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Professor: [http://people.epfl.ch/frederic.kaplan Frédéric Kaplan]
Professor: [http://people.epfl.ch/frederic.kaplan Frédéric Kaplan]


Assistants: Paul Guhennec, Didier Dupertuis, Beatrice Vaienti
Assistants: Alexander Rusnak


Rooms: Wednesday (CM1110) and Thursday (BC03)
Rooms: Wednesday (CM1110) and Thursday (BC03/BC04)


==Links==
==Links==
*[https://moodle.epfl.ch/course/view.php?id=15281 Moodle]
*[https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/lmievevb2b78lyxoqu130/FDH_Textbook.pdf?rlkey=c6dv6m97sf81l6dcz7nw777j0&dl=0 Textbook]
*[https://annuel2.framapad.org/p/fdh Framapad]
*[https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/w4dcnwdtfd4xq4p0bj3ub/AETpOIrGvsYisZPTbitU4xY?rlkey=heoqml8hsg4judym2yhzrzliy&dl=0 Slides]
*[https://timeatlas.eu Time Atlas (Public version)]
*[https://timeatlas-test.epfl.ch/app/ Time Atlas (Dev version)]
*[[Projects]]
*[[Projects]]
* Sources (2024)
** [https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/s4zlaxrpka4w1h7mx6zvu/FDH_Morphographs.zip?rlkey=qp1omyyjj9dqfuko49rrd37tt&dl=0 Morphograph]
* Sources (2024)
** [https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/oekkk9ts0pnjyiqaezz7m/Toponomastica-Veneziana.pdf?rlkey=wfky7ht9ckxa1w1qo6c69bo98&dl=0 Tassini PDF], [https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/lfu8ugk25re333gca65g7/Toponomastica-Veneziana_with_pages_delim.txt?rlkey=fouht7678vs102918hn9fuxs1&dl=0 Tassini OCR]
** [https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/netqhm40dyw046withu8q/AJO_CPupJwuLw4Zvg1JF2jc?rlkey=ldswph81gb0n9xgi5qzz1b1i8&dl=0 Guido Commerciale PDF]
** [https://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/metabook?id=sanudodiary Sanudo PDF]
<!--  
<!--  
*[https://conference.timemachine.eu Time Machine Conference 2018]
*[https://conference.timemachine.eu Time Machine Conference 2018]
Line 29: Line 37:


==Plan ==
==Plan ==
=== Part I : Concepts ===
=== Part I : Concepts and Fields ===


==== Week 1 : What are Digital Humanities? ====
==== Week 1 : What are Digital Humanities? ====
22.09 (2h) Welcome and Introduction to the course
* FDH-0 (1h)  Introduction to the course and Digital Humanities, structure of the course. Introduction to Framapad with a simple exercise. Principle of collective note talking and use in the course. State of the Digital Humanities at EPFL, in Switzerland and in Europe. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/e422bc1a Video recording link (2020)]. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/gH89nlFvbY/ Video recording link (2021)].


23.09 (4h) What are Digital Humanities? What is their object of study?
10.09 :
* FDH-1-1 (1h) What Are Digital Humanities : Digital Humanities, Digital Studies, Humanities Computing and Studies about Digital Culture. Digital Humanism vs. Digital Humanities. Why digital methods tend to dissolve traditional disciplinary frontiers. A focus on practice. Translation issues. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/f9472d5e Video recording link (2020)]. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/BfVSPfvNao/ Video recording link (2021)].
* FDH-1-2 (1h) Digital Humanities as a field : Big Data Digital Humanities vs Small Data Digital Humanities. The 3 circles.  Exercise on relationship between elements in Digital Culture schema. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/867c0795 Video recording link].  [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/kJP7ARo3bB/ Video recording link (2021)].
* FDH-1-3 (2h) Big Data of the Past. Data acceleration regime. Inferred Patterns. Redocumentation. Fictional Spaces [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/c2a637c2 Video recording link (2020)]. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/SyUsJMcsOR/ Video recording link (2021)].


==== Week 2 : Patrimonial Capitalism and Commons  ====
(2h) Welcome and Introduction to the course
* Getting know each others. Presentation of each student with a Photo illustrating their interest or history.
* Introduction to the structure of the course and the FDH textbook.


