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An analysis of the Digital Humanities conference abstracts between 2004 and 2014 [3] highlights some trends evident in the evolution of the conference (such as the increasing rate of new authors entering the field, and the continuing disproportional predominance of authors from North America represented in the abstracts).
Until 2004, Computers and the Humanities was the official journal of ACH. [3] (In 2005 it was renamed to Language Resources and Evaluation. [3] The print journal most closely associated with ACH is Literary and Linguistic Computing (Oxford University Press). The open-access, peer-reviewed journal of ACH is Digital Humanities Quarterly (ADHO).
The Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations is an umbrella organisation whose goals are to promote and support digital research and teaching across arts and humanities disciplines, drawing together humanists engaged in digital and computer-assisted research, teaching, creation, dissemination, and beyond, in all areas reflected by its diverse membership. [19]
Digital humanities (DH) is an area of scholarly activity at the intersection of computing or digital technologies and the disciplines of the humanities. It includes ...
Its purpose is to promote the advancement of education in the digital humanities through the development and use of computational methods in research and teaching in the Humanities and related disciplines, especially literary and linguistic computing. [2] In 2005, the Association joined the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations (ADHO). [3]
The Text Encoding Initiative (TEI) is a text-centric community of practice in the academic field of digital humanities, operating continuously since the 1980s.The community currently runs a mailing list, meetings and conference series, and maintains the TEI technical standard, a journal, [1] a wiki, a GitHub repository and a toolchain.
The Digital Humanities Summer Institute (DHSI) is an annual digital humanities training program held in June at the University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. DHSI now attracts over 600 participants [1] for two weeks of courses, forum discussions, paper sessions, and unconferences. DHSI has an International Advisory Board. [2]
Digital Humanities Quarterly has been noted among the "few interesting attempts to peer review born-digital scholarship." [4] Having emerged from a desire to disseminate digital humanities practices to the wider arts and humanities community and beyond, [5] the journal is committed to open access and open standards to deliver journal content, publishing under a Creative Commons license. [6]