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Till Nagel – Projects. An animated visualization of Shanghai's subway network. Shanghai Metro Flow consists of an animation with three network visualizations, and an accompanying infographic poster showing subway line details. The project is part of the Design Shanghai 2013 - Aesthetics City and exhibited at the Shanghai Power Station of Art. Read more – ‘Shanghai Metro Flow’. Visualizing bike rides as physical small multiples. Twelve maps show my monthly bike rides from July 2012 to June 2013.

Unfolding is a library to create interactive maps and geovisualizations in Processing and Java. A comparison of national and international carriers in domestic flight routes. Border Bumping is a work of dislocative media that situates cellular telecommunications infrastructure as a disruptive force, challenging the integrity of national borders. An interactive multitouch visualization of relations between geo-positioned locations. SimpleTouch is a small library to create simple multitouch sketches in Processing. Interactive News Graphics Collection.

Do good with data. TULP interactive. Gregor Aisch – driven by data. Open Book Publishers launches new Digital Humanities Series » aaDH: Australasian Association for Digital Humanities. Open Book Publishers has launched a new Digital Humanities Series . The series is overseen by an international board of experts (including two members of the aa-DH inaugural executive committee) and its books subjected to rigorous peer review.

Its objective is to encourage works that extend the boundaries of the field and help to strengthen its interrelations with the other disciplines of the arts, humanities and beyond. We are interested in experimental monographs, edited volumes and collections as well as introductory guides for non-specialists, best practices guides for practitioners and “state of the art” surveys. The Series offers digital humanists a dedicated venue for high-quality, Open Access publication. Proposals in any area of the Digital Humanities are invited. Editorial Board: Paul Arthur, Kathleen Fitzpatrick, Julia Flanders, Gary Hall, Brett D.

Crowdsourcing For Humanities Research. Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis | Spatial History Project — Humanities + Design — Literary Lab. Digital Scholarship in the Humanities | Exploring the digital humanities. Step By Step | Spatial Humanities. National Endowment for the Humanities. Getting Started in the Digital Humanities. The Stone and the Shell | Historical questions raised by a quantitative approach to language. The CUNY Digital Humanities Resource Guide - CUNY Academic Commons. From CUNY Academic Commons Welcome to the CUNY Digital Humanities Resource Guide, a collaboratively produced introduction to the field of Digital Humanities. The guide is a project of the CUNY Digital Humanities Initiative (DHI), a new working group aimed at building connections and community among those at CUNY who are – or would like to be – applying digital technologies to research and pedagogy in the humanities.

Introduction Using This Guide The Digital Humanities The Resource Guide Hackathon Resources HTML and CSS Credits: The Digital Humanities Resource Guide was created by Charlie Edwards, a graduate student in the Ph.D. Future versions of the guide will be produced collaboratively by the members of the CUNY DHI community and, we hope, by the DH community at large. Want to make a suggestion or correction? DevDH.org. Filmbook : Dennis Neuschaefer-Rube. Brendan Griffen | it's full of stars. Graphs Of Wikipedia: Influential Thinkers The internet is big — very big. One such way to investigate all of this free online content is through graphs. The network visualisations by Simon Raper in his fantastic post about graphing the history of philosophy is one example of how to exploit such data. Let’s take this a step further and create a series of graphs using everyone on Wikipedia. Using subsets of this dataset (authors, actors, sports players etc.), we can investigate sub-networks within the larger dataset.

In the next series of posts, I will present a few of my […] SONY MOUSE & CAT - GFX Process Montage. At long last, we have documented trips on Citi Bike. Rides are displayed as point-to-point journeys (not routed in the street grid – yet) and are rendered in color based on whether the rider was an annual or casual user. This visualization was produced using journey data from Tuesday, September 17th at 12 midnight and Wednesday, September 18th at midnight.

Approximately 75,000 rides were taken in these two days. The weather was mild, with highs in the 60s and lows in the 50s. No rain at all was recorded. Credit: Jeff Ferzoco: linepointpath.com Sarah Kaufman: Rudin Center for Transportation Juan Francisco Saldarriaga: Spatial Information Design Lab spatialinformationdesignlab.org/people.php? Id=311 And thanks to Ekene Ijoema, David Stolarsky, and Chrys Wu for their support and help. Julian Palacz. » Play it, Sam. Kevin Schaul | Hacker journalist. Digital Analog- An Online Publication For New MediaDigitalAnalog – An Online Publication for Creativity + Code. Lome - sieci społeczne | Is Data Visualization a way of story telling, exploration, or expression? I'm just starting my thesis on data visualization recently I was talking about this issue with my thesis advisor. After reading Peter Gassner's article Data Visualization Is A Tool, Too! On www.datavisualization.ch I decided to write this blog post.

