[csaa-forum] Digging the Data (17/4 USYD): How to Research and the Implications of New Media Data
Deb Verhoeven
deb.verhoeven at deakin.edu.au
Thu Apr 2 11:12:01 ACST 2015
And while we are on the topic:
Registrations are also open for DH2015 which this year will be hosted by UWS.
Digital Humanities (DH2015) is the annual international conference of the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO) and will be held in Sydney, 29 June–3 July 2015.
This will be the first time that the annual Digital Humanities conference will take place outside Europe and North America in its 26-year history. The conference theme of Global Digital Humanities acknowledges the field’s expansion worldwide across disciplines, cultures and languages.
DH2015 is hosted by the University of Western Sydney’s Digital Humanities Research Group, a leader in collaborative digital humanities in the Asia-Pacific region. The conference is held in partnership with the State Library of New South Wales and in collaboration with GovHack 2015 and the third International Linked Open Data in Libraries, Archives, and Museums Summit (LODLAM<http://summit2015.lodlam.net/>).
Keynote Speakers include Genevieve Bell (vice president and Intel Fellow and the director of User Experience Research in the Intel Labs organization at Intel Corporation); Jeffrey T. Schnapp (faculty director of metaLAB at Harvard and faculty co-director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society) and Tim Sherratt (Associate Professor of Digital Heritage at the University of Canberra and a manager of Trove at the National Library of Australia).
Early Bird Registrations close on 20 April: http://dh2015.org/registration/
Cheers
Deb
_____________________________________
Professor Deb Verhoeven
Project Director, Humanities Networked Infrastructure (HuNI)
huni.net.au<http://huni.net.au> | @HuNIVL
International Program Chair
DH2015<http://dh2015.org/>
Research My World
pozible.com/researchmyworld<http://pozible.com/researchmyworld>
Chair, Media and Communication
School of Communication and Creative Arts
Deakin University
Melbourne Burwood campus
221 Burwood Highway, Burwood Victoria 3125, Australia
deb.verhoeven at deakin.edu.au | +613 92517655 | @bestqualitycrab
about.me/DebVerhoeven<http://about.me/DebVerhoeven>
From: Gerard Goggin <gerard.goggin at sydney.edu.au<mailto:gerard.goggin at sydney.edu.au>>
Date: Thursday, 2 April 2015 11:38 am
To: "csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au<mailto:csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au>" <csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au<mailto:csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au>>
Subject: [csaa-forum] Digging the Data (17/4 USYD): How to Research and the Implications of New Media Data
[Apologies for cross-posting]
Digging the Data - first ANZCA preconference seminar event, co-hosted by the University of Sydney’s Department of Media and Communication (MECO) Media at Sydney seminar series.
The seminar will explore the emerging field of digital research methods with prestigious speakers including Jonathon Hutchinson, Axel Bruns, Peta Mitchell, Rowan Wilken, Tarrin Wills, Cate Dowd, Jeremy Hammond, Ravi Glasser-Vora and Tim Highfield.
The proliferation of data generated by new media devices has exploded within the last few years, leading to the development of new and exciting possibilities of connected, linked and deep data. The market place has seen new and emerging start-ups that operate in and around new media data, policy makers are unsure of how to govern and regulate this emerging area of activity, and finally, researchers and academics are especially interested in this field as it presents new ways of understanding the world around us. By being able to ask new questions of once exhausted research sites and to make sense of research data in new and exploratory ways, both opportunities and challenges manifest for those working and researching in this field.
Digging the Data explores the state of the field for digital research methods within the media and communication discipline. With a backdrop of the digital humanities, this preconference will explore the tensions between humanities scholars and computer scientists collaboratively working on digital media projects. Both research specialists have different expertise, vastly different scholarly trajectories and often speak different languages. However, when working collaboratively, the disciplines can develop novel research questions, unique research methodologies, focus on areas previously inaccessible and explore previously exhausted research environments.
Registrations are now open for the full day digital research methods seminar hosted at The University of Sydney’s Department of Media and Communication.
https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/digging-the-data-how-to-research-and-the-implications-of-new-media-data-tickets-16367881775
This ANZCA preconference has four agenda items:
1. To examine the state of the field of digital methods;
2. To explore how digital methods intersect with the digital humanities and media and communications;
3. To showcase USyd’s current work and digital research tools;
4. To provide the foundations for a ‘Digital Methods’ working group at ANZCA, 2015.
The outcome of this one-day preconference provides a unique point of departure to generate interest in both an ANZCA digital methods seminar and working group.
We anticipate strong interest for this event and places are limited. We are also showcasing a new research tool we have developed in collaboration with Intersect, that is now available to all Australian scholars.
Please register asap for this exciting new ANZCA and University of Sydney event!
Enquiries to Dr Jonathon Hutchinson: jonathon.hutchinson at sydney.edu.au<mailto:jonathon.hutchinson at sydney.edu.au>
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Gerard Goggin
ARC Future Fellow
Professor of Media and Communications
Department of Media and Communications
University of Sydney
e: gerard.goggin at sydney.edu.au<applewebdata://58CAECF0-6F6E-47A3-9980-953EE0F9094E/gerard.goggin@sydney.edu.au>
p: +61 2 9114 1218
m: +61 428 66 88 24
w: http://sydney.edu.au/arts/media_communications/staff/gerard_goggin.shtml
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