Transparent, Interconnected, Accessible? The State of Digital Provenance Research
Schneider, Stefanie (1); Vollmer, Ricarda (1); Ludwig, Elisa (1); Maget Dominicé, Antoinette (2)
1: LMU Munich, Germany; 2: Université de Genève, Switzerland
HTML XMLThe study uses digital methods to address the challenges of cultural heritage management. It examines the current research landscape in museums, identifying shortcomings and suggesting directions for future improvement. The study takes an interdisciplinary approach, combining statistical analysis with qualitative approaches from the humanities, in particular art-historical provenance research.
Coherent UX and Accessibility: Reinventing the Cultural Heritage Framework for Convergent Multimodal Editions
Steller, Jonatan Jalle
Academy of Sciences and Literature Mainz, Germany
This talk presents the process to rewrite the Cultural Heritage Framework, a set of extensions for the CMS TYPO3 to edit/publish cultural heritage data in multimodal digital editions. An analysis of media ecologies particularly emphasised the need for coherent user experiences across data types and a focus on accessibility.
Are we still stuck in the past? : Using corpus linguistics to examine how historical discourses around mental illness endure in the reporting of schizophrenia in the UK press.
Balfour, James Adrian
University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
A corpus linguistic study investigating press representations of schizophrenia.