CfP: CHR 2023, Paris, December 6-8
Dear colleagues,
 
I’d like to draw your attention and invite you to participate in the 4th edition of the Computational Humanities Research conference which will take place in Paris on December 6-8. Call for papers is now live, submission deadline is July 24. Please find more details in CFP below. There’s always been a good contingent of computational and digital archaeology and history folk and it’s a great opportunity to see what’s currently trending in the DH world.  
 
On behalf of the program chairs, 
Iza Romanowska
 
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CHR 2023, Paris, December 6-8 

 
In the arts and humanities, the use of computational, statistical, and mathematical approaches has considerably increased in recent years. This research is characterized by the use of formal methods and the construction of explicit, computational models. This includes quantitative, statistical approaches, but also more generally computational methods for processing and analyzing data, as well as theoretical reflections on these approaches. Despite the undeniable growth of this research area, many scholars still struggle to find suitable research-oriented venues to present and publish computational work that does not lose sight of traditional modes of inquiry in the arts and humanities. This is the scholarly niche that the CHR conference aims to fill. More precisely, the conference aims at
  • Building a community of scholars working on humanities research questions relying on a wide range of computational and quantitative approaches to humanities data in all its forms. We consider this community to be complementary to the digital humanities landscape.
  • Promoting good practices through sharing “research stories”. Such good practices may include, for instance, the publication of code and data in order to support transparency and replication of studies; pre-registering research design to present theoretical justification, hypotheses, and proposed statistical analysis; or a redesign of the reviewing process for interdisciplinary studies that rely on computational approaches to answer questions relevant to the humanities.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
 
We invite original research papers from a wide range of topics, including – but not limited to – the following:
  • Applications of statistical methods and machine learning to process, enrich and analyse humanities data, including new media and cultural heritage data;
  • Hypothesis-driven humanities research, simulations and generative models;
  • Development of new quantitative and empirical methods for humanities research;
  • Modeling bias, uncertainty, and conflicting interpretation in the humanities;
  • Evaluation methods, evaluation data sets  and development of standards;
  • Formal, statistical or quantitative  evaluation of categorization / periodization;
  • Theoretical frameworks and epistemology for quantitative methods and computational humanities approaches;
  • Translation and transfer of methods from other disciplines, approaches to bridge humanistic and statistical interpretations;
  • Visualisation, dissemination (incl. Open science) and teaching in computational humanities;
  • Potential and challenges of AI applications to humanities research.
 
VENUE
 
The 2023 edition of the Computational Humanities Research conference will be hosted by the École pour l’informatique et les techniques avancées – Paris . The conference will be a hybrid event with an option to attend in person in Paris, virtually, or a combination of the two.
 
IMPORTANT DATES
 
  • Submission deadline: July 24, 2023
  • Notification of acceptance:  September
  • Camera ready versions due: October
  • Conference: December 6 – December 8, 2023

 

SUBMISSION TYPES
 
Long Papers: up to 5000 words (ca. 10 pages, references, abstract and tables/illustrations excluded). Long papers report on completed, original and unpublished results. Brevity of argument is preferred. We welcome the use of appendices or other supplementary information.
 
Short Papers: up to 3000 words (ca. 6 pages references, abstract and tables/illustrations excluded). Short papers report on focussed contributions, and may present work in progress.
 
Lightning Talks: Submit a 750 words abstract to give a 5 minute presentation during a lightning talks session. This format can be well suited for reporting work in progress, introducing ideas, preliminary results, or focused question-answer research.
 
Posters: For poster presentations we ask you to submit an abstract describing your work in about 750 words (references excluded). Posters are well suited to present new or early stage research, for a corpus or database description, or for detailed technical explanations and clarifications.
 
Posters and lightning talks abstracts will not be published in the proceedings, but they will be added to the website of CHR.
Published by Aline Deicke
April 24, 2023

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