Annual Conference of the Data for History Consortium

Data for History 2021: Modelling Time, Places, Agents

Datum
16:15 - 18:00 Uhr
Ort
Online
Veranstaltet von
Data for History-Konsortium, Professur für Digital History (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), Laboratoire de Recherche Historique Rhône-Alpes

The effects of the growing integration of digital tools and methods in historical research make the issues of interoperability of data produced in different projects and domains (archives, museums, etc.), and their reuse in the context of open science and FAIR principles (data should be findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable) ever more pressing. In fact, we are at a turning point in historical research: The change from a primarily analogue based to a primarily digital based working context requires a major reconsideration of the very foundations of our field. Historians have to consciously think through how this change affects their practices and determine the means to best form this new, digital working environment to facilitate the ends of historical research.

This question becomes particularly clear in the context of datafication, the conversion of analogue information into digital data. In this process, fundamental decisions are taken whose outcomes will determine not only the fidelity of the representation of the primary sources but the reusability of that data into the future. Data modelling decisions taken today will deeply shape and affect the kind of research that will or will not be feasible tomorrow. The challenge is, thus, to make modelling choices in such a way that the highest possible degree of data reusability and sustainability can be guaranteed, while respecting the particular source modelled as well as the specific nature of historical data, such as ambiguity, uncertainty, incompleteness, and change over time.

The objective of this year's conference therefore is to gain a better understanding of current ideas and practices in modelling time, space and agents as historical data and to assess the implications of these choices on the process of historical research and analysis. Throughout all of this, the focus is on exchange and building up a community.

The virtual conference will take place each Wednesday afternoon via Airmeet from May 19 to June 30, 2021. If you are interested to attend, please register here

 

Programm (May 26, 2021)

16:15 – 17:00 Session 4: Modelling the Analysis

  • Helen Mair Rawsthorne (LASTIG, Université Gustave Eiffel): Analyzing Eighteenth century Hydrographic Data: A Campaign in the Bay of Biscay, 1750-1751
  • Dirk Wintergrün, Roberto Lalli (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin): Coding and Analyzing Socio-Epistemic Networks—an Approach to Combine Modelling and Network Analysis

17:15 – 18:00 Session 5: Dating the Uncertain

  • Mateusz Fafinski (Université de Lausanne): Challenges for Visualizing Spatial and Chronological Distribution of Medieval Manuscripts: Towards New Ontologies
  • Andreas Kuczera (Academy of Science and Literature, Mainz): Uncertainty as a Challenge— Normalization of Dates in the Regesta Imperii