and Technology, Saarland University,
Germany. He received undergraduate education in the humanities and
social sciences from the University of Passau and studied linguistics at
Tilburg University and Radboud University, the Netherlands. His research
applies computational approaches to text with questions on human
communication and the human mind.
Kelly Baker Josephs Kelly Baker Josephs is Professor of English at York College,
CUNY and Professor of English and Digital Humanities at the CUNY Graduate Center.
She is the author of Disturbers of the Peace: Representations of Insanity in Anglophone Caribbean Literature (2013)
and founder and former editor of sx salon: a small axe literary platform.
Adam James Bradley After completing a Ph.D. in English and Systems Design Engineering at the
University of Waterloo, Adam James Bradley joined the Visualization for
Information Analysis Lab (Vialab) at Ontario Tech University as a
research scientist. Adam's work is concerned with the problems of
subjectivity, ambiguity, and interpretation that are omnipresent in
digital tool design and text analysis. In some way all of Adam's work
from visual text analytics, to interactive pen and paper applications,
to visual search platforms are all trying to address the same question:
How can we use technology to augment human actions in a way that allows
us to be creative and imaginative, while still leveraging the power and
speed of the machine.
Marc Bron Marc Bron is Senior Principle Researcher at Oracle, London. After completion of his PhD at the University of Amsterdam,
he worked as a postdoc at Utrecht University and data scientist at Yahoo Labs, London.
Sheelagh Carpendale Sheelagh Carpendale is a Canada Research Chair in Information
Visualization in Computing Science at Simon Fraser University. Her many
awards include: IEEE Visualization Career Award, NSERC STEACIE, and a
BAFTA. She is a Fellow in the Royal Society of Scientists and has been
inducted into the both IEEE Visualization Academy and the ACM CHI
Academy. By studying how people interact with data or information both
in work and social settings, she works towards designing more natural,
accessible and understandable interactive visual representations of
data.
Cait Coker Cait Coker is Associate Professor and Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Her work primarily examines the history of women and publishing, and her articles have appeared in The Seventeenth Century,
Transformative Works and Cultures, and College Research Libraries.
She also frequently publishes on science fiction, fan fiction, and popular culture including editing the forthcoming
collection The Global Vampire in Popular Culture (2019).
Christopher Collins Christopher Collins received the PhD degree from University of Toronto in
2010. He is currently the Canada Research Chair in Linguistic
Information Visualization and Associate Professor at Ontario Tech
University. His research focus combines information visualization and
human-computer interaction with natural language processing. He is a
past member of the executive of the IEEE Visualization and Graphics
Technical Committee and has served several roles on the IEEE VIS
Conference Organizing Committee.
Iris Cuppen Iris Cuppen holds an MA degree in Culture Studies from Tilburg
University, the Netherlands, and works as a writer at Bakken & Bæck,
a digital studio based in Amsterdam. Before, she worked as a graphic
designer and as an art teacher at St. Joost‘s - Hertogenbosch, where she
also studied graphic design.
Marian Dörk Marian Dörk is a Research Professor for Information Visualization at the Institute for Urban Futures of the University of Applied Sciences Potsdam.
He co-directs the UCLAB, a transdisciplinary research space at the intersection between interface design, computer science, and the humanities.
Janina Jacke Janina Jacke is currently working as a postdoc in the German literature department at the University of Hamburg
and has been part of different Digital Humanities projects. Her research is focused on narratology,
theory of interpretation and methodology (in digital literary studies).
Rabea Kleymann Rabea Kleymann is a literary scholar from the University of Hamburg with a focus on aesthetic theory formation and digital humanities.
Cara Marta Messina Cara Marta Messina is a PhD candidate in the English Department, Writing and Rhetoric, at Northeastern University.
She is the recipient of the 2019 Kairos Journal Graduate Student Teaching Award.
Her research interests include fan studies, writing studies, writing analytics, new media, digital pedagogy, and anti-racist/anti-misogyny activism.
Her work has or will appear in The Journal of Writing Analytics,
Composition Forum, Social Knowledge Creation, and edited collections.
Kate Ozment Kate Ozment is assistant professor of English at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona.
She has published on using historical and enumerative bibliographic methods for the recovery of eighteenth-century
women writers in Authorship and Early Modern Women
and has forthcoming work theorizing feminist bibliography.
Currently, she is working on a book project on the history of
women book collectors and antiquarians in the twentieth-century United States and how they shaped the study of historical artifacts.
Victor Sawal Victor Sawal is a developer in the Visualization for Information Analysis
Lab (Vialab) at Ontario Tech University.
Desmond Schmidt Desmond Schmidt trained as a classicist, graduating from the
University of Queensland in 1981, obtaining his first PhD at the
University of Cambridge, UK on the Greek lyric poet Bacchylides in
1987, and his second in Information Technology from the University of
Queensland in 2010. He has worked as a software engineer in
information security, text-mining and user interface design. He has
also worked on a number of digital editions including the Vienna
Edition of Wittgenstein, Digital Variants at University Roma Tre and
the Charles Harpur Critical Archive.
Hannah Schwan Hannah Schwan is currently studying Interfacedesign at the University of Applied Sciences Potsdam.
Her focus lies on user interface/user experience design and information visualization.
David Soll David R Soll is Director of the Developmental Studies Hyridoma Bank, a
NIH National Resource, and Carver Professor at the University of
Iowa.
Jan-Erik Stange Jan-Erik Stange is a Berlin-based user experience and data visualization designer at ATLAS.ti.
His interests lie in qualitative data visualization, user experience design and visual storytelling.
Inge van de Ven Inge van de Ven is Assistant Professor of Online Culture in the
Department of Culture Studies at Tilburg School of Humanities and
Digital Sciences, the Netherlands. She holds a PhD from Utrecht
University, where she also completed postdoctoral research on creativity
in education, funded by Education for Learning Societies. She held a
Core Fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Study of the Central
European University in Budapest, as well as visiting scholarships at
Harvard University, the Shanghai International Studies University, and
The University of Copenhagen. Her articles appeared in journals such as
European Journal of English Studies,
Image & Narrative, Narrative, and Journal
for Creative Behavior. Her monograph Big Books in times of Big Data will be published in
November 2019 with Leiden University Press.
Jasmijn Van Gorp Jasmijn Van Gorp is an assistant professor in Audiovisual Data Studies at Utrecht University.
She is the operational workpackage leader of CLARIAH's Media Suite, a Dutch research infrastructure for audiovisual data.
Previously, she has been postdoctoral researcher in several digital
heritage projects at Utrecht University and the University of Amsterdam.
Menno van Zaanen As a professor in Digital Humanities, Menno is particularly interested in
incorporating the use of computational techniques in the field of
Humanities. His PhD in the area of computer science dealt with building
systems that learn (linguistic) grammars from plain sequences
(sentences). These empirical grammatical inference systems result in
patterns that can be used for further analysis of the data, for
instance, in applied machine learning, computational linguistics, or
computational musicology. During his MA (computational linguistics) and
MSc (computer science) studies, Menno used techniques from the one field
and applied it to situations in the other, such as proofing tools and
error correction, machine translation, and multi-modal information
retrieval. Such techniques can be applied to Humanities data, but for
them to be fully successful, the results still need to be interpreted in
the context of Humanities.
Edward Voss Edward Voss is Senior Research Associate at the W. M. Keck Dynamic Image
Analysis Facility at the University of Iowa.
Melinda Weinstein Melinda Weinstein is Associate Professor of English at Lawrence
Technological University in Southfield, MI.