All workshop participants must register through ConfTool, which will maintain the most up-to-date information on each of the workshops. If you have already registered for the conference, you can still edit your registration to add or drop workshops.
For ease of reference, the workshop list (current as of 4/1/2024) is also displayed below:
Monday, August 5, 2024: Full Day Workshops
- Doing DH at the Library of Congress (onsite at the Library of Congress)
- National Cemeteries as Digital Classrooms: Making Veterans Stories Accessible to All (onsite at Alexandria National Cemetery)
DHTech will hold a mini-conference at DH2024 themed “DH Inside Out”. Typical DH conference presentations are focussed on the research with a slight nod to the technical details; we want to flip that format and dive more deeply into the technical aspects of the work, while still keeping it in context of the research and domain specifics. To that end, we invite submissions of interest to the people who work on the technical aspects of DH projects, such as: implementation and design specifics of packages and applications lessons learnt regarding the design and implementation of research software tool demonstrations from a technical perspective community and diversity topics specific to the technical DH community.
Monday, August 5, 2024: Morning Workshops
- New experiences in DH publishing: the Journal of Digital History
- Parallel Text Processing and Translation Alignment with Ugarit
Monday, August 5, 2024: Afternoon Workshops
- Digital Humanities Role-Playing Game
Venture forth with the #DHRPG, a tabletop role-playing game where you can experience the thrill of doing a DH project and negotiating the project team’s individual needs, desires, and abilities. In this pre-conference activity, we’ll run two tables of ~5 players, each doing a one-shot adventure. All are welcome, whether you’re new to DH (or RPGs) or a pro!
- What can I do with Constellate?: Practical Approaches for Teaching Text Analysis and Artificial Intelligence
- Accountable concordance reading with FlexiConc
- The Libraries and Digital Humanities Special Interest Group: https://adholibdh.github.io/
- Aligner, vérifier et enrichir des jeux de données sur le patrimoine écrit ancien: découvrir et pratiquer le web service de réconciliation pour OpenRefine de Biblissima
If you have never found the time to experiment with the super easy data reconciliation feature of OpenRefine, this half-day workshop will give you the opportunity! It will also introduce the Biblissima endpoint for authoritative data about written cultures (shelfmarks for manuscripts or ancient prints, people, places, iconographic descriptors, etc.), which will be used for the exercises. While the process is straightforward, this session may lead to interesting discussions among the participants on how to balance the need for automation and critical review of the results obtained. See https://data.biblissima.fr/w/Accueil/en. The workshop will be given in English and/or French depending on the speaking language of the audience
Tuesday, August 6, 2024: All-day Workshop
- Audio-Visual in DH Special Interest Group
Tuesday, August 6, 2024: Morning Workshops
- Reimagine your teaching through games: Introduction to prototyping interactive fiction games for learning
- Publishing with Manifold
- Introduction to publishing XML with static site and front-end technologies. A hands-on exploration of the publishing toolkit of the Scholarly Editing Journal
- Geovistory, a LOD Research Infrastructure for Historical Sciences
Tuesday, August 6, 2024: Afternoon Workshops
- #DHMakes Mini-Conference
- Catch Our DHRIFT: DH Workshops for Responsible Reuse
DHRIFT, an OER tool for publishing, reproducing, and revising interactive DH technical
skill workshops, includes modules on topics like Python, JavaScript, and R. In this workshop, attendees will learn about DHRIFT’s pedagogy and underlying technologies.
Participants will create a customized, static workshop site and build new workshops
with DHRIFT.
- From Sources to Data to Models: Tools for Interpreting the Evolution of Knowledge Systems
Distributed Text Services (DTS) is an API specification that aims to help manage the text heterogeneity problem by providing well-structured information about texts collections, text metadata, referencing systems, and by delivering texts and text fragments in a consistent fashion. The specification has been available as a public working draft since 2020. A version 1 alpha release was produced in the Spring of 2024 and is in a comment and revision phase pending a stable release in the Fall. This workshop aims to introduce participants to DTS and its potential for publishing text collections, expand the DTS community, encourage adoption of the API, and to introduce participants to the existing implementations and tools for working with DTS APIs.