29.09 :
11.09 :
* FDH 1-4 Patrimonial Capitalism (1h) Introduction to the DH circle linking the digitisation of sources, their processing, their analysis, visualisation and the creation of societal value (insight, culture) leading ultimately to the digitisation of new sources. Presentation of some sustainable DH circles (genealogy, image banks). Patrimonial capitalism and the risk of monopolistic companies. Parallelism with the race for sequencing the Human Genome.  [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/e02cfdd0 Video recording link]. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/t5WxZR3avB Video recording link (2021)]
* FDH 1-5 The Commons (1h) What are the commons ? What is the public domains ? History and evolution. Copyright overreaching. Frontal collision. Governing with the commons  [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/79fa0d4e Video recording link]. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/9n4jojmzpd/ Video recording link (2021)]


30.09
What are Digital Humanities? What is their object of study?
* FDH 1-6 Anatomy of a large-scale project (1h) Venice Time Machine. European Time Machine. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/93a6e77b Video recording link (pre-recorded)]. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/61b8d58f Video recording link (live)]
* Digital vs Analogue, Abstract vs Concrete, Information, Token, Data/Code equivalence
* Past projects presentation. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/64542a60 Video recording link] [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/jnrEK9A55w/ Video recording link (2021)].
* Maud Ehrmann, Impresso project and data acceleration regime (2h)
* FDH 1-7 Projects.See also [[Projects]] page  [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/86de590d Video recording link (pre-recorded)]. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/e9c89123 Video recording link (live)].


=== Part II : Pipelines ===
==== Week 2 : What are Digital Humanities (ctd.) ====


==== Week 3Digitisation  ====
17.09 :   


06.10
* Humanities, Hermeneutics. Patterns
* FDH 2-1 Introduction to the Digitization Process. The Story of Google books. Document digitization as a problem of conversion of dimensions. Digitization is logistic optimization. Alienation. Digitization on demand. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/6cb9541c Video recording link] [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/7sxSQKh4ZV/ Video recording link (2021)].


07.10
18.09 :
* (2h) FDH 2-2  Document Structure. General presentation of the pipeline. Content and Structure. Circulation. Standards. Open Annotation Data Model. Shared Canvas.IIIF. Synchronic patterns and diachronic homology. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/247ce03e Video recording link]


* (2h)  [[Projects]] presentations. 5' per project with max 3 slides. Fill out the [[Projects#Groups|group table]] before the course. You can find a group using the [https://annuel2.framapad.org/p/fdh framapad]. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/7eef2f77 Video recording link]
Morning :  


==== Week 4: Writing Systems and Text Encoding  ====
*  Anatomy of a large-scale project : Venice Time Machine. European Time Machine.


13.10 (2h) FDH 2-3 : Writing Systems [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/2e3b9a81 Video recording link]
Afternoon :  


14.10
* Manuel Ehrenfeld / Designing the Time Machine Atlas
- (2h) FDH 2-4 : Text Encoding [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/95c94280/ Video recording link]
- (2h) Work and support on [[Projects|projects]]


==== Week 5: Text Processing and Understanding ====
* Formation of the groups (ideally 2, max 3 students)


20.10 (2h) FDH 2-5 Text Processing : Diachronic and synchronic analysis. n-grams, TF-IDF, Topic Modeling, Word Space Models and Word embeddings (2h) [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/4aeff31f Video recording link.]
==== Week 3: Subfields Student Presentation  ====


21.10 (2h) FDH 2-6 Text Understanding : Close, surface, distant and machine reading, Information extraction, Named Entities, Resources, Large-Scale Projects (2h) [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/b9821f1e Video recording link.]. Work on Project (2h).
Groups of students will give a 10-minute presentation, using slides, followed by a 10-minute class discussion on the potential of Big Data in various fields of the Humanities. Presentations may include an overview of existing projects and/or projections of future research in these disciplines. (See graduation system below)


==== Week 6:  Images  ====
For each subfields, groups must


27.10 (2h) FDH 2-7 : Image systems. [http://www.tube.switch.ch/videos/521a27b7 Video recording link]
* Define the specific object of study of the subfield,
* Define the opportunities of a change of scale,
* Illustrate with existing or prospective examples.  


