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CFP: The Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (in English)

作者adminweb

The Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (in English) is now inviting submissions for Volume 9 of the journal to be issued in October 2026.

The JJADH is a peer-review and open-access journal, hosted with J-STAGE, a platform for scholarly publications in Japan. It is developed and managed by the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST). The journal can be accessed at:

https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jjadh/6/0/_contents/-char/en

The JJADH is not limited to Japanese studies. The editorial board encourages international submissions and will consider papers pertaining to DH on a broad range of disciplinary interests. We are also welcoming proposals for special issues with papers that cluster on a similar topic.

To submit your paper, please access the online submission system at:

https://journals24.jadh.org/index.php/jadh/submission

First please register with the journal by clicking the “register” link. Make sure to register as “Author.” Once you have registered, you can submit your paper by clicking “New submission.” Please read the instructions on the pages carefully. We ask that papers be submitted according to the guidelines and web-submission process stipulated.

1. _Papers should be between 10 and 18 pages in length (4,000 to
8,000 words) A4 or letter, double-spaced, 12-point, Times New
Roman._

2. Please submit your paper (written in English) in MS-Word
(_.doc,_ .docx) or LibreOffice (*.odt) format.

3. Because this journal is an online publication, you may include
hyperlinks, images, graphics, and so forth, as necessary.

4. For your references/bibliography, please follow the Chicago
Manual of Style (CMS) guidelines (readily available online).

5. Please also follow CMS guidelines for other aspects of prose
styling, such as italicization of foreign words, monograph titles, and
so forth.

6. If you are not a native speaker of English, please have your
paper proofread by a scholar who is a native speaker before
submission.

7. Except in cases where a scholar is invited to submit, papers will
undergo a double-blind review by academic peers, with reader’s comments
made available upon completion of the review.

Submissions will be accepted until _March 1st, 2026._

JJADH Editorial Board

- Christian Wittern (Kyoto University, Japan) Editor in Chief
- Gaétan Rappo (Doshisha University) Managing Editor
- Kiyonori Nagasaki (International Institute for Digital Humanities / Keio University, Japan) Technical Editor
- Hilofumi Yamamoto (Institute of Science Tokyo) Advisory Editor
- Ikki Ohmukai (University of Tokyo)
- Thomas Dabbs (Aoyama Gakuin University)
- A. Charles Muller (University of Tokyo)
- Paul Arthur (Edith Cowan University, Australia)
- Susan Brown (University of Guelph)
- Bor Hodošček (Osaka University)
- Asanobu Kitamoto (National Institute of Informatics)
- Maki Miyake (Osaka University)
- Hajime Murai (Future University Hakodate)
- Yusuke Nakamura (University of Tokyo)
- Geoffrey Rockwell (University of Alberta, Canada)
- Ray Siemens (University of Victoria, Canada)

  •  

CFP for JADH2025

作者adminweb

JADH2025: “Crossing the Gap: Rethinking Boundaries between the Humanities and Informatics”
The Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (JADH) is pleased to announce its 14th annual conference, to be held in person at Osaka University on September 19-21, 2025.
Where is the boundary between the Humanities and Informatics, and how can we cross it? This theme has long been considered in Digital Humanities. The concept of Methodological Commons has become a vital foundation for the effective realization of interdisciplinary collaboration and the advancement of Digital Humanities. The sharing of methodologies in Digital Humanities has developed in various ways through the interplay between technology, techniques, and research subjects.
In recent years, the emergence of generative AI has brought about a profound shift in the balance between the Humanities and Informatics. In both fields, the areas where generative AI can take over seem to be expanding, simultaneously creating new possibilities for development and raising issues within these fields. In doing so, this development foregrounds critical issues regarding the very roles of the Humanities and Informatics—disciplines that form the core of Digital Humanities.

