BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//Historical Network Research - ECPv6.3.1//NONSGML v1.0//EN CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH X-WR-CALNAME:Historical Network Research X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://historicalnetworkresearch.org X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Historical Network Research REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H X-Robots-Tag:noindex X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:UTC BEGIN:STANDARD TZOFFSETFROM:+0000 TZOFFSETTO:+0000 TZNAME:UTC DTSTART:20190101T000000 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190118 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190120 DTSTAMP:20240328T123746 CREATED:20181204T153541Z LAST-MODIFIED:20181204T160355Z UID:69705-1547769600-1547942399@historicalnetworkresearch.org SUMMARY:Graph Technologies in the Digital Humanities: Modelling\, Access\, Comparison\, Mainz DESCRIPTION:Graph Technologies in the Digital Humanities: Modelling\, Access\, Comparison \nCall for papers for a two day international exploratory conference organized by the Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur in Mainz\, 18–19 January 2019. \nAlthough graph models as a computing technology are several decades old\, it is only through advancement of generally available computing capacity in the last few years that the application of graph models has become feasible for many humanities projects. As a result we are now seeing a widespread exploration of their potential in the humanities: graphs are being used to express social networks\, correspondence networks\, text variation\, textual traditions\, prosopographical data\, and so forth. Furthermore\, they increasingly complement relational or XML-based research data repositories. The exploratory state of graph application in the humanities is marked by a great variety of modelling approaches and various understandings of graphs as data and information structures. These different modelling approaches are to be presented and discussed at the conference as a first step towards conceivable harmonisation. \nThe purpose of this conference is to cast a wide net\, soliciting contributions that represent the many applications that humanities researchers are currently finding for graphs. While keeping the rich variation in modeling approaches and applications in the foreground\, we aim at the same time to explore the possibility of generalizing data structures for different application domains. The conference will thus focus both on celebrating a multitude of creative approaches and on identifying common ground for community-driven development of humanities-specific graph models. \nKey topics of the conference include: \n\nFlexibility versus Interoperability\nGraphs are versatile structures able to express highly specific data\, information\, and interpretation. This facilitates humanities research\, marked as it is by heterogeneous data\, situated interpretation\, complex research questions\, and project-specific ephemeral research design. At the same time research institutions\, data repositories\, research infrastructures\, and digital archives require standardization of data and interoperability of tools to facilitate their sustainability and reuse. Are these two features fundamentally at odds with each other\, or can they be different sides of the same coin?\nGeneralization\nClosely related to the first key topic is the question of modelling in graph structures and possibilities of generalization. Can we define generic terms\, concepts\, and structures  from which discipline-specific annotation systems can then be developed? What does a minimally-sustainable humanities-oriented generic graph data structure look like\, and is it possible with such a structure to support the highly specific semantics required by most humanities research?\nApproaches to Querying and Access\nTo support different research strategies it is paramount that interoperable research data repositories support adaptable query and information retrieval approaches. Several graph-oriented query languages exist (e.g. GraphQL\, OpenCypher\, Gremlin\, SPARQL)\, but what requirements should be set for a graph query language geared especially towards humanities research data and questions? What can such strategies look like? Are there opportunities to find interdisciplinary approaches here?\n\nWe welcome proposals for theoretical papers that engage substantially with any of these key topics\, as well as for practice-based papers that describe the practical application of graph technologies to humanities research work to these topics and/or argue practical engineering solutions and approaches to these key questions or related topics such as: \n\nGraph-based data models\, theoretical and practical explorations\nApplications of graph technologies in the humanities\nText-as-Graph (TAG)\nSolutions for query and comparison of different graph models\nStrategies for\, or demonstration of\, various kinds of (computational) access to humanities data and information represented as graphs\nGraph representation of specific networks of persons\, objects\, and information relating to humanities research questions\nInteracting with graphs and graph interaction design\nGraphs as a solution for information and data annotation in the humanities\nGraphs as models for representation of provenance and transmission of information\nGraphs as models for historical data and information\, above and beyond social network analysis\nEngineering solutions to analysis\, traversal\, querying graph structure data in specific humanities research contexts\nThe comparison and interpretation of graphs\, subgraphs\, and traversals\n\nProposals (between 300 and 500 words\, excluding bibliographic references) should be submitted to graphentechnologien@adwmainz.de by 15 October 2018. Abstracts may be submitted in English or German. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be sent out on 25 November 2018. Authors of successful submissions will be allotted 20 minutes for their presentations\, as well as a few minutes for discussion thereafter. \nA keynote by Prof. Dr. Thomas Stäcker\, Director of the State and University Library in Darmstadt\, will be presented at the conference. \nThe organizers of the conference are seeking funding to support travel costs for the presenters of each accepted paper (one bursary per paper). \nPresented papers will be published on line at the very least\, however the program committee intends to publish selected papers in a suitable peer reviewed publication. \nProgram Committee: \nProf. Dr. Tara Andrews (University of Vienna)\nDr. Andreas Kuczera (Academy of Science and Literature\, Mainz/Gießen)\nDr. Thomas Efer (University of Leipzig)\nFranziska Diehr (Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz\, Berlin)\nDr. Elena Spadini (University of Lausanne)\nDrs. Joris van Zundert (Huygens Institute for the History of the Netherlands\, Amsterdam) \n\n\n Related URL:https://historicalnetworkresearch.org/event/graph-technologies-in-the-digital-humanities-modelling-access-comparison-mainz/ LOCATION:Mainz END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR