PowerPoint-Präsentation Citizen Science in the context of recent Digital Humanities projects – an overview and outlook Amelie Dorn, Melanie Seltmann Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities (ACDH), Austrian Academy of Sciences (ÖAW) Citizen Science in Digital Humanities (DH) Overview Evaluation and analysis of recent DH projects and studies concerning Citizen Science Outlook Citizen Science in - expectations and possibilities Citizen Science in Digital Humanities Overview – evaluation of 32 recent projects and studies • DH2015 (Digital Humanities) [24] • DHd2015 (Digitial Humanities im deutschsprachigen Raum) [4] • Dhb3 2015 (Digital Humanities in Berlin) [3] • other [1] Citizen Science in Digital Humanities Overview – evaluation topics • lexicography • visualisation • infrastructure • citizen science Citizen Science in Digital Humanities • 9 out of 32 projects contain CS elements Mode of CS integration I. interactive use of social media (facebook, twitter, flickr) II. crowdsourcing  nichesourcing] III. apps IV. collective annotation Interactive Use of Social Media Travis, C. (2015) A Digital Humanities GIS Ontology: Tweetflickertubing James Joyce’s "Ulysses" (1922). DH2015. • Social Media-Geographical Information System mapping of Bloomsday (annual celebration of Joyce’s novel Ulysses) • map Tweets from Twitter, and postings from Flickr and Youtube locally (Dublin) and globally (Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Australia-Pacific, North and Latin America) to specific locations from the novel • surveys taken on social media activity on Bloomsday: highest activity around Davey Byrne’s Pub and Martellow Tower. • surveys taken on social media activity before and after the event: Flickr and YouTube posts exhibited the highest activity in Dublin outside of Bloomsday  digital eco-system maintains a virtual Joycean Dublin on a sustained basis. Interactive Use of Social Media Scots words and place-names (SWAP) project (cf. Hough, C. et al.) • SWAP project - Scots Words And Place Names • Aim: engage the Scottish public in talking about the Scots words they use and hear around them • collect information on names of places which use Scots words: how they were pronounced; if people knew what they meant; whether they appeared on maps or were known through word-of-mouth; even how they looked (through uploading pictures). • use of Facebook and Twitter to collect data and build communities • social media as a fast, broad-reaching and efficient medium for engaging the general public • collected words were added to collections of Scottish Language Dictionaries and to a comprehensive online glossary of Scots place-names Crowdsourcing/Nichesourcing Hakkarainen, JP (2015) Nichesourcing The Uralic Languages For The Benefit Of Linguistic Research And Lingual Societies. DH2015. • Project: digitisation of monographs and newspapers for endangered Uralic languages • citizen science as a means of integrating the language community in linguistic research • ‘nichesourcing’ – distributing tasks among small groups  better for qualitative than quantitative results • Typical CS task: edit and collect word for fields of vocabularies where researchers require more information  by means of an OCR editor Crowdsourcing/Nichesourcing Voss et al (2015) From Crowdsourcing to Knowledge Communities: Creating Meaningful Scholarship Through Digital Collaboration. DH2015. • Description of different approaches and communities across 3 projects • Distinction between ‘crowd‘  perform autonomous, simple tasks and ‘knowledge communities‘  require collaboration, coordination and a more social element • engaged 3 different types of crowds: the general public ; the expert community and the paid community . • All 3 were only partially successful in terms of the research questions initially posed Apps Gray, S. J. (2015) Textal: Unstructured Text Analysis Workflows Through Interactive Smartphone Visualisations. DH2015 • understand how users analyse text through mobile devices • visual style: word clouds • allows users to explore data behind the word cloud by touching individual words • brings together tools and workflows for use by researchers to analyse unstructured text as well as giving the general public a tool to easily create word clouds. • insights gained from the usage data of the application’s global user base and the textual data crowdsourced from users of the application. Apps Bow, C. (2015) Bringing to life the Living Archive of Aboriginal Languages. DH2015. • online archive of Indigenous Aboriginal languages • wealth of written and illustrated texts in endangered languages • browse and search interface by language and location • bulk download and offline acces through mobile app • schools use app to create libraries on iPad‘s of sources in local languages • social media to engage different users in schools , remote communities and academic contexts. Collaborative Annotation Claudia Müller-Birn et al. (2015) neonion - kollaboratives, semantisches Annotieren von Dokumenten als Mehrwert für das Forschen in den Geisteswissenschaften und der Informatik (neonion – collaborative, semantic annotation of documents for reserach in the humanities and informatics). Dhd2015. • active scholarly reading involves annotating text with comments, highlights or underlining. • increased reading online – annotate digital sources • mixed-initiative annotation – by users and automated services Citizen Science in Digital Humanities Summary Mode of CS integration I. interactive use of social media (facebook, twitter,flickr) [2] II. crowdsourcing  nichesourcing [2] III. apps [3] IV. collective annotation [1] Citizen Science in Digital Humanities (DH) Overview Evaluation and analysis of recent DH projects and examples concerning Citizen Science Outlook Citizen Science in - expectations and possibilities Citizen Science in Digital Humanities Outlook • current digital humanities project and the Austrian Academy of Siences • basis: vast collection of dialect words (~2.5 million entries) from the Bavarian dialects in region of the former Austro-Hungarian monarchy • multi-faceted: elexicography | infrastructure | visualisation | citizen science Citizen Science in Digital Humanities Outlook Citizen Science in exploreAT! • putting together specilised focus groups • thematic topics: bread & pastries, colours Citizen Science in DH Outlook Citizen Science in exploreAT! • bread  concepts: different types of bread (Schwarz-, Grau-, Weißbrot) • colours  concepts: historic vs current (social tagging) (allrot vs zinoberrot) Citizen Science in DH Outlook Citizen Science in exploreAT! Considerations • effective ways of integrating CS in exploreAT! ? • most practical way of contributions? • citizens as possible addressees of scientific output • collecting experiences (+/-) with CS from other projects Thank you for your attention! ... time for questions, comments, suggestions.... References Bow, C. (2015). Bringing to life the Living Archive of Aboriginal Languages. Paper presented at the DH2015, Sydney, Australia. Gray, S. J., Terras, M., Ammann, R., & Hudson-Smith, A. (2015). Textal: Unstructured Textg Analysis Workflows Through Interactive Smartphone Visualisations. Paper presented at the DH2015, Sydney, Australia. Hakkarainen, J.-P. (2015). Nichesourcing The Uralic Languages For The Benefit Of Linguistic Research And Lingual Societies. Paper presented at the DH2015, Sydney, Australia. Hough. C. et a. (2011) Scots Words and Place-names: JISC Final report. Project Report. JISC. Scots words and place-names, from http://swap.nesc.gla.ac.uk/ [accessed 30.03.2016] Claudia Müller-Birn et al. (2015) neonion - kollaboratives, semantisches Annotieren von Dokumenten als Mehrwert für das Forschen in den Geisteswissenschaften und der Informatik. Dhd 2015, Graz, Austria. Travis, C. B. (2015). A Digital Humanities GIS Ontology: Tweetflickertubing James Joyce's 'Ulysses' (1922). Paper presented at the DH2015, Sydney, Australia. Voss, J., Wolfenstein, G., Zypher, F., Heuser, R., Young, K., & Stanhope, N. (2015). From Crowdsourcing to Knowledge Communities: Creating Meaningful Scholarship Through Digital Collaboration. Paper presented at the DH2015, Sydney, AUstralia.