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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20250312T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20250312T140000
DTSTAMP:20260409T185536
CREATED:20240711T144034Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250219T122250Z
UID:1719-1741784400-1741788000@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Open Research and Digital Humanities
DESCRIPTION:Date: Wednesday 12 March  \nTime: 13.00 to 14.00  \nLocation: Palmer 103 and online  \n  \nThe Digital Humanities CoP and Hub\, in collaboration with the Open and Robust Research at Reading (ORRR) network\, invite you to a lunchtime event on the theme of Open Research and Digital Humanities.   \nThe event will include a guest talk by Dr Christopher Ohge\, Senior Lecturer in Digital Approaches to Literature at the School of Advanced Study and member of the School of Advanced Study’s Digital Humanities Research Hub.   \nTitle: Responsible Computing in Scholarly Publication  \nAbstract: This talk will review the importance of responsible computing\, including Open Research practices\, in Digital Humanities research. He will draw on three recent initiatives – his work on the Herman Melville Electronic Library\, a digital edition of an anti-slavery anthology\, and coordinating the Digital Humanities Climate Coalition Toolkit – to highlight the challenges and opportunities of responsible approaches. Using these examples\, Dr Ohge will show how minimal computing strategies in particular can both increase sustainability and make a statement to promote environmentally conscious digital research.  \nDr Ohge will be joined for questions by Dr Dawn Kanter (Digital Humanities Officer)\, Dr Anna Tsakalaki (ORRR network lead)\, Evangeline Gowie (UKRN Open Research Coordinator)\, and Dr Robert Darby (Research Data Manager)\, in a panel chaired by Dr Mara Oliva (Digital Humanities Academic Champion).  \n  \nOur events are open to all researchers\, staff\, and PGRs from any subject – we welcome interdisciplinary collaboration!  \nTea/coffee will be available for those attending in person.   \n  \nProgramme  \n\n\n\n1-1:10 \nCoffee and welcome\nDr Mara Oliva\, Dr Dawn Kanter\, Dr Anna Tsakalaki and Evangeline Gowie \n\n\n1:10-1:40 \nGuest talk: Responsible Computing in Scholarly Publication \nDr Christopher Ohge\, School of Advanced Study \n\n\n1:40-1:50 \nQ&A Panel\nDr Christopher Ohge\, Dr Dawn Kanter\, Dr Anna Tsakalaki\, Evangeline Gowie\, Dr Robert Darby\, chaired by Dr Mara Oliva \n\n\n1:50-2:00 \nWhat’s next (who to contact\, future events for DH and OR)\nDr Mara Oliva\, Dr Dawn Kanter\, Dr Anna Tsakalaki and Evangeline Gowie \n\n\n\n  \nMore about the DH CoP and Hub  \nDigital Humanities (DH) is the critical study of the intersection between digital technologies\, disciplines in the Arts and Humanities\, and scholarly communication. The DH Community of Practice (CoP) and the DH Hub work together in supporting researchers to build knowledge and skills in DH\, to develop and undertake DH research projects\, and to maintain digital research outcomes. You can read more about the CoP here and about the Hub here.  \n  \nMore about the ORRR Network  \nOpen and Robust Research at Reading (ORRR) is a network of colleagues interested in making research accessible to everyone.  \nOpen access publishing is just the tip of the iceberg that is ‘open research’\, which aims to make all stages of the research lifecycle (e.g. data\, methodologies) transparent\, collaborative and robust. The network aims to overcome silos to provide a space where colleagues from all departments can ask questions and share expertise in the growing (but challenging!) area of open research.  \nThe network hosts monthly events\, a Teams channel with spaces for different interests and newsletters detailing open research support and activity within the university. Members contribute by speaking at events\, sharing resources on Teams or opening discussions around challenges they are facing or have overcome. The Network is supported by the University’s Open Research Action Plan (2024-29) and draws heavily on activities and projects in collaboration with the UK Reproducibility Network (Why open research at Reading?). It is facilitated by Anna Tsakalaki\, the Reproducibility Local Network Lead\, Evangeline Gowie\, the Open Research Coordinator\, and Etienne Roesch\, the Institutional Lead for Reading.  \nScheduled events:  \nIn 2025\, there is a range of scheduled events to participate in:  \n\nMonthly meetings of the Open Research practices in Qualitative methods special interest group. \nInvited internal and external talks on applied use of different Open Research practices on real projects. \nDiscussions around application of specific OR methodologies and implications for researchers \nPractical support on how-to by peers \n\n  \nJoin the Open Research network to find out more about what is on offer and participate in events! 
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/digitalhumanities/event/open-research-and-digital-humanities/
LOCATION:Palmer 103
CATEGORIES:Collaboration,Community of Practice,In-person,Online
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20250226T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20250226T140000
DTSTAMP:20260409T185536
CREATED:20241127T163850Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250110T134720Z
UID:2465-1740567600-1740578400@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Digital Space Workshop
DESCRIPTION:The Digital Humanities CoP and Hub are hosting an upcoming event centred around the theme of Digital Space. \nDate: 26 February 2025\, from 11.00 to 14.00 (coffee/ tea and lunch included)   \nLocation: Whiteknights Campus    \nFormat: Flash presentations followed by breakout sessions designed to facilitate networking and interdisciplinary collaboration\nFuture Collaboration Opportunity: This event will be followed by a one-day Action Lab in June 2025 \nThis is an internal event. For further details and to take part\, UoR colleagues can please contact digitalhumanities@reading.ac.uk. We look forward to hearing from you and sharing ideas at this workshop! 
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/digitalhumanities/event/digital-space-workshop/
LOCATION:Whiteknights Campus
CATEGORIES:Community of Practice,In-person,Workshop
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20241120T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20241120T143000
DTSTAMP:20260409T185536
CREATED:20240711T143525Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241017T095201Z
UID:1715-1732107600-1732113000@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Humanities Data
DESCRIPTION:Keynote Speaker: Dr Giles Bergel (Oxford)\, Senior Researcher in Digital Humanities in the Department of Engineering Science \nDate: Wednesday 20 November 2024 \nTime: 13.00 to 14.30 \nPlace: EMG27 and Online \n  \nProgramme\nCoffee and Tea available from 13.00 \n\n\n\n13.00\nWelcome and Intro – Dr Mara Oliva (DH Champion) and Dr Dawn Kanter (DH Officer)\n\n\n13.10\nKeynote address: Dr Giles Bergel\, Senior Researcher in Digital Humanities\, Department of Engineering Science – “Do Humanists have Data?”\n\n\n13.40\nRoundtable:\nDr Amy Richardson\, Archaeology\, “Data-driven approaches in the archaeology of the Middle East”\nDr Rhi Smith\, UMASCS\, “Museum data: tackling legacies and making connections”\nDr Dawn Kanter\, DH Hub\, “Collecting and Connecting Portrait-Sitting Data”\n\n\n14.00\nQ&A\n\n\n14.10\nHow to go about it: Dr Dawn Kanter and Dr Robert Darby with Dr Marjorie Gerhardt\n\n\n14.30\nWhat’s next (DH CoP and Hub – future events) & close – Dr Mara Oliva\n\n\n\n  \nKeynote address: Dr Giles Bergel\, Senior Researcher in Digital Humanities\, Department of Engineering Science – “Do Humanists have Data?” \nAbstract: The question that this talk addresses might be put in two different senses. In a practical sense\, the question asks if humanists work with or create data that is immediately available for computational use. On a more theoretical level it could be asked if humanists have data at all. Both questions are fundamental given (for example) AI’s voracious appetite for training data and as\, in an age of academic precarity\, the humanities seek both a realistic future and a usable past. The talk will address both questions through the example of the speaker’s experience on Digital Humanities projects in textual studies\, book history and computer vision. \nBio: Giles Bergel is Senior Researcher in Digital Humanities in the Department of Engineering Science at the University of Oxford. A book historian by training\, he manages an engagement programme in the humanities for the EPSRC-funded Visual AI project\, while also pursuing research in the computational analysis of the printed page\, currently including for the AHRC-funded Envisioning Dante project. \n  \nThis event is being run by the Digital Humanities Community of Practice\, in collaboration with the Digital Humanities Hub. The DH CoP and the DH Hub work together in supporting researchers to build knowledge and skills in DH\, to develop and undertake DH research projects\, and to maintain digital research outcomes. \nOur events are open to all researchers\, staff\, and PGRs from any subject – we welcome interdisciplinary collaboration!
