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  • Paris

    Call for papers - History

    The Connected Past

    Networks in archaeology and history

    Over the past decade "network" has become a buzz-word in many disciplines across the humanities and sciences. Researchers in archaeology and history in particular are increasingly exploring network-based theory and methodologies drawn from complex network models or social network analysis as a means of understanding dynamic social relationships in the past, as well as technical relationships in their data. This series of conferences aims to provide a platform for pioneering, multidisciplinary, collaborative work by researchers working to develop network approaches and their application to the past.

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  • Lisbon

    Seminar - History

    Networks over space and time: modelling, analyzing, and representing complex data in the digital humanities

    This workshop is about interconnections between, and in space and time. But it also sees interconnections at other levels: between modelling and analysing, between theory and practice, as well as between humanities and computing.

    In the humanities, a close look at networks and relationships, whether formal or informal, personal or social, of information or of knowledge, of transportation or of communication, has always been an important subject of study and, at the same time, a powerful analytical process. In computer science, the study of networks and of methodologies for analysis and visualization of these relationships is nowadays an increasingly well understood and practiced area of knowledge. In both the humanities and computer science, researchers are well aware of the dynamic nature of data and knowledge when viewed through the lenses of space and time.

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  • Pessac

    Seminar - Geography

    Cartography and participation

    CARPAR’13 seminar

    La notion de « cartes participatives » regroupe des réalités très diverses mais qui renvoient toutes à un processus d’élaboration collective de représentations cartographiques par un ensemble de personnes n’appartenant pas au milieu de la cartographie institutionnelle. Son champ apparaît en rapide expansion et on assiste depuis quelques années à une inflation des cartes participatives en ligne, en lien avec les développements du Web 2.0.

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