Thursday 6 June – Day 2
The poster and demo sessions will take place on the second day of the conference, Thursday 6 June (15:45-17:00), in the historic KU Leuven University Library building. The posters will be on display in the Van Cauwenberghzaal on the ground floor of the University Library. The demos take place in the Colloquium, which is located on the second floor, and in offices off the corridor on the first floor (consult the signs and see demo details below).
Poster Specifications
Please print your posters prior to the conference. You can opt to print your poster before your travels. If your luggage restrictions will not accommodate travel with your printed poster, you can also visit a copy shop in Leuven to have your poster printed (please ensure adequate time).
For posters, we prefer A0 size in portrait format. The poster panels measure 1×1 meters and will not accommodate landscape format in A0 size. A1 size is also acceptable; the poster panels can accommodate landscape format in A1 size.
We will send out more communication about the poster session, including a visual overview of the room and the poster panel assigned to each poster, closer to the conference. We will also have a poster session coordinator to help people find their correct location and hang their poster during the conference.
Download the PDF with titles and presenters of posters and demos (subject to updates).
Poster Presentations
Frederik Truyen, Sofie Taes and Roberta Pireddu | Addressing bias in digital cultural heritage collections metadata: the example of the DE-BIAS project |
Julie Birkholz, Sally Chambers, Tom Gheldof, Lamyk Bekius, Christophe Verbruggen, Vincent Vandeghinste, Walter Daelemans, Els Lefever, Dirk Van Hulle, Tim Soens, Iason Jongepier, Léa Hermenault, Piraye Hacıgüzeller, Jens Lemmens, Nooshin Shahidzadeh Asadi, Vincent Neyt, Mark Depauw, Tim Van de Cruys, Frédéric Pietowski, Margherita Fantoli, Pieterjan De Potter, Frederic Lamsens, Davy Verbeke, Vincent Ducatteeuw, Rein Debrulle, Pranaydeep Singh, Cynthia Van Hee, Fien Danniau, Lise Foket, Gert Huskens, Krishna Kumar Thirukokaranam Chandrasekar, Wouter Ryckbosch and Johan Van Der Eycken | Advancing infrastructural collaboration in the digital humanities: the CLARIAH-VL experience |
Julie Birkholz, Ingo Börner, Sally Chambers, Silvie Cinková, Tess Dejaeghere, Maciej Eder, Jennifer Edmond, Vicky Garnett, Michal Hradiš, Michal Křen, Michal Mrugalski, Eliza Papaki, Marco Raciti, Christof Schoech, Peer Trilcke, Karina van Dalen-Oskam, Artjoms Šeļa, Sarah Hoover, Salvador Ros Munoz, Joann Byszuk, Vera Maria Charvat, Anna Dijkstra, Julia Dudar, Evgeniia Fileva, Françoise Gouzi, Bartłomiej Kunda, Emily Ridge and Vera Yakupova | Computational Literary Studies Infrastructure (CLS INFRA): Initial findings and conclusions for the field |
Fabian Cremer, Jaap Geraerts and Thorsten Wübbena | Curating and opening legacy silos. Strategies and pragmatics in small research institutions curating institutional legacy data collections |
Steven Claeyssens | Datasheets for Digital Cultural Heritage |
Olivier Gason | Exploring the DAI micro-computer through a map of the readers of two of its hobbyist magazines. |
Davor Lauc, Tomislava Lauc and Vjera Lopina | The Formalization of Multilingual Etymologies into Semantic Networks: AI Methodologies for Etymological Dictionaries |
Nele Gabriels, Gustavo Candela, Sally Chambers, Margherita Fantoli, Mariana Montes, Laura Narli, Mark Verbrugge and Dirk Kinnaes | From digitised collections to datasets: KU Leuven Libraries’ first implementation of the Collections as Data principle |
Ellen Vanderstraeten, Thomas Jenné and Alexander Derveaux | The Gevaert Paper Project – Unlocking a historic photographic collection in Wikibase |
Hendrik Hameeuw, Dirk Kinnaes, Stephan Pauls, Nele Gabriëls, Bruno Vandermeulen and Lieve Watteeuw | Integrating multimodal research datasets on heritage objects into a curated consultation environment on a Mirador 3 platform |