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/digitalhumanities/event/humanities-data/
LOCATION:EMG27
CATEGORIES:Community of Practice,In-person,Online
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20241023T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20241023T143000
DTSTAMP:20260409T185536
CREATED:20240711T143250Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240924T105214Z
UID:1713-1729688400-1729693800@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Back to Campus Networking
DESCRIPTION:Digital Humanities CoP/Hub \nBack to Campus – In-Person Networking Event \nWed 23 October 13.00 to 14.30 \nRoom: Palmer 106 \n  \nJoin us for our first event of the academic year to discover exciting new Digital Humanities research projects at Reading! \nThis is an in-person only networking event. Kindly RSVP by accepting the MS Teams invite to ensure we can arrange enough coffee and tea for everyone. \n  \nProgramme: \n13.00: Welcome & Introduction – Dr Mara Oliva (DH Champion) & Dr Dawn Kanter (DH Officer) \n13.15: Flash Presentations – round 1. Chair: Dr Rachel Lewis\, H&C Research Development Manager \n\nDr Ren Ren\, Real Estate & Planning\, HBS\nDr Anna Jackman\, Geography & Environmental Science\nDr Dominic Lees\, FTT\nDr Jacqui Turner\, History\nDr Jade Siu\, Economics\nDr Michela Bariselli\, Philosophy\nDr Amy Smith\, Classics\nDr Nicola Wilson\, English\n\n13.40: Comfort Break \n13.50: Flash Presentations – round 2. Chair: Dr Rachel Lewis\, H&C Research Development Manager \n\nDr Neha Hui\, Economics\nProf Mike Goodman\, Geography & Environmental Science\nDr Kerry Goettlich\, Politics & International Relations\nDr Amy Richardson\, Archaeology\nJackie Baines and Dr Ed Ross\, Classics\nDr Rhi Smith\, Director of UMASCS Academic Learning and Engagement\nDr Nathan Savage\, Geography & Environmental Science\nDr Dawn Kanter\, DH Officer\n\n14.15: Closing & Networking \n  \nThe DH CoP fosters an environment of innovation\, knowledge-sharing and interdisciplinary collaboration among colleagues. It is open to researchers\, professional staff\, and PGRs from all research themes within the University of Reading. Join the DH CoP. The CoP works alongside the DH Hub in in supporting researchers to build knowledge and skills in DH\, to develop and undertake DH research projects\, and to maintain digital research outcomes.
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/digitalhumanities/event/back-to-campus-in-person-networking-event/
LOCATION:Palmer 106
CATEGORIES:Community of Practice,In-person,Networking
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20240228T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20240228T153000
DTSTAMP:20260409T185536
CREATED:20240226T091249Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240226T091249Z
UID:1032-1709128800-1709134200@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Beyond Scale: GIS and the Humanities
DESCRIPTION:Beyond Scale: GIS and the Humanities\nProfessor Stuart Dunn\n(King’s College London) \nDate: Wednesday 28 February 2024\nTime: 14:00-15.30\nPlace: Palmer 105 and Online \nProgramme\nCoffee and Tea available from 13.50\n14.00 Welcome and Intro – Dr Mara Oliva (DH Champion)\n14.10 Keynote address: Professor Stuart Dunn (King’s College London) – ‘Beyond Scale: GIS and the Humanities’\n14.50 Q&A\n15.25 What’s next (DH CoP and Hub – future events) & close – Dr Mara Oliva
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/digitalhumanities/event/beyond-scale-gis-and-the-humanities/
LOCATION:Palmer 105
CATEGORIES:Community of Practice
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20221109T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20221109T160000
DTSTAMP:20260409T185536
CREATED:20220927T170121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230721T150008Z