This symposium aims to explore how these disciplines can and should function within Digital Humanities under these evolving circumstances, and to investigate new possibilities for crossing traditional disciplinary boundaries. Through this examination, we hope to illuminate future pathways for the development of Digital Humanities and to foster productive dialogue on the potential trajectories of collaborative research.
In this context, we welcome presentations that will stimulate discussion of a rethinking of the boundaries between the Humanities and Informatics. This encompasses a broad spectrum, from theoretical discussions to practical applications. We are also keen to include research that reflects the diverse global practices in Digital Humanities, continuing the tradition of previous conferences.
However, it's important to clarify that the conference's scope extends beyond the theme. We invite proposals on all aspects of Digital Humanities and especially encourage papers that deal with practices that cross borders, for example, between academic fields, media, languages, cultures, organizations, and so on, as related to the field of Digital Humanities. Topics of interest span a wide range, including AI, data mining, information design and modeling, software studies, and humanities research enabled through the digital medium; computer-based research and computer applications in literary, linguistic, cultural, and historical studies, including electronic literature, public humanities; and interdisciplinary aspects of modern scholarship. Examples might include text analysis, corpora, corpus linguistics, language processing, language learning, and endangered languages; the digital arts, architecture, music, film, theater, new media, and related areas; the creation and curation of humanities digital resources; and the role of Digital Humanities in academic curricula. The range of topics covered by Digital Humanities can also be consulted in the journal Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (http://dsh.oxfordjournals.org/), Oxford University Press.
Abstracts submitted should be of 500-1000 words in length in English, including the title and authors’ names.
Please submit abstracts via the ConfTool website below, which will open soon, by 11:59 PM, 15 Apr, 2025 (HAST).
https://www.conftool.net/jadh-2025/
Submissions for presentation papers will be accepted starting around February at the same URL above.
Presenters will be notified of acceptance on May 30, 2025.

Type of proposals:
Interactive presentations: Interactive poster session presentations may include work-in-progress on any of the topics described above as well as demonstrations of computer technology, software, and digital projects.
Short papers: Short papers are allotted 10 minutes (plus 5 minutes for questions) and are suitable for describing work-in-progress and reporting on shorter experiments and software and tools in early stages of development.
Long papers: Long papers are allotted 20 minutes (plus 10 minutes for questions) and are intended for presenting substantial unpublished research and reporting on significant new digital resources or methodologies.
Panels: Panels (90 minutes) are comprised of either: (a) Three long papers on a joint theme. All abstracts should be submitted together with a statement, of approximately 500-1000 words, outlining the session topic and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities; or (b) A panel of four to six speakers. The panel organizer should submit a 500-1000 words outline of the topic session and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities as well as an indication from all speakers of their willingness to participate.
Use of generative AI language tools:
Recently, while chatbots as a new text-generating tool are becoming widespread, various problems such as authorship, accuracy, and ethical implications have been pointed out. Since the Digital Humanities field needs to respond constructively to this situation, the JADH Program committee does not prohibit their use. However, at least at present, generative AI language tools will not be recognized as an author. Instead, please report the significant use of generative AI language tools, as described in the arXiv's policy.
https://blog.arxiv.org/2023/01/31/arxiv-announces-new-policy-on-chatgpt-...
After the conference:
JADH strongly encourages you to improve your contribution to this conference based on the discussion that will take place during your presentation and submit them to our open-access journal, the Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jjadh/list/-char/en).

  •  

Call for Papers: JADH2025

作者adminweb

JADH2025: “Crossing the Gap: Rethinking Boundaries between the Humanities and Informatics”

The Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (JADH) is pleased to announce its 14th annual conference, to be held in person at Osaka University on September 19-21, 2025.
Where is the boundary between the Humanities and Informatics, and how can we cross it? This theme has long been considered in Digital Humanities. The concept of Methodological Commons has become a vital foundation for the effective realization of interdisciplinary collaboration and the advancement of Digital Humanities. The sharing of methodologies in Digital Humanities has developed in various ways through the interplay between technology, techniques, and research subjects.

In recent years, the emergence of generative AI has brought about a profound shift in the balance between the Humanities and Informatics. In both fields, the areas where generative AI can take over seem to be expanding, simultaneously creating new possibilities for development and raising issues within these fields. In doing so, this development foregrounds critical issues regarding the very roles of the Humanities and Informatics—disciplines that form the core of Digital Humanities.

This symposium aims to explore how these disciplines can and should function within Digