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UK-Förderung (24.194 £): AURA (Archives in the UK/ Republic of Ireland & AI): Digitale Geisteswissenschaftler, Informatiker und Interessenvertreter zusammenbringen, um Kulturgüter zu erschließen Ukri01.08.2020 Forschung und Innovation im Vereinigten Königreich, Großbritannien

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AURA (Archives in the UK/ Republic of Ireland & AI): Digitale Geisteswissenschaftler, Informatiker und Interessenvertreter zusammenbringen, um Kulturgüter zu erschließen

Zusammenfassung The AURA network brings together Digital Humanists, Computer Scientists, archivists and other stakeholders to unlock cultural assets held in "dark" digital archives currently closed to users. Not so long ago, historians, literary scholars and other scholars would read letters and other papers preserved in Special Collections Libraries. Of course, this analogue world has not disappeared, but the digital revolution has profoundly changed the way we encounter archives. Born-digital archives are now better preserved and managed thanks to the development of open-access and commercial software. Yet, preserving born-digital records is not enough. We also need access to these archival materials, in order to produce new knowledge and foster public engagement. Archives are meant to be used, not locked away. A central problem is that most born-digital archives are closed to users due to privacy, copyright or technical issues. Even when access is possible (as in the case of web archives), users often need to physically travel to repositories rather than consult materials remotely. In order to unlock cultural assets, we need to bring the best minds together and harness the latest technology. At present, applying Artificial Intelligence to archives remains at the exploratory stage. Yet, automation is no longer a choice, it is a necessity. AI can be used to separate personal and business emails and improve accessibility to non-confidential records; identify sections of documents that refer to personal data allowing partial views or limited access to the archival content; extract named entities (people names, dates, events) from archives and link them to external sources. While access to digital archives is essential, we also need to anticipate the moment when born-digital records will be more accessible. To make sense of this mass of data, new methodologies are urgently needed, combining traditional humanistic methods with data-rich approaches. Collaborations between Humanities scholars, Computer Scientists, archivists and other stakeholders are therefore essential to make archives more accessible, but also to design new methodologies to analyse huge amounts of data. The network will focus on three major themes, that will be explored in each of the three workshops: "Open Data versus Privacy" (Workshop 1 in Dublin); "AI and Archives: Current Challenges and Prospects of Born-digital archives" (Workshop 2 in London); "AI and Archives: What comes next?" (Workshop 3 in Edinburgh). The workshops will be carefully structured to include a mix of short presentations, speed meetings with interdisciplinary teams to discuss a specific question relating to the overall workshop theme, and practical activities designed to lead to mutually beneficial, sustainable collaborations. We will also create wiki pages for each workshop to foster asynchronous discussion, and build on the participation of people that cannot be onsite. In addition, a project website will keep track of all the network activities in the form of reports, blog posts and recordings of presentations. Associated social media, as well as a dedicated listserv, will help us connect with interested parties - in academia, archival institutions and beyond.
Kategorie Research Grant
Referenz AH/V002341/1
Status Active
Laufzeit von 01.08.2020
Laufzeit bis 31.12.2021
Fördersumme 24.194,00 £
Quelle https://gtr.ukri.org/projects?ref=AH%2FV002341%2F1

Beteiligte Organisationen

Loughborough University
Dublin City University
Irish Traditional Music Archive
University of Edinburgh
Waterford Institute of Technology
National Library of Ireland
British Library The
International Council on Archives
National Library of Scotland

Die Bekanntmachung bezieht sich auf einen vergangenen Zeitpunkt, und spiegelt nicht notwendigerweise den heutigen Stand wider. Der aktuelle Stand wird auf folgender Seite wiedergegeben: Loughborough University, Loughborough, Großbritannien.

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