UID:614-1668002400-1668009600@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:DH COP *UoR only* - Reflections: DH and our work
DESCRIPTION:Community of Practice\nPlease note\, this event is a meeting of the Digital Humanities Community of Practice\, which is open to University of Reading researchers only. If you are interested in any of the presentations\, please contact the speakers directly (details included below). \nThis term’s meeting of the Digital Humanities Community of Practice will be taking place on Wednesday 9 October 2022\, 14:00-16:00. \nThe COP is a space for colleagues with an interest in Digital Humanities to come together\, share ideas and expertise\, and discuss the challenges and opportunities presented by digital research and engagement with Digital Humanities as a discipline. \nIt is open to all researchers\, staff\, and PGRs from any subject – we welcome interdisciplinary collaboration! \nThe meeting will be on campus\, but will have a hybrid option in order to ensure ongoing accessibility for those especially vulnerable to Covid-19. \nYou are welcome to join the Community of Practice via our MS Teams channel. (This link will take you to the Teams channel. If you are not already a member\, you will be presented with a dialogue box that says ‘Join’. Click this to send a request\, which will be approved if you are a member of the University of Reading. If you are already a member of the Team\, this link just takes you directly to the ‘General’ channel.) \nWithin the COP\, you will be able to introduce yourself\, share your research\, and have access to information about funding opportunities\, support\, and events. Read more here. \nIf you have any questions please contact the DH Academic Champion\, Mara Oliva (m.oliva@reading.ac.uk). \n\nProgramme\nDate and time: Wednesday 9 November 2022\, ROOM TBC and hybrid\, 14:00-16:00 \nDH CoP: REFLECTIONS ON DH AS A DISCIPLINE EVENT AND OXFORD SUMMER SCHOOL  \n14.00 – Welcome – tea and coffee  \n14.05 to 14.15 – Introduction and reflection on ‘Digital Humanities as a Discipline’ event – Mara Oliva (DH Champion)  \nPresentations from Colleagues who attended the Digital Humanities at Oxford Summer School \n14.15 to 14.50 – “DH and my Research” \n\nDr Jumbly Grindrod (Philosophy)\nDr Rachel Foxley (History)\nProfessor Teresa Murjas (Film Studies)\nDr Marjorie Geherhardt (Languages)\n\nQ&A  \n14.50 – break \n15.00 to 15.50 – “DH and my Job”  \n\nDr Rachel Lewis (Research Development Manager\, Heritage & Creativity)\nOlivia Thompson (Digital Humanities Officer)\nGuy Baxter (Associate Director – Archives Services\, University Museum and Special Collections)\nFiona Melhuish (UMASCS Librarian) \nSharon Maxwell (Archivist\, University Museum and Special Collections) \n\nQ&A and Discussion  \n15.50 to 16.00 – what’s next? And closing-  MO  \n 
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/digitalhumanities/event/dh-cop-uor-only-reflections-dh-and-our-work/
CATEGORIES:Community of Practice
ORGANIZER;CN="Mara%20Oliva":MAILTO:m.oliva@reading.ac.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220531T113000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220531T130000
DTSTAMP:20260409T185536
CREATED:20220309T103817Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230721T150049Z
UID:523-1653996600-1654002000@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:DH COP *UoR only* - Virtual Ancient Rome