28.10 (2h) FDH 2-8 : Image processing [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/b36df7a0 Video recording link] [https://diamond.timemachine.eu/ Time machine search engine] (2h) Work on project
24.09 :


(FDH 2-9 : Image understanding not done this year)
* Pierre Vann, Julien Jordan / Architecture/Urbanism
* Anaël Donini, Anastasia Meijer / Applied Sociology
* Eliott Bell, Christophe Bitar / Big Data in History
* Camille Dupre Tabti, Olivia Robles /  Big Data and Musicology
* Néhémie Frei, Niccholas Reiz Art History: Film Studies
 
25.09 :
 
Morning :
 
* Camille Lannoye, Sophia Kovalenko / Art History
* Yibo Yin, Jiajun Shen, Yifan Zhou / Big Data and History
* Marguerite Novikov / Lingustics
* Xiru Wang, Jingru Wnag / Big data and theology
* Jérémy Hugentobler / Archeology
 
Afternoon
 
2.15 pm : Projects presentation by prof and TA. Examples of DH projects that can be selected during the course. It is also possible to invent new one. Each student has to select two and present their ideas the following week.
 
=== Part II : Media Pipelines  ===
 
==== Week 4: Documents and Writing Systems  ====
 
01.10 :
 
(2h) Documents : Definition and Encoding. IIIF Format.
 
02.10 :
- (2h) Writing Systems
 
* (2h)  [[Projects]] presentations. Each group present 2 projects. 5' per project with max 3 slides. At the end of the session, the goal is to select one really fitting the taste and skills of the students and the learning ambition of the course.
 
Vote on skills tutorial for Skills sessions
 
==== Week 5: Texts ====
 
08.10 :
 
(2h) Reading and Text encoding (2h)
 
09.10 :
 
(2h) Text Spaces and Text systems
 
(2h) SKILL SESSION 1 (Vote for the tutorials) (Alex Rusnak)
 
==== Week 6:  Paintings, Engravings and Photographs  ====
 
15.10 :
 
(2h) Image reading. Image space and image systems
 
16.10 :
 
(2h) Example of the Replica Pipeline
 
 
(2h) SKILLS SESSION 2 (Vote for the tutorials) (Alex Rusnak)
 
==== Week Off  ====
 
22.10 :
 
No course
 
23.10 :
 
No Course


==== Week 7: Maps ====
==== Week 7: Maps ====


03.11 (2h) FDH-2-10 Map systems [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/d4ab83fe/ Video recording link]
29.10 :
 
(2h) Are Maps different than images ? Alex Rusnak's Presentation on 2D/3D map encoding
 
30.10 :
 
Morning
 
(2h) Remi Petitpierre presentation : Cartography at scale


04.11 (2h) FDH-2-11 Map processing (2h) [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/18e9f30a Video recording link]Work on project
Afternoon


==== Week 8: Architecture and Objects  ====
2h) Beatrice Vaienti presentation : Genealogies of Jerusalem's maps


10.11 (2h) FDH-2-12: Architecture and Object Systems. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/2e8468fd Video recording link]
==== Week 8: Design and Architecture ====


11.11 (2h) FDH-2-13: Architecture and Object Processing: Modelling vs Sampling : Model-based Procedural methods. Architectural grammars. Class I and Class II elements. The question of realism. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/397be5e4 Video recording link]. (2h)Work on project
05.11 :
   
(2h) 3D Models Systems and Encoding


=== Part III : Knowledge modelling and processing ===
06.11 :
 
(2h) 3D Models Processing
 
(2h)Work on project : Definition of the MVP (Minimum Viable Product)


==== Week 9 : Semantic modelling  ====
=== MidTerm Presentations ===


17.11  
12.11 :


- (1h) FDH-3-0 Summary of the concept viewed so far and introduction to part 3 [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/efa55bf4 Video recording link]
* You can select the presentation of this course : Music, Poetry, Fashion, Rituals, Web, Diagrams and Tables, Zeitgeist modelling (simulation of the everyday)


- (1h) FDH-3-1 Semantic modelling. RDF, Metaknowledge [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/4ac03a54 Video recording link]
* Summary of the concept viewed so far. Publication of the study guide


18.11 '''Midterm presentation''' (10%)
13.11 Midterm presentations


{|class="wikitable"
{|class="wikitable"
! style="text-align:center;"| Time
! style="text-align:center;"| Time
! Project name
! Project name
! Group nº
|-
|-
|10:20-10:35
|10:20-10:40
| X
| Group 7
| Group X
|-
|-
|10:35-10:50
|10:40-11:00
| X
| Group 6
| Group X
|-
|-
|10:50-11:05
|11:00-11:20
| X
| Group 5
| Group X
|-
|-
|11:05-11:20
|11:20-11:40
| X
| Group 4
| Group X
|-
|11:20-11:35
| X
| Group X
|}
|}


Line 138: Line 212:
! style="text-align:center;"| Time
! style="text-align:center;"| Time
! Project name
! Project name
! Group nº
|-
|-
|13:20-13:35
|13:15-13:35
| X
| Group 3
| Group X
|-
|-
|13:35-13:50
|13:35-13:55
| X
| Group 2
| Group X
|-
|-
|13:50-14:05
|13:55-14:15
| X
| Group 1
| Group X
|-
|-
|14:05-14:20
|14:15-14:35
| X
| Group 8
| Group X
|-
|14:20-14:35
| X
| Group X
|}
|}


==== Week 10 : Ontologies, Constraints and Rule systems ====
=== Part III : Knowledge modelling and processing ===
 
==== Week 9 : Semantic modelling, Rule systems, simulations and parallel worlds  ====


24.11 (2h) FDH 3-2 Universal Ontologies [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/130eace5/ Video recording link]
19.11 :


25.11 (2h) FDH 3-3 Rule systems, simulations and parallel worlds [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/f315a5f3 Video recording link]
- (1h) Semantic modelling. RDF, Metaknowledge
- (1h) Universal Ontologies


-- Project plan and milestones deliverable on the Wikipage of each project (10%)
20.11 :


==== Week 11 : Non conceptual knowledge systems and topological data science  ====
(2h)  Rule systems, simulations and parallel worlds


(2h) Preparation of the exam


01.12 (2h) FDH 3-4 Non conceptual knowledge systems [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/64c53fc5/ Video recording link (Part 1)] [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/dd24ce0a/ Video recording link (Part 2)]


02.12 (2h) FDH 3-5 Topological data science [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/f21c15b0 Video recording link]
==== Week 10 : In class Exam and Non conceptual knowledge systems and topological data science  ====
 
26.11 :
 
(2h) In class exam
 
27.11 :
 
(2h) Non conceptual knowledge systems
(2h) Work on Projects


=== Part IV : Platforms ===
=== Part IV : Platforms ===


==== Week 12 : Data, User and Bot Management  ====
==== Week 12 : Data, User and Agent Management  ====
 
03.12 :
 
(2h) Data


08.12 (2h) Data Management  : FAIR principle, Creative Commons,  Data Management models, Sustainability,  Right to Forgotten. Management of uncertainty, incoherence and errors. Iconographic principle of precaution [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/fa8d5847/ Video recording link]
04.12 :


09.12 (2h) User Management : Part I: Persona. Part II: Motivation and onboarding dynamics. Three case studies: Twitter. Quora. Wikipedia. Part III: "Wisdom" of the crowds. Collectivism vs Liberalism. Open source as a form of liberalism for engineering. The ambiguous of fork. Part IV: The "power" of the crowds. Mechanical Turk. Crowdflower. Crowdfunding. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/26697fee/ Video recording link]
(2h) User


(2h) Bot Management : Three case studies on bot management : Twitter, Wikipedia, Google. [https://tube.switch.ch/videos/b3bef9b2/ Video recording link]
(2h) Agents


==== Week 13 : Work on projects ====
==== Project work ====


15.12 (2h) Work on project
10.12 Work on project


16.12 (4h) work on project
11.12 Work on project


==== Week 14 : Exam  ====
==== Final Week : Project Presentation ====


21.12 (5pm)
17.12


-- Deadline for GitHub repository (10%)
-- Due: GitHub repository  
-- Due: Report writing


-- Deadline for Report writing (40%)
18.12


22.12 (2h) Final project presentation Part 1 (20%)
(4h) Final project presentation (20%)


{|class="wikitable"
{|class="wikitable"
! style="text-align:center;"| Time
! style="text-align:center;"| Time
! Project name
! Project Name
! Group
|-
| 10:15 - 10:40
| Group 1
|-
|-
|13:15-13:40
| 10:40 - 11:05
| X
| Group 2
| Group X
|-
|-
|13:40-14:05
| 11:05 - 11:30
| X
| Group 3
| Group X
|-
|-
|14:05-14:30
| 11:30 - 11:55
| X
| Group 4
| Group X
|-
|-
|14:30-14:55
| 11:55 - 12:20
| X
| Group 5
| Group X
|}
|}
23.12 (2h) Final project presentation Part 2 (20%)


