ISBN-13: 9783031489402 / Angielski
ISBN-13: 9783031489402 / Angielski
Chapter 1: Digital Humanities Looking at the World — Introduction — Sílvia Araújo, Micaela Aguiar and Liana Ermakova.- Part I: Digital Humanities Looking at Social Media and News Media.- Chapter 2: Negative Comments towards Formula 1 Drivers on Twitter — Vanessa Cunha, Violeta Barahona and Fabio Passos.- Chapter 3: Abusive Name-Calling: Representations Around the Term Genocida during the COVID Pandemic — Yara Toledo, Marcos Roberto de Oliveira, Natália Luri A. Ribeiro and Paula Tavares Pinto.- Chapter 4: Storytelling and Journalism: Narratology of Two Social Movements in the French and Spanish Presses — Estéfano Rodríguez-Peláez.- Chapter 5: Enhancing Semantic Understanding by Bridging Topic Modeling and Thematic Analysis: An Empirical Study on Self-Help Twitter Corpus and In-Depth Interviews — Canan Urhan.- Part II: Digital Humanities Looking at Art.- Chapter 6: The Language of Fashion from a Multidimensional Perspective — Katherine O. Ortolani.- Chapter 7: The Verbal Language of Video Games in a Multidimensional Perspective — Lucas Ferraz Escarabelin.- Chapter 8: The Verbal Language of the Visual Arts: A Multidimensional Analysis of the Discourse around Sally Mann's Photography — Yara Toledo Dias.- Part III: Digital Humanities Looking at Nature, Traveling and Tourism.- Chapter 9: Digital Humanities-Based Games: A Novel Approach for Mitigating Plant Awareness Disparity — Mariana Aparecida de Almeida Souza, Ana Cláudia de Macêdo Vieira, Thiago Eliezer Siqueira, Gabriel Lima Prisco Madureira, Pedro Vieira Cruz, Ana Paula Ribeiro de Carvalho Ferreira, Tatiana Ungaretti Paleo Konno and Sérgio Manuel Serra da Cruz.- Chapter 10: Mapping Travel Writing through Digital Humanities: Contributions for the Communication of Travel Writing — Luciano Moreira and Maria Zulmira Castanheira.- Chapter 11: GIS Multimedia Atlases for the Conservation and the Memory of the Coastal Environment in the Area of Ravenna — Marco Cornaglia and Arianna Mecozzi.- Part IV: Digital Humanities Looking at Public Policies.- Chapter 12: Mission Statement Topic Models: Coherence, Diversity, and Utility — John M. Ford, J. Peter Leeds and Sarah M. Kubosumi.- Chapter 13: Investigating Cybercrime in Brazil: A Transdisciplinary Analysis on Digital Humanities — Emerson de Barros Duarte, Sabrina Santos Cruz de Oliveira, and Sérgio Manuel Serra da Cruz.- Chapter 14: Conducting a Multivocal Systematic Literature Review about Compliance with the Brazilian Law for General Data Protection — Roberta Cláudia de Jesus Bordalo, Hugo do Val F. Fernandes and Mônica Ferreira da Silva.- Chapter 15: Analysis of Online Electoral Advertising in 2022 Brazilian Elections Using Topic Modeling — Alessandra Gomes.- Part V: Digital Humanities Looking at Science.- Chapter 16: A Portal for the Advancement of Open Science in the Humanities — Juliana Andreassa da Lomba, Marcos Roberto de Oliveira, Renata Sant’Anna Lamberti Spagnuolo and Rafael Cury Scarpelli.- Chapter 17: Named Entity Recognition for Classifying Technoscientific persons : Combining Pre-trained Language Models and Silver Standard Datasets — Ahmet K. Süerdem and Samet Gümüş.- Part VI: Digital Humanities Looking at Health.- Chapter 18: Textual Analysis of Facebook Communities Related to Depression — Silas Lima Filho, Mônica Ferreira da Silva and Jonice Oliveira.-Chapter 19: Opinion Mining in Mental Health: Users' (Many) Opinions at Your Fingertips — Renato M. B. Alves, Mônica F. da Silva and Élton C. Marinho.- Chapter 20: Deep Learning-Based Context Sensitive Typo Detection, Alteration in Clinical Notes — Vijaya M Lakshmi. Challa and Ramakrishnudu Tene.- Part VII: Digital Humanities Looking at Education.- Chapter 21: Technology Adoption in Teaching Students with ADHD: The Importance of Understanding Users' Reality — Tainá Souza, Mônica Silva and Renato Alves.- Chapter 22: A Brazilian Initiative towards Digital Literacy: Evaluating the Impact of Motivational Factors on the Intention to Use a Distance Learning Platform — Élton Carneiro Marinho, Nathália Miranda do Nascimento, Mônica Ferreira da Silva, Eber Assis Schmitz, Antônio Juarez Sylvio Menezes de Alencar and Sérgio Manuel Serra da Cruz.- Chapter 23: Experiments with Distant Reading...in Portuguese — Diana Santos.- Part VIII: Digital Humanities Looking at Repositories and Archives.