Daniele Morrone | Integrating TheSu XML with pre-existing digital resources: Strategies for stand-off annotation and cross-format automatic processing in history of ideas and science |
Giorgio Busi Rizzi and Sara Zanetti | Localizing Peanuts: Linus, Charlie, and the making of auteur comics magazines in Italy and France (1965-1975) |
Dawn Zhuang | Mapping India in Pliny the Elder’s Natural History: Exploring the Uses of Network Analysis for Corpora with Place Name Annotations |
Jan Bigalke, Jonathan Jonathan Blumtritt and Benedikte Löbbert | Mapping of family relationships and topographical information using the example of the Cologne Beguines |
Sven Lieber, Ann Van Camp, Dieter De Witte, Erik Buelinckx, Els Angenon, Hannes Lowagie, Inez De Prekel, Julie Birkholz, Karine Lasaracina and Ravi Khatri | MetaBelgica: Breaking Belgian Federal Data Silos to support Named Entity Linking |
Axel Matthey | Modeling in history: using LLMs to automatically produce diagrammatic models synthesizing Piketty’s historiographical thesis on economic inequalities in the first half of the 20th century |
Fien Messens, Julie M. Birkholz, Marjan Sterckx, Christophe Verbruggen and Frédéric Lemmers | Networking in the Past: the NAVEZ Project |
Ching-Han Kuo | Networking the Early Modern World |
Sara Cosemans, Philip Grant, Ratan Sebastian and Marc Allassonnière-Tang | Refugee Policy in 1970s Archives |
Fien Danniau and Vincent Ducatteeuw | Reuniting collections, historiography and the public. The Case of Ghent Mapped. |
Paola Peratello | Runes in Venice. Ontological description of the runic inscriptions on the Piraeus Lion (Venetian Arsenal) |
Seoyeong Ahn, Nour Alassali, Nina Olenderek and Marieke van Erp | Scented Pages: Decoding Smells in Das Parfum |
Laura Soffiantini | A sense of space. Modelling spatial knowledge in ancient narratives. |
Florentina Armaselu | Small-Scale Testing on Generative AI and Post-OCR Correction in Historical Datasets |
Laura Mesotten, Anouk D’Hont and Hanne Heirman | From Stranded to Scholar: Navigating Research Challenges with the Research Survival Game |
Arjan van Dalfsen | Tulip Mania, Tulip Hoax, or Something in Between? Using Token Classification to Follow Tulips over Time |
Suchismita Ghosh | Two Centuries of Indian Print Project: Digitising rare South Asian books, Collaboration and Digital Humanities |
Mark Depauw and Bart Thijs | Using Artificial Intelligence to link Source References in Secondary literature to Databases and Full text Corpora |
Hennie Brugman, Norah Karrouche, Sebastiaan van Daalen, Sterre Houtzager, Marijke Kunst, Bas Leenknegt and Wonu Veys | A web application for creating and sharing references and annotations across disciplines and collections |
Harm Nijboer, Leon van Wissen and Judith Brouwer | The world of Janssonius. Using Linked Data to explore the network of a key actor in the creative industries of seventeenth century Amsterdam |
Demos
Nooshin Shahidzadeh Asadi Location: Colloquium | Axolotl: The New Collaborative TEI-XML Editor for HTR Post-Processing |
Lara Peeters and Kenneth Hoste Location: Colloquium | EESSI: Bridging silos by streaming scientific software installations |
Mees van Stiphout and Berit Janssen Location: Colloquium | I-Analyzer – A Digital Text Corpus Tool for All |
Lorenz Demey Location: 2.45 (first floor) | Integrating Historical and Logical Research on Aristotelian Diagrams: A Hands-On Demonstration of Leonardi.DB |
Golnaz Sarkar Farshi Location: Colloquium | Multilingual Data Literacy in Contemporary Historical Research |
Martin Kroon, Jelte van Boheemen and Jan Odijk Location: 2.39 (first floor) | SASTA – Semi-automatic Analysis of Spontaneous Language |
Magdalena Turska and Wolfgang Meier Location: 2.43 (first floor) | TEI Publisher 9 |