This series of talks has been organised by Digital Scholarship at Oxford and UCL Digital Humanities.
Join us on the 14th May for Digital Humanities Across the Divide - Network Analysis. In this session
Sofía Sanabria de Felipe (University of Oxford) and Jin Gao (UCL) will present their research in Network Analysis. This will be followed by a Q and A session.
Register here
About the speakers
Jin Gao is Lecturer in Digital Archives at Dept of Information Studies, UCL. Jin's research interests lie primarily in the digital cultural heritage, museum provenance studies, history of Digital Humanities, social network analysis, and non-Western cataloguing standards.
Sofía Sanabria de Felipe is a doctoral researcher in History at the University of Oxford working on the reception of Kant’s aesthetics in post-Napoleonic Francophone Europe. Her research has been published in journals such as Angelaki and History of European Ideas and ACM, the world’s largest educational and scientific computing society. As Ambassador for Gale, a global provider of research and digital learning resources and archives, Sofía has a wealth of experience in the digital humanities. Specifically, Sofía has explored the value of MALLET (a text-mining tool) for establishing networks of ideas and new interpretations of historiographically rich periods. Her forthcoming paper, ‘A Tale of Nodes, Links and Revolution: Configuring 1848 in the digital age’ is soon to be published by the open-access, expert and peer-reviewed Gale Research Showcase.
Chaired by Sebastian Dows-Miller (UCL). Sebastian Dows-Miller is a Research Fellow at University College London, supported by the Leverhulme Trust. In his research, he applies digital methods to the study of manuscripts written in French, asking what we can learn about medieval scribes from how they abbreviate words.