- Chapter 24: Evaluating the FAIRness of Scientific Data Repositories — Paulo V. C. Amaral, Frederico Alan de Oliveira Cruz and Sérgio Manuel Serra da Cruz.- Chapter 25: Recognizing and Linking Named Entities in Portuguese Medieval Texts — Maria Inês Bico, Jorge Baptista, Fernando Batista and Esperança Cardeira.- Part IX: Digital Humanities Looking at Language.- Chapter 26: Exploring New Horizons in Word Sense Disambiguation and Topic Modeling: Potential of Deep Learning Based Transformers Models — Ahmet K. Süerdem.- Chapter 27: Exploring the Leipzig Corpora Collection in the LSP classroom – A Data-Driven Approach — Teresa Alegre and Katrin Herget.- Chapter 28: Final Thoughts — Digital Humanities Looking at Generative AI — Micaela Aguiar and Sílvia Araújo.
Sílvia Araújo is an Assistant Professor at the University of Minho, Portugal, specializing in corpus linguistics, language technologies, and digital humanities. She leads FCT-funded projects (Perfide, PortLinguE) and IDEA-UMinho initiatives. Sílvia directs the Master's Degree in Digital Humanities, heads the Digital Humanities Research Group, and oversees the journal H2D. She contributes to journals like Myriades, PSIQUE, and Polissema and organizes the annual techLING conference on language technology.
Micaela Aguiar is a post-doctoral researcher on the project PortLinguE, Multilingual Portal for Specialized Languages: mining open data for cross-language information retrieval, at the University of Minho, Portugal. She recently completed her Ph.D in linguistics, in the field of Discourse Analysis. Micaela Aguiar’s research interest lies in digital humanities, corpus linguistics and NLP, which she hopes to explore further in her future work.
Liana Ermakova, an associate professor at the University of Western Brittany since 2017, specializes in information retrieval, natural language processing, and AI. Her work encompasses evaluation metrics, information analysis, multi-document summarization, text simplification (SimpleText), and scientometrics. She leads the JOKER project (2021-2022), building a wordplay corpus. She's also active in organizing conferences, workshops, and AI competitions.
This edited volume explores how digital humanities can address critical societal challenges in social media, health, education, archives, heritage, and the arts. It features contributions from leading scholars and practitioners in various fields, offering a comprehensive overview of the role of digital humanities in addressing pressing social and economic issues. Designed for scholars, researchers, and practitioners in digital humanities, social sciences, arts, and cultural studies, the book highlights the potential of digital technologies to tackle today's most urgent problems, making it a valuable resource for those interested in harnessing digital innovation for societal benefit.
Sílvia Araújo is an Assistant Professor at the University of Minho, Portugal, specializing in corpus linguistics, language technologies, and digital humanities. She leads FCT-funded projects (Perfide, PortLinguE) and IDEA-UMinho initiatives. Sílvia directs the Master's Degree in Digital Humanities, heads the Digital Humanities Research Group, and oversees the journal H2D. She contributes to journals like Myriades, PSIQUE, and Polissema and organizes the annual techLING conference on language technology.
Micaela Aguiar is a post-doctoral researcher on the project PortLinguE, Multilingual Portal for Specialized Languages: mining open data for cross-language information retrieval, at the University of Minho, Portugal. She recently completed her Ph.D in linguistics, in the field of Discourse Analysis. Micaela Aguiar’s research interest lies in digital humanities, corpus linguistics and NLP, which she hopes to explore further in her future work.
Liana Ermakova, an associate professor at the University of Western Brittany since 2017, specializes in information retrieval, natural language processing, and AI. Her work encompasses evaluation metrics, information analysis, multi-document summarization, text simplification (SimpleText), and scientometrics. She leads the JOKER project (2021-2022), building a wordplay corpus. She's also active in organizing conferences, workshops, and AI competitions.
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