{|class="wikitable"
{|class="wikitable"
! style="text-align:center;"| Time
! style="text-align:center;"| Time
! Project name
! Project Name
! Group nº
|-
|10:15-10:40
| X
| Group X
|-
|-
|10:40-11:05
| 1:15 - 1:40
| X
| Group 6
| Group X
|-
|-
|11:05-11:30
| 1:40 - 2:05
| X
| Group 7
| Group X
|-
|-
|11:30-11:55
| 2:05 - 2:30
| X
| Group 8
| Group X
|}
 
{|class="wikitable"
! style="text-align:center;"| Time
! Project name
! Group
|-
|-
|13:15-13:40
| 2:30 - 2:55
| X
| Group 9
| Group X
|-
|-
|13:40-14:05
| 2:55 - 3:20
| X
| Group 10
| Group X
|}
|}


== Resources ==
== Various Resources ==
*[https://gallica.bnf.fr/accueil/?mode=desktop Gallica]
*[https://gallica.bnf.fr/accueil/?mode=desktop Gallica]
*[https://docs.opencv.org/3.1.0/db/d27/tutorial_py_table_of_contents_feature2d.html Feature matching tutorial]
*[https://docs.opencv.org/3.1.0/db/d27/tutorial_py_table_of_contents_feature2d.html Feature matching tutorial]
Line 271: Line 333:




* 2 oral presentations (30%)
* (Group work) 3 oral presentations (30%)
** Presention of the potential of Big data for a subfield of Digital Humanities (10%)
** 1 midterm presentation of the project (10%)
** 1 midterm presentation of the project (10%)
** 1 final discussing the project result (20%)
** 1 final discussing the project result (10%)
* Written deliverables (Wiki writing) (40%)
* (Group work) Written deliverables (Wiki writing) (20%)
* Quality of the project (30%)
* (Group work) Quality of the project and code (20%)
* (Individual work) Exam on Course Content (30%)
 
=== 3 collective oral presentations (30%) ===
 
 
==== Subfield presentation  (10%) ====
10' max presentation + 5' questions


=== 2 collective oral presentations (30%) ===
Notation grid :
*The presentation contains a description of the subfield in relation with Big Data (4)
* + 0.5 The slides are clear and well presented
* + 0.5 The oral presentation is dynamic and fluid
* + 0.5 The applications are relevant
* + 0.5 The students participate well to the collective discussion


==== Midterm presenting the project planning  (10%) ====
==== Midterm presenting the project planning  (10%) ====
Line 289: Line 364:
* + 0.5 The students answer well to the questions
* + 0.5 The students answer well to the questions


==== Final discussing the project result (20%) ====
==== Final discussing the project result (10%) ====
10-15' for presentation and 5-10' for questions
10-15' for presentation and 5-10' for questions


Line 299: Line 374:
* + 0.5 The students answer well to the questions
* + 0.5 The students answer well to the questions


=== Written deliverables (Wiki writing) (40%) ===
=== Written deliverables (Wiki writing) (20%) ===
 
* Project plan and milestones (5%) (>300 words)
* Motivation and description of the deliverables (5%) (>300 words)
* Detailed description of the methods (5%) (>500 words)
* Quality assessment and discussion of limitations  (5%) (>300 words)
 
The indicated number of words is a minimal bound.


* Projet plan and milestones (10%) (>300 words)
=== Quality of the project and code (20%) ===
* Motivation and description of the deliverables (10%) (>300 words)
* Detailed description of the methods (10%) (>500 words)
* Quality assessment and discussion of limitations  (10%) (>300 words)


The indicated number of words is a minimal bound. Detailed description can in particular be extended if needed.
* Quality of the realisation 10%
* Code delivered on github  10%


=== Production (30%) ===
=== Exam on Course Content (30%) ===


* Quality of the realisation 20%
* A series of questions on the course to ensure the core concepts are understood. [https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/9zrr1phua0jm1636ij5mn/FDH_2024_Exam.pdf?rlkey=ad4uj531ddolyklrk9qcntt8k&dl=0 Example from last year]
* Code deliverable on github  10%

Latest revision as of 09:34, 13 November 2025

Welcome to the wiki of the course Foundation of Digital Humanities (DH-405).

