Corpus Analysis with AntConc: Corpus analysis is a form of text analysis, which allows you to make comparisons between textual objects at a large scale (so-called ‘distant reading’). It allows us to see things that we don’t necessarily see when reading as humans. In this session, we cover the basics of using AntConc, a free software program designed for performing detailed analyses of different kinds of textual materials.
GIS for Art Historians, Part 1: Led by Antonio LoPiano (Duke University Wired! Lab for Digital Art History and Visual Studies Fellow, PhD Candidate – Classical Studies Department, Duke University) on December 4, 2020. This tutorial covers a brief introduction to theoretical considerations and then moves on to practical skills such as importing data, generating historical basemaps, and creating time aware animations.
GIS for Art Historians, Part 2: Led by Antonio LoPiano (Duke University Wired! Lab for Digital Art History and Visual Studies Fellow, PhD Candidate – Classical Studies Department, Duke University) on December 11, 2020. This tutorial covers a brief introduction to theoretical considerations and then moves on to practical skills such as importing data, generating historical basemaps, and creating time aware animations.
Omeka Classic + Neatline Best Practices
StoryMapJS for Images (PDF)
Tropy Demo for Graduate Students
Voyant Tools for Art Historians: Workshop led by Dr. Heather Froehlich, Literary Informatics Librarian, Penn State University Libraries, October 16, 2020.
On-the-Fly Text Analysis with Voyant Tools: Incorporating computational text analysis in your research or classroom might seem scary, but it doesn’t have to be! In this workshop you can learn how to use the free Voyant Tools environment to study the verb “to say” in a novel. Although the session is in English, this classroom-friendly tool supports multiple languages.
Penn State | College of Arts & Architecture | Department of Art History
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