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{de} Im Forschungskolloquium werden internationale Projekte aus dem Bereich der digitalen Geisteswissenschaften vorgestellt. In diesem Semester wird ein Schwerpunkt auf Themen aus den digitalen Altertumswissenschaften liegen. Die Veranstaltung ist offen für externe Teilnehmer*innen, eine Registrierung ist nicht erforderlich, einfach diesen Link klicken: https://meet.in-berlin. de/dh_colloquium_fu_berlin  Bei Rückfragen wenden Sie sich bitte an Prof. Dr. Stefan Heßbrüggen-Walter (s.hessbrueggen-walter@fu-berlin.de).

{en} This research colloquium presents international Digital Humanities projects. This semester will feature a number of talks from digital classics. The event is open to external participants, registration is not required, just click this link: https://meet.in-berlin. de/dh_colloquium_fu_berlin  If you have any questions, please contact Prof. Dr. Stefan Heßbrüggen-Walter (s.hessbrueggen-walter@fu-berlin.de).

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Semesterplan / Schedule

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Charles Pence (Université catholique de Louvain): »Dynamic topic modeling and concept-mapping in philosophy«»Topic Modeling for Conceptual Cartography«

A not uncommon desire in digital humanities work is to take the measure of a concept or idea and its changing use and meaning over time. How and where has it been invoked? With what has it been related, and in what contexts? A natural tool, in turn, for this kind of work is topic modeling – the kinds of results that topic modeling provides could give us the “semantic neighborhood” surrounding a key term, and, carefully applied, show us how that neighborhood varies across a corpus. In this talk, I’ll present some efforts in this direction: successes and failures in a number of efforts to use topic models, supplemented with various kinds of other information or further complexity, to better understand the cartography of concepts in historical and contemporary philosophy of science. I hope to offer both some fruitful examples and some terrible warnings.

Mi/Wed · 18.01.2023 · 18:15–19:45

Federica Iurescia (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano): »LiLa: Linking Latin. Interoperability between Lexical and Textual Resources for Latin with the Linked Open Data Paradigm«Data Paradi

The “LiLa: Linking Latin” project builds a Linked Data-based Knowledge Base of interoperable Linguistic Resources and Natural Language Processing (NLP) tools for Latin. Its aim is to make the existing corpora, dictionaries, and lexica for Latin interact, in order to boost the potential of the single resources. The key to achieve interoperability is to use a standard way to represent data and metadata. Such a way consists in applying the principles of the so-called Linked Open Data Paradigm, which is the standard approach for knowledge description in the Semantic Web.

The talk will detail the basic architecture of LiLa and will give an overview of the lexical and textual resources connected to the knowledge base so far. Moreover, a number of queries on the interoperable resources in LiLa will be presented.

Mi/Wed · 01.02.2023 · 18:15–19:45

Maria Chiara Parisi (Universiteit van Amsterdam): »Mathematics & Scientific Explanation in Antiquity: A ›Slow Science‹ and ›Big Data‹ Study«

Science explainswhyreality is as it is. But what is scientific explanation? In philosophy of science, it is debated whether explanations are causal or can also be non-causal. Importantly, if all scientific explanations are causal, then mathematics does not explain, because mathematics provides non-causal, conceptual explanations. A virtually identical debate originated in antiquity with Proclus (412–485 CE), opposing two views:

  • (1) mathematics is explanatory.
  • (2) mathematics is not explanatory.

This ancient opposition ruled the debate on scientic explanation for millennia. An unsolved mystery surrounds (2), however. Proclus follows (1) and attributes (2) to Aristotle, contradicting Aristotle's own authoritativewritings.Whatdynamicsofthoughtcouldexplainsuchastarkandmomentous misattribution?

My main hypothesis is that, against current opinion, both the misattribution and the emergence of (2) are due to a conceptual shift regarding the objects of scientic knowledge. To show this, and to reconstruct this extremely consequential debate, I use a novel approach combining traditional, qualitative methods or ‘slow science’, and quantitative, computational techniques on a 'big data' corpus in Greek and Latin spanning 450 authors and nine centuries. This approach allows me to remain grounded in textual exegesis, while enlarging the evidence basis for a wide-scope investigation. In this talk, I focus on this novel approach. After introducing the theoretical framework, I discuss corpus selection and processing to enable (string and semantic) searches and collect relevant passages. Moreover, I illustrate the modelling of the concept of scientific explanation in Antiquity by adapting the Classical Model of Science (de Jong and Betti 2010) to the ancient context.

Mi/Wed · 15.02.2023 · 18:15–19:45

Rachele Sprugnoli (Università di Parma): »Sentiment Analysis for Latin: lexicons, annotation and automatic approaches«

The talk will present the development of sentiment lexicons for Latin, their publication as Linked Open Data in the context of the ERC project “LiLa: Linking Latin” and will report on the pilot manual annotation of sentiment in a set of poems written by Horace. Moreover, the results of a few preliminary experiments on the automatic detection of sentiment in Horace texts will be described.

Mi/Wed · 22.02.2023 · 18:15–19:45

Monica Berti (Universität Leipzig): »Canons of Ancient Historians in the Age of Linked Open Data«

The goal of this talk is to discuss characteristics of canons and catalogs of ancient literature in the digital age. The talk will present a project for extracting data about ancient Greek authors and works from still extant sources. The talk will show concrete examples about the extraction, annotation, and analysis of the language used by ancient authors to refer to other authors and works. The talk will address questions concerning the use of Linked Open Data best practices for collecting and sharing this data. 

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(Die Veranstaltung im Vorlesungsverzeichnis.)