DESCRIPTION:Community of Practice\nPlease note\, this event is a meeting of the Digital Humanities Community of Practice\, which is open to University of Reading researchers only. If you are interested in any of the presentations\, please contact the speakers directly (details included below). \nThe COP is a space for colleagues with an interest in Digital Humanities to come together\, share ideas and expertise\, and discuss the challenges and opportunities presented by digital research and engagement with Digital Humanities as a discipline. \nIt is open to all researchers\, staff\, and PGRs from any subject – we welcome interdisciplinary collaboration! \nWithin the COP\, you will be able to introduce yourself\, share your research\, and have access to information about funding opportunities\, support\, and events. Read more here. \n\nMeeting details\nThis term’s meeting of the Digital Humanities Community of Practice will be taking place online\, on Tuesday 31 May (11:30-13:00). \nThe meeting will include a presentation by Matthew Nicholls (Senior Tutor at St John’s College\, Oxford and Visiting Professor\, UoR Classics) on his 3D model of Ancient Rome. An abstract of the presentation is below. \nThe meeting will be taking place online in order to ensure ongoing accessibility for those especially vulnerable to Covid-19. From the autumn term\, we hope to hold a mixture of online and hybrid events so that colleagues can network in person. The invite for this meeting\, which you can add to your calendar\, will be posted in the Teams channel. \nYou are welcome to join the Community of Practice via our MS Teams channel. (This link will take you to the Teams channel. If you are not already a member\, you will be presented with a dialogue box that says ‘Join’. Click this to send a request\, which will be approved if you are a member of the University of Reading. If you are already a member of the Team\, this link just takes you directly to the ‘General’ channel.) \nIf you have any questions please contact the DH Academic Champion\, Mara Oliva (m.oliva@reading.ac.uk). \n\nProgramme\nDate and time: 31 May 2022\, 11:30-13:00 – MS Teams \n11:30-11:40: Welcome and DH Hub news – Mara Oliva (Academic Champion) \n11:40-11:45: Introduction to 3D visualisations \n11:45-12:30: Presentation: 3D model of Ancient Rome – Matthew Nicholls \n12:35-12:55: Q&A \n12:55-13:00: Next COP and Close \n\nAbstract: ‘3D model of Ancient Rome’\nMatthew Nicholls’ large scale 3D model of ancient Rome will be familiar to some Reading colleagues\, not least those who have cause to walk down the Classics corridor in the Morley Building. This project grew initially out of research on ancient Roman buildings\, and developed as a teaching innovation. Its ongoing uses include a public-facing online course (MOOC) which has now been taken by over 62\,000 people and has generated significant revenue and course applications at Reading; there are also research uses and ‘impactful’ licensing to television documentaries\, software firms\, games studios\, and others. The model itself and a Part 3 module deriving from it won a Guardian/HEA teaching innovation award\, and were the basis of a successful application for a National Teaching Fellowship and two REF impact case studies. It was largely created in free or low-cost consumer software\, without specialist training. \nThis talk will look at the creation of the digital model: the software and processes used to create it\, the challenges and benefits of 3D visualisation of the ancient past\, and some of its uses and applications. \nReading materials\n\nVirtual Rome website\nBook chapter: Nicholls\, M. (2019)\, ‘Sketchup and digital modelling for Classics’\, in B. Natoli and S. Hunt (eds.) Teaching Classics with Technology\, Bloomsbury\, London\, pp. 131-144. [Available via the University of Reading’s repository\, CentAUR]\nArticle: Nicholls\, M. (2016)\, ‘Digital visualisation in Classics teaching and beyond’\, Journal of Classics Teaching 17 (33)\, pp. 27-30. [Available via the University of Reading’s repository\, CentAUR]\n\nIf you are not a member of UoR and are interested in this presentation\, please contact Matthew Nicholls.
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/digitalhumanities/event/cop-2-uor-only-virtual-ancient-rome/
CATEGORIES:Community of Practice
ORGANIZER;CN="Mara%20Oliva":MAILTO:m.oliva@reading.ac.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220223T113000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220223T130000
DTSTAMP:20260409T185536
CREATED:20220217T144717Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230721T145925Z
UID:520-1645615800-1645621200@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:DH COP *UoR only* - The Legacies of Stephen Dwoskin's Personal Cinema
DESCRIPTION:Community of Practice\nPlease note\, this event is a meeting of the Digital Humanities Community of Practice\, which is open to University of Reading researchers only. If you are interested in any of the presentations\, please contact the speakers directly (details included below). \nThe COP is a space for colleagues with an interest in Digital Humanities to come together\, share ideas and expertise\, and discuss the challenges and opportunities presented by digital research and engagement with Digital Humanities as a discipline. \nIt is open to all researchers\, staff\, and PGRs from any subject – we welcome interdisciplinary collaboration! \nWithin the COP\, you will be able to introduce yourself\, share your research\, and have access to information about funding opportunities\, support\, and events. Read more here. \n\nMeeting details\nThis term’s meeting of the Digital Humanities Community of Practice will be taking place online\, on Wednesday 23 February (11:30-13:00). \nYou are welcome to join the Community of Practice via our MS Teams channel. (This link will take you to the Teams channel. If you are not already a member\, you will be presented with a dialogue box that says ‘Join’. Click this to send a request\, which will be approved if you are a member of the University of Reading. If you are already a member of the Team\, this link just takes you directly to the ‘General’ channel.) \nThe first meeting will include an introduction by the Digital Humanities Academic Champion\, Mara Oliva\, followed by a presentation by Rachel Garfield\, PI of the project ‘The Legacies of Stephen Dwoskin’s Personal Cinema’\, along with Co-Is Yunhyong Kim (University of Glasgow) and Frank Hopfgartner (University of Sheffield). An abstract of the presentation is below. \nOwing to the ongoing pandemic\, this first meeting will take place online. The meeting invite\, for you to add to your calendar\, will be posted in the Teams channel. \nIf you have any questions please do join the MS Teams channel or contact Mara Oliva (m.oliva@reading.ac.uk). \n\nProgramme\nDate and time: 23 February 2022\, 11:30-13:00 – MS Teams \n11:30-11:45: Welcome and overview of DH Project and Academic Community strand \n11:45-12:30: Presentation: ‘The Legacy of Stephen Dwoskin’s Personal Cinema’ \n12:30-12:35: Comfort break \n12:35-12:55: Q&A \n12:55-13:00: Next COP and Close \n\nAbstract: ‘The Legacy of Stephen Dwoskin’s Personal Cinema’\nThis presentation discusses the unique contributions of the AHRC-funded project ‘The Legacy of Stephen Dwoskin’s Personal Cinema’. It will highlight how the project is discovering novel uses of digital forensics\, data exploration and visual analysis to advance archival and creative practice\, and humanities research\, as well as research data management. The presentation will be delivered by the PI\, Rachel Garfield\, and two Co-Is\, Dr Yunhyong Kim (university of Glasgow) and Dr Frank Hopfgartner (University of Sheffield). \nDr Kim will discuss: \n\nData exploration approaches to reveal clues about the artist’s personal/professional history\, stages of creative processes\, and technical environment;\nThe benefits of visualising the file directory structure and timeline\, as a supplementary tool for archival processes in description and arrangement;\nA survey on email visualisation research to address the conflict between privacy and access\, as well as privacy conscious data management and its impact for humanities research.\n\nDr Hopfgartner will discuss: \n\nOur research into visualising Dwoskin’s work using movie barcodes and audio spectrograms;\nOur approaches to analysing the use of sound in Dwoskin’s films;\nA brief outline of results of an analysis of Dwoskin’s use of video shots.\n\nReading materials\n\nDwoskin project website\nLUX blog archive (with posts on the Dwoskin project)\nBook: Garfield\, R. and Miller\, H. K. (eds.) (2022)\, Dwoskino. LUX/University of Reading.\nArticle: Bartliff\, Z.\, Kim\, Y.\, Hopfgartner\, F. and Baxter\, G. (2020)\, ‘Leveraging digital forensics and data exploration to understand the creative work of a filmmaker: a case study of Stephen Dwoskin’s digital archive’\, Information Processing & Management 57 (6). [Available via the University of Reading’s repository\, CentAUR]\nArticle: Bartliff\, Z.\, Kim\, Y. and Baxter\, G. (2020)\, ‘Visualisation of hard drive content to support archival processes for personal digital archives’. In: 83rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Information Science and Technology (ASIS&T 2020)\, 22 Oct – 01 Nov 2020. [Available via the University of Reading’s repository\, CentAUR]\n\nIf you are not a member of UoR and are interested in this presentation\, please contact Professor Rachel Garfield.
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/digitalhumanities/event/cop-1-uor-only-dwoskin/
CATEGORIES:Community of Practice
ORGANIZER;CN="Mara%20Oliva":MAILTO:m.oliva@reading.ac.uk
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR