In recent years, the intersection of data science, digital humanities, and generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) has emerged as a fertile ground for groundbreaking research, innovation, and exploration. The theme of the 2nd International Conference on Data & Digital Humanities — Generative Artificial Intelligence for Text and Multimodal Data (DDHUM2024) underscores the pivotal role that generative AI plays in transforming the landscape of humanities research and scholarship.
The primary aim of this conference is to bring together researchers from various disciplines who are interested in data and the digital humanities. We invite linguistic specialists, data scientists, IT professionals, developers, and anyone with a strong interest in data from a digital humanities perspective to participate in discussions on current and future challenges. Although the main emphasis is on methodologies and practical applications of Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) for the analysis, application, and communication of textual and multimodal data, we also welcome submissions on the following topics:
Getting
data
Where and how do digital humanists find and clean their text data?
Open Access and Open Science
Digital libraries
Data repositories
Language Corpora
Social media
Audio/video data
Web scraping techniques
Text cleaning and parsing techniques
Tools for extracting and cleaning data
LLM & LMM
Other related topics
Finding inspiration in data
How do digital humanists find inspiration in their text data?
Corpora comparison
Entity recognition
Summarization
Terminology extraction
Text statistics
Sentiment analysis & Opinion mining
Author profiling
New research methodologies and design
Text simplification
Other related topics
Telling a story with data
Why do digital humanists need to tell stories with their text data?
AI-generated Infographics
AI-generated Animated videos
Geolocalization
Interactive Dashboards
AI-driven Science Communication
AI-generated Podcasts
Other related topics
Full Papers: Consisting of 10 to 15 pages (including references).
Short Papers: Comprising 6 to 9 pages (including references).
All papers must be formatted according to the following template:
Submit your paper in the following link:
Please note that you'll need to create an account with CMT in order to submit).
In-person presentations are allocated 15 minutes, including Q&A. We suggest that the presentation of your slides takes about 10 minutes, leaving 5 minutes for an introduction by the session chair and questions from the audience.
Please upload your presentation file to the computer in the session room before the session starts. Note that the presentation computer has only USB ports.
Virtual presentations are scheduled in virtual rooms. Virtual presentations are allocated 15 minutes (10 min presentation + 5 min Q&A). Access to the virtual rooms (in Zoom) will be provided by December 09th.
Accepted papers will be published in an indexed journal or by a renowned publisher, with details to be announced at a later date.
Araújo, Sílvia, Aguiar, Micaela, & Ermakova, Liana (Eds.) (2024) Digital Humanities looking at the world: Exploring innovative approaches and contributions to society. Palgrave Macmillan (Springer Nature). ISSBN: 978-3031489402.
https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-48941-9?page=2#toc