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

Contact

Professor: Frédéric Kaplan

Assistants: Vincent Buntinx and Lia Costiner

Rooms: Wednesday (CMN1113) and Friday (CM1104)

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

Introduction

Week 1 : Structural tensions in Digital Humanities

20.09 (2h) 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. Structuring tensions 1: 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.

22.09 (2h) (a) Structuring tensions 2: Big Data Digital Humanities vs Small Data Digital Humanities. The 3 circles. Exercise on relationship between elements in Digital Culture schema. (2h) Practical session: Introduction to MediaWiki. Objective: Learning the basic syntax of MediaWiki. Get a first experience of collaborative editing. Learning to write from a neutral point of view. Creation of the articles by the student followed by peer-review by another student (enriching, completing references). Each student picks a DH person and DH concept, write a Wiki page for each (30 mn + 30 mn). Each student chooses another person and another concept among the ones already covered, enrich with complementary information and references (20 mn + 20 mn)

(25.09 2pm : Experiment with Digital Art History interface INN116)

Week 2 : Patrimonial capitalism and common goods

27.09 (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. Introduction to the TIme Machine FET Flagship and mutualised infrastructure approach. (1h) General presentation of the Time Machine pipeline at the Datasquare / ArtLab pavillon.

29.09 (4h) Forum ArtTech (Rolex Learning Center). Mininig Big Data of the Past. Patrimonial capitalism and businesses opportunities. Examples of FamilySearch, myHeritage, Corbis.

Part I : Pipelines

Week 3: Documents pipeline

04.10 (2h) The Digitization Process and Pipelines. What is a document? What is a digital image? Exercise on Book Scanners typologies. Document digitisation as a problem of conversion of dimensions. Digitisation is logistic optimization. Alienation. Digitisation on demand. Fedorov's notion of optimal experiment.

06.10 (2h) Pipeline for Written documents. Part I: Standards. Open Annotation Data Model. Shared Canvas. Part 2: Regulated Representations. DHCanvas. (2h) Presentation of the Projects. Presentation of the main databases used in the course and ClioWire platform.

Week 4: Artworks Pipeline

11.10 (2h) Pipeline for Artworks photographs. Image banks and phototarchives. Scanning techniques for photographs. Segmentation. Visual similarity vs visual connections.

13.10 (4h) Introduction to deep learning approaches. Exercises with the Replica database and search engine. 5 mn presentation. Work on projects. Formation of the groups.

Week 5: Maps Pipeline

18.10 (2h) What are cartographic documents. Exercice on ancient maps. History of cartography. Odometry. Triangulation. Coordinate systems. Metric systems. Projection. Cadaster. Aerial photography.

20.10 (4h) (a) Introduction to GIS. Points, Lines, Polygons. Coordinate Sytems. QGIS Hands On. Exercise on Venetian cadaster (Bastien). (b) Oral presentation of project plan

Week 6: 3D Pipeline

25.10 (2h) Pipeline for 3D spaces. Modelling vs Sampling : Part I : Modelling. Photogrammety. Demo Sketchup. Model-based Procedural methods. Architectural grammars. Class I and Class II elements. The question of realism.

27.10 (4h) Part II : Sampling. Photogrammetric tutorial (Nils)

Part II : Algorithms

Week 7 : Deep Learning algorithms

01.11 (2h) A panorama of Deep learning methods. Successes. Fundamental principles. Neurons. Receptive Fields. Hierarchical representation / texture. Gradient descent. Credit Assignment Path. Most important architectures. Convolutional neural networks. Recurrent neural networks. Siamese Networks. Word2Vec. Generative Adversarial Networks. Style Transfer. Importance of Deep learning for Digital Humanities. Can Deep Learning networks and Big Data of the Past lead to new forms of Artificial Intelligence ?

03.11 (2h) Machine vision tutorial (Benoit, Sofia). Introduction to Anaconda, Jupyter, TensorFlow. Deep learning in practice. (2h) Work on bibliography

Week 8 : Knowledge modelling

08.11 (2h) The beauty of Knowledge modelling. Tables. Databases. Semantic web, Ontologies, URI, RDF, CIDOC-CRM, How to code event, places and influence. Metaknowledge

10.11 (4h) (a) Exercise in semantic modelling and inference (Maud) (b) Work on project, preparation of presentation

-- Deadline Bibliography and discussion of the state of the art (10%)

Week 9 : Project

15.11 (2h) Midterm presentation with project planning and prior art (10%)

17.11 (4h) Project development

-- Deadline for individual essay (30%)

Part III : Platform management

22.11 (2h) Data Management  : Computing infrastructure, Data Management models, Sustainability. Apps. Management of uncertainty, incoherence and errors. Iconographic principle of precaution. Example of Wikipedia and Europeana.

24.11 (4h) VENICE

29.11 (2h) User Management : Representation, Rights, Traceability, Vandalism, Motivation, Negotiation spaces. Right to be forgotten.

01.12 (4h) Testing phase

-- Deadline peer-grading (5%)

06.12 (2h) Bot Management : Versioning. Open source repositories.

08.12 (4h) Testing phase and report writing

13.12 (2h) Report writing

-- Deadline for GitHub repository (10%)

-- Deadline Detailed description of the methods (10%) (>500 words)

-- Deadline Quantitive analysis of the performances (10%) (>300 words)


15.12 (4h) Final project presentation (20%) and Discussion of the collective paper

References

Key Figures

Identity map (Cardon)

Maps for Big Data Digital Humanities (Kaplan)

Semiotic Triangle (McCloud)

Image similarity

Uncanny Valley (Mori)

Databases

(Page to be created indicating characteristics, quantity and copyright)

Le Temps Archives

Cini Photoarchive

Venice Time Machine documents

Scans of Acedemic Book and journals about Venice

Linked Book

Assessment and Notation grid

The final grade is based on 65% collective work and 35% individual work

a) 2 collective oral presentations

  • 1 10' midterm presenting the project planning and prior art (10%)
  • 1 20' final discussing the project result (20%)

b) Collective Written deliverables (Wiki writing)

  • Bibliography and discussion of the state of the art (10%) (>300 words)
  • Detailed description of the methods (10%) (>500 words)
  • Quantitive analysis of the performances (10%) (>300 words)

c) Collective Code deliverable

  • Organisation of the GitHub repository (5%)

d) Individual essay (Word or Open Office)

  • Introduction/Motivation on the relevance of ClioWire in the Digital Humanities landscape and Beyond (15 %) (> 500 words)
  • Discussion and Future Work (15%) (> 500 words)
  • Peergrading (5%)