What could be the digital humanities' Hugging Face?
We have a question for the DH community: what are the most sought after computational resources that, if made available, will greatly facilitate and accelerate your research? We would like to understand what are a) the code libraries you dream of using, b) the shared tasks you think are urgently needed. To systematically collect these ideas, we made the following survey: https://forms.gle/VL2Yc82AghB4X5Qg9. We invite anyone doing research in DH to participate, especially those who write (or use) code for their research. The survey takes only up to 10 minutes. We’d very much appreciate your thoughts and feedback. The survey results will be made public, in order for everyone to potentially collaborate on building the resources that could propel digital humanities research in the future. Furthermore, anyone can decide whether to sign their ideas or remain anonymous. You can also re-tweet: https://twitter.com/giovanni1085/status/1361565811933126661. Thank you. Kind regards, Giovanni Colavizza (University of Amsterdam) Kaspar Beelen (The Alan Turing Institute) The Alan Turing Institute is a limited liability company, registered in England with registered number 09512457 with registered offices at British Library, 96 Euston Road, London, England, NW1 2DB. We are also a charity registered in England with charity number 1162533. DISCLAIMER: Although we have taken reasonable precautions to ensure the completeness and accuracy of this e-mail, transmission cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late or be incomplete. If you receive a suspicious or unexpected email from us, or purporting to have been sent on our behalf, particularly containing different bank details, please do not reply to the email, click on any links, open any attachments, or comply with any instructions contained within it. Our Transparency Notice found here - https://www.turing.ac.uk/transparency-notice sets out how and why we collect, store, use and share your personal data and it explains your rights and how to raise concerns with us.
participants (1)
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Kaspar Beelen