I see three big roles of data visualization: DataVis as a way of telling stories. Gapminder.org It's purely informative role. You show big amounts of data in graphical way to explain something. DataVis as a tool for exploration. Digg Labs Arc Visualization This approach comes from scientific data visualization where representing data visually is one way of coping with information overload. DataVis as a way of expression. Greet posters Sometimes we are just inspired by beauty of data and we are focusing purely on aesthetics. There is never ending discussion about simply decorating data vs. making it more meaning full. Adrien segal : art . design . data . sculpture. Category Archives: Visualisation. Digital Humanities (101) The following, “Digital Humanities (101),” was presented on Wednesday, March 12, 2013, by Josh Honn, Digital Scholarship Fellow, Center for Scholarly Communication & Digital Curation, and Geoff Morse, Coordinator of Humanities and Social Sciences, to librarians and staff at Northwestern University Library.

This presentation was also a chance to quasi-officially launch “A Guide to Digital Humanities” and Chicago DH. Introduction Thank you all for coming out for our presentation on digital humanities (which I’ll also be calling simply DH). Geoff and I are hoping that this talk will work both as an introduction and a catalyst to further discussion within the library as we all continue to understand the role of digital technology in the scholarship of humanists, and the roles of librarians within digital humanities.

For my part of the presentation I want to very quickly introduce the backstory of digital humanities and share an update on recent developments on campus. Open & Accessible. Projects & Publications | A Guide to Digital Humanities. Tapor. TAPoR 2.0 is a reimagining of the original TAPoR (Text Analysis Portal for Research). It is a both a resource for discovery and a community. The TAPoR team has created a place for Humanities scholars, students and others interested in applying digital tools to their textual research to find the tools they need, contribute their experience and share new tools they have developed or used with others. We've recently debuted TAPoR 2.5 and have made some changes we think you will enjoy.

In order to help you discover research tools for textual study, we invite you to: Browse Tools by Type or Tag We have added number of different tags added to the tools to help you figure out what tools will work best for you and the task at hand. Search and Use Tools TAPoR 2.0 is more than a place to find the classification of tools, it is a place to find and to used the tools themselves. There are a few ways in which you can find tools. Read and Create Tool Reviews Contribute and Advertise DH Tools Upcoming Features. UCLDH: The Hub of a (virtual) Network | Digging Digital Humanities. My recent trip to University College London was a great success* and has left me with a ton of information to digest, ideas to play around with, and questions to ask. (It also left me with a long illness, which is why this first post is extremely late in the making). One of the main points of the DiggingDH project is to question the concept of a ‘center’ – so it was interesting for me to pay a visit to a center which primarily exists in the virtual.

The Centre for Digital Humanities at UCL sits within the Department for Information Studies, is co-directed by Claire Warwick and Melissa Terras and consists of PhD students, a teaching fellow, and a research coordinator. The Centre’s success has allowed for the recent addition of a research manager. The larger management team and affiliated members range much wider than Information Studies, though, so one can imagine getting everyone together might be difficult. Are you part of a DH Center? How does marketing fit within your agenda? Sensate Journal Steven Feld: Acoustemic Stratigraphies: Recent Work in Urban Phonography » Sensate Journal. Acoustemic Stratigraphies: Recent Work in Urban Phonography This piece derives from an October 2010 presentation at Harvard’s Sensory Ethnography Lab.

In it, Steven Feld introduces three recent soundscape compositions and follows their audition with critical conversation about his work in “acoustemology,” (acoustic epistemology), sound as a way of knowing. The pieces and verbal contextualizations focus on time-space interactions and all of their historical, cultural, mental, material, and mediatized dimensions. The term “acoustemic stratigraphies” is offered to evoke the complexity of peeling back and exposing layers of experiential knowing though sound, of listening as habitus, of the poetics and politics of recording, editing, and auditing. Press Esc to return to the Sensate article page from within the media pieces. Right Click to Download .wav Right Click to Download .wav Right Click to Download .wav Right Click to Download Podcast of entire talk with audio selections.

Projects. Projects metaLAB projects seek to establish new standards of scholarly excellence, imagination, and impact even as they hack conventional academic structures. They privilege collaboration, experimentation, and iteration. Large or small, they derive their substance not only from rigorous research and design thinking but also from the input of audiences, end-users, and peers.

Some projects operate within university walls, others outside. metaLAB serves as a catalyst, incubator, and platform, working to spin off selected projects into freestanding, sustainable ventures. projects Humanities Studios Effective the spring semester of 2014, metaLAB has launched a new category of studio courses that are open to all FAS students.

Lightbox Gallery: a design project for the Digital Problem-Solving Initiative A project of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society The Harvard Art Museums are reopening in Fall 2014. Feral Trees metaLABprojects series Curarium Digital Ecologies at the Arnold Arboretum openLAB. Pitch Interactive, Inc. - A Data Visualization Studio. Digital Initiatives at the Grad Center | building CUNY Communities since 2009. Flowing City | visualizing the city built of data. Online Journalism Blog | A conversation. World of Data.