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The Text Analysis Portal for Research (TAPoR) and Research Needs in the Digital Humanities. Ray Siemens CRC Humanities Computing siemens@uvic.ca. 2005 UVic Canarie Advanced Research Networks Day. 25 November 2005. TAPoR & TAPoR@UVic.
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The Text Analysis Portal for Research (TAPoR) and Research Needs in the Digital Humanities Ray Siemens CRC Humanities Computing siemens@uvic.ca 2005 UVic Canarie Advanced Research Networks Day 25 November 2005
TAPoR & TAPoR@UVic • The Text Analysis Portal for Research (TAPoR) is a collaboration of research units at six Canadian universities, to build a centralized gateway to representative electronic texts and text analysis tools. They include: • University of New Brunswick (in the Electronic Text Centre & Computer Science) • Université de Montréal (in Law) • University of Toronto (in English & Information Studies) • McMaster University (in the Humanities Computing Centre) • University of Alberta (in the Arts Computing Area) • University of Victoria (in the Humanities Computing and Media Centre, across the faculty of Humanities, and with collaboration with the Library) • TAPoR@UVic has operated with the HCMC (Peter Liddell, Director) and focussed on the creation and analysis of texts in varied electronic media • encouraging standardized digitisation of Humanities research resources, • provoking new (inter)disciplinary research and research questions by interrelating large databases with new search and retrieval tools, and • supporting and reflecting research into human-computer interface and interaction issues.
Next Phase of Research Development • Involves the development of large, varied-media datasets toward application in high-performance computing. • These group into clusters, consisting of • textbase-oriented activities • multimedia database activities • GIS-related activities • A common ground is found in the way in which they will require a deeper understanding of issues related to large-scale interrelation issues and the application to them of practices associated with high-performance computing.
Textbase • Internet Shakespeare Editions (Michael Best) • Canada Century Research Infrastructure (Peter Baskerville) • Imperialism on the Ground (John Lutz and Patrick Dunae) • Renaissance English Knowledgebase (Ray Siemens) • Cowichan Dictionary (Tom Hukari)
Multimedia Database • Le mariage sous l'Ancien régime (Claire Carlin) • Pedagogical Exploration and Analysis of a French Learning Object Repository (Catherine Caws) • Infant Speech Acquisition Project (John Esling) • Katakana Database Project (Joe Kess)
GIS • Representations of London in the 16th- and 17th- Centuries (Janelle Jenstad) • McClure House: Cataloging and Display of Heritage Architectural Archives (Martin Segger, Chris Petter) • And • Le mariage sous l'Ancien régime (Carlin) • Imperialism on the Ground (Lutz, Dunae)
Common Research Direction • All projects involve the creation of large, complex datasets developed to standards appropriate to • the disciplinary traditions out of which each emerge • formats that will allow them to take their place in larger corpora • in forms suitable for the application of high-performance computing techniques. • While we have developed an understanding of the ways in which humanities data in textual form can be represented, organized, and grouped for small-scale dissemination and analysis, our understanding of the ways in which such materials integrate at large-scale levels is still emerging. • Addressing issues and concerns • inherent in representing materials that document human experience: varied forms and types, developed across many years and in varied media (paper, clay, canvas, stone, &c.), defying easy categorization and description • relating to the digital formats used to store the electronic incarnations of those materials • governing the ways in data in varied and disparate forms can see integration via common representative strategies (also emerging) and algorithmic facilitation (i.e. tool development).
Reflection in Curriculum • Extant courses at the graduate and undergraduate level in History, Linguistics, English, and other disciplines • A new BA curriculum specifically in the Digital Humanities is in the late stages of planning