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Media type:
E-Book
Title:
Archives, access and artificial intelligence
:
working with born-digital and digitized archival collections
Contains:
Introduction
/ Lise Jaillant, Loughborough University, UK
Artificial intelligence and discovering the digitized photoarchive
/ X.Y. Han, Cornell University/Vardan Papyan, University of Toronto/Ellen Prokop, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC/David L. Donoho, Stanford University/C. Richard Johnson, Jr., Cornell University
Web archives and the problem of access : prototyping a researcher dashboard for the UK Government Web Archive
/ Mark Bell, The National Archives, London/Tom Storrar, The National Archives, London/Jane Winters, School of Advanced Study, University of London
Design thinking, UX and born-digital archives : solving the problem of dark archives closed to users
/ Lise Jaillant, Loughborough University, UK
Towards critically addressable data for digital library user studies
/ Paul Gooding, University of Glasgow
Reviewing the reviewers : training neural networks to read peer review reports
/ Martin Paul Eve, Birkbeck, University of London/Robert Gadie, University of the Arts,London/Victoria Odeniyi, University of the Arts, London/Shahina Parvin, Brandon University, Canada and Jahangirnagar University, Bangladesh
Supervised and unsupervised : approaches to machine learning for textual entities
/ Tobias Hodel, University of Bern
Inviting AI into the archives : the reception of handwritten recognition technology into historical manuscript transcription
/ Melissa Terras, University of Edinburgh
Afterword : towards a new discipline of Computational Archival Science (CAS)
/ Richard Marciano, University of Maryland.
Description:
Digital archives are transforming the Humanities and the Sciences. Digitised collections of newspapers and books have pushed scholars to develop new, data-rich methods. Born-digital archives are now better preserved and managed thanks to the development of open-access and commercial software. Digital Humanities have moved from the fringe to the centre of academia. Yet, the path from the appraisal of records to their analysis is far from smooth. This book explores crossovers between various disciplines to improve the discoverability, accessibility, and use of born-digital archives and other cultural assets.