Contact

Professor: Frédéric Kaplan

Assistants: Alexander Rusnak

Rooms: Wednesday (CM1110) and Thursday (BC03/BC04)

Links

Summary

This course gives an introduction to the fundamental concepts and methods of the Digital Humanities, both from a theoretical and applied point of view. The course introduces the Digital Humanities circle of processing and interpretation, from data acquisition to new understandings and services. The first part of the course presents the technical pipelines for digitising, analysing and modelling written documents (printed and handwritten), maps, photographs and 3d objects and environments. The second part of the course details the principles of the most important algorithms in particular deep learning approaches (for document analysis and image generation) and knowledge modelling (semantic web, ontologies, graph databases). The third part of the course focuses on platform management from the points of view of data, users and bots. Students will practise the skills they learn by engaging in a class-wide collective project.

Plan

Part I : Concepts and Fields

Week 1 : What are Digital Humanities?

10.09 :

(2h) Welcome and Introduction to the course

  • Getting know each others. Presentation of each student with a Photo illustrating their interest or history.
  • Introduction to the structure of the course and the FDH textbook.

11.09 :

What are Digital Humanities? What is their object of study?

  • Digital vs Analogue, Abstract vs Concrete, Information, Token, Data/Code equivalence
  • Maud Ehrmann, Impresso project and data acceleration regime (2h)

Week 2 : What are Digital Humanities (ctd.)

17.09 :

  • Humanities, Hermeneutics. Patterns

18.09 :

Morning :

  • Anatomy of a large-scale project : Venice Time Machine. European Time Machine.

Afternoon :

  • Manuel Ehrenfeld / Designing the Time Machine Atlas
  • Formation of the groups (ideally 2, max 3 students)

Week 3: Subfields Student Presentation

Groups of students will give a 10-minute presentation, using slides, followed by a 10-minute class discussion on the potential of Big Data in various fields of the Humanities. Presentations may include an overview of existing projects and/or projections of future research in these disciplines. (See graduation system below)

For each subfields, groups must

  • Define the specific object of study of the subfield,
  • Define the opportunities of a change of scale,
  • Illustrate with existing or prospective examples.

24.09 :

  • Pierre Vann, Julien Jordan / Architecture/Urbanism
  • Anaël Donini, Anastasia Meijer / Applied Sociology
  • Eliott Bell, Christophe Bitar / Big Data in History
  • Camille Dupre Tabti, Olivia Robles / Big Data and Musicology
  • Néhémie Frei, Niccholas Reiz Art History: Film Studies

25.09 :

Morning :

  • Camille Lannoye, Sophia Kovalenko / Art History
  • Yibo Yin, Jiajun Shen, Yifan Zhou / Big Data and History
  • Marguerite Novikov / Lingustics
  • Xiru Wang, Jingru Wnag / Big data and theology
  • Jérémy Hugentobler / Archeology

Afternoon

2.15 pm : Projects presentation by prof and TA. Examples of DH projects that can be selected during the course. It is also possible to invent new one. Each student has to select two and present their ideas the following week.

Part II : Media Pipelines

Week 4: Documents and Writing Systems

01.10 :

(2h) Documents : Definition and Encoding. IIIF Format.

02.10 :

- (2h) Writing Systems

  • (2h) Projects presentations. Each group present 2 projects. 5' per project with max 3 slides. At the end of the session, the goal is to select one really fitting the taste and skills of the students and the learning ambition of the course.

Vote on skills tutorial for Skills sessions

Week 5: Texts

08.10 :

(2h) Reading and Text encoding (2h)

09.10 :

(2h) Text Spaces and Text systems

(2h) SKILL SESSION 1 (Vote for the tutorials) (Alex Rusnak)

Week 6: Paintings, Engravings and Photographs

15.10 :

(2h) Image reading. Image space and image systems

16.10 :

(2h) Example of the Replica Pipeline


(2h) SKILLS SESSION 2 (Vote for the tutorials) (Alex Rusnak)

Week Off

22.10 :

No course

23.10 :

No Course

Week 7: Maps

29.10 :

(2h) Are Maps different than images ? Alex Rusnak's Presentation on 2D/3D map encoding

30.10 :

Morning

(2h) Remi Petitpierre presentation : Cartography at scale

Afternoon

2h) Beatrice Vaienti presentation : Genealogies of Jerusalem's maps

Week 8: Design and Architecture

05.11 :

(2h) 3D Models Systems and Encoding

06.11 :

(2h) 3D Models Processing

(2h)Work on project : Definition of the MVP (Minimum Viable Product)

MidTerm Presentations

12.11 :

  • You can select the presentation of this course : Music, Poetry, Fashion, Rituals, Web, Diagrams and Tables, Zeitgeist modelling (simulation of the everyday)
  • Summary of the concept viewed so far. Publication of the study guide

13.11 Midterm presentations

Time Project name
10:20-10:40 Group 7
10:40-11:00 Group 6
11:00-11:20 Group 5
11:20-11:40 Group 4
Time Project name
13:15-13:35 Group 3
13:35-13:55 Group 2
13:55-14:15 Group 1
14:15-14:35 Group 8

Part III : Knowledge modelling and processing

Week 9 : Semantic modelling, Rule systems, simulations and parallel worlds

19.11 :

- (1h) Semantic modelling. RDF, Metaknowledge - (1h) Universal Ontologies

20.11 :

(2h) Rule systems, simulations and parallel worlds

(2h) Preparation of the exam


Week 10 : In class Exam and Non conceptual knowledge systems and topological data science

26.11 :

(2h) In class exam

27.11 :

(2h) Non conceptual knowledge systems (2h) Work on Projects

Part IV : Platforms

Week 12 : Data, User and Agent Management

03.12 :

(2h) Data

04.12 :

(2h) User

(2h) Agents

Project work

10.12 Work on project

11.12 Work on project

Final Week : Project Presentation

17.12

-- Due: GitHub repository -- Due: Report writing

18.12

(4h) Final project presentation (20%)

Time Project Name
10:15 - 10:40 Group 1
10:40 - 11:05 Group 2
11:05 - 11:30 Group 3
11:30 - 11:55 Group 4
11:55 - 12:20 Group 5
Time Project Name
1:15 - 1:40 Group 6
1:40 - 2:05 Group 7
2:05 - 2:30 Group 8
2:30 - 2:55 Group 9
2:55 - 3:20 Group 10

Various Resources

Assessment and Notation grid

  • (Group work) 3 oral presentations (30%)
    • Presention of the potential of Big data for a subfield of Digital Humanities (10%)
    • 1 midterm presentation of the project (10%)
    • 1 final discussing the project result (10%)
  • (Group work) Written deliverables (Wiki writing) (20%)
  • (Group work) Quality of the project and code (20%)
  • (Individual work) Exam on Course Content (30%)

3 collective oral presentations (30%)

Subfield presentation (10%)

10' max presentation + 5' questions

Notation grid :

  • The presentation contains a description of the subfield in relation with Big Data (4)
  • + 0.5 The slides are clear and well presented
  • + 0.5 The oral presentation is dynamic and fluid
  • + 0.5 The applications are relevant
  • + 0.5 The students participate well to the collective discussion

Midterm presenting the project planning (10%)

10' max presentation + 5' questions

Notation grid :

  • The presentation contains a planning (4)
  • + 0.5 The slides are clear and well presented
  • + 0.5 The oral presentation is dynamic and fluid
  • + 0.5 The planning is realistic.
  • + 0.5 The students answer well to the questions

Final discussing the project result (10%)

10-15' for presentation and 5-10' for questions

Notation grid :

  • The presentation presents the results of the project (4)
  • + 0.5 The slides are clear and well presented
  • + 0.5 The oral presentation is dynamic and fluid
  • + 0.5 The results are well discussed
  • + 0.5 The students answer well to the questions

Written deliverables (Wiki writing) (20%)

  • Project plan and milestones (5%) (>300 words)
  • Motivation and description of the deliverables (5%) (>300 words)
  • Detailed description of the methods (5%) (>500 words)
  • Quality assessment and discussion of limitations (5%) (>300 words)

The indicated number of words is a minimal bound.

Quality of the project and code (20%)

  • Quality of the realisation 10%
  • Code delivered on github 10%

Exam on Course Content (30%)