Digital Humanities
@ Pratt

Inquiries into culture, meaning, and human value meet emerging technologies and cutting-edge skills at Pratt Institute's School of Information

Category: Resources

“UX/DH” (Pratt Institute, April 12, 2014)

On April 12, 2014, the New York City Digital Humanities Student Group, UX/IA Pratt, and ASIS&T @ Pratt hosted the UX/DH event at Pratt SILS, featuring presentations on current and possible intersections between user experience and digital humanities. The first panel, “User Experience at New York University Libraries,” featured three Pratt SILS UX Practicum students discussing their work at NYU…

“How Did They Make That? Reverse-Engineering Digital Projects” with Miriam Posner (CUNY Graduate Center, March 27, 2014)

Miriam Posner, teacher and coordinator at the UCLA Digital Humanities program, recently presented her lecture “How Did They Make That? Reverse-Engineering Digital Projects” at the CUNY Graduate Center. The aim of Posner’s lecture was to provide techniques for dissecting Digital Humanities projects and for understanding how they were built. Posner stated that these techniques could be useful both for “modeling…

“UX/DH” (Pratt, April 12, 2014)

UX/DH Hosted by NYCDH Student Group, Pratt UX/IA, & Pratt ASIS&T SILS Pratt Institute Manhattan Campus Room 609 Saturday, April 12, 2014UX/DH The Pratt UX/DH event hosted by NYCDH Student Group, Pratt UX/IA and Pratt ASIS&T on Saturday April 12, 2014 covered a number of User Experience (UX) and Digital Humanities (DH) projects. Three separate projects were covered. Three members…

“UX/DH” (Pratt, April 12, 2014)

Last weekend I had the good fortunate to attend a combined user experience and digital humanities conference at Pratt. It was short conference, with just three speaker portions: a couple of Pratt SILS students who are working on different aspects of UX at New York University, Pratt alumnus Sean Fitzell who presented on usability evaluation in digital humanities, and Will…

“HiPSTAS, What?: Information Retrieval, Machine Learning, and Visualizations with Sound” with Tanya Clement (CUNY Graduate Center, March 5, 2014)

High Performance Sound Technologies for Access and Scholarship, is a DH project headed by Prof. Tanya Clement. The projects is based out of the Univ. of Austin Texas’ School of Information and works with the Illinois Informatics Institute located at the University of Illinois, which focuses on the STEM related bioinformatic research. A simple reading of the project’s title, entails…

“Research without Borders: The Changing World of Scholarly Communication: Negotiating Constraints and Open Scholarship” (Columbia University, February 27, 2014)

The recent panel discussion “Research without Borders: Negotiating Constraints and Open Scholarship” is part of an ongoing series presented by the Scholarly Communication Program at Columbia University. Using examples from their own scholarly activities, the panelists introduced models for open scholarship that subvert traditional methods of knowledge production, valuation, and dissemination. Leith Mullings, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology, CUNY Graduate Center…

“How Did They Make That? Reverse-Engineering Digital Projects” with Miriam Posner (CUNY Graduate Center, March 27, 2014)

Starting with an image of a decidedly non-digital monkey wrench, Miriam Posner recently gave the presentation, “How Did They Make That: Reverse-Engineering Digital Projects.”  Her talk was part of a series sponsored by CUNY’s Digital Humanities Initiative and built upon her August 29, 2013 blog post, “How did they make that?” Posner introduced her CUNY presentation as a way to…

“HiPSTAS, What?: Information Retrieval, Machine Learning, and Visualizations with Sound” with Tanya Clement (CUNY Graduate Center, March 5, 2014)

There is a tendency when discussing, analyzing, and archiving audio recordings to consider their significance in terms of textual output and transcription availability. However, there is much non-text based information that can be collected from audio recordings that falls outside traditional research methodologies. Considering audio within the context of visualization and pattern recognition offers the potential for the discovery of…

“Research without Borders: Negotiating Contracts and Open Scholarship” (Columbia University, February 27, 2014)

The panel entitled “Research without Borders: Negotiating Contracts and Open Scholarship” took place on February 27th, 2014 that featured different panelists, ranging from professors to data scientists. Although Digital Humanities wasn’t the main topic of this event, despite having a Professor of the subject at the panel, but it none the less had incorporated this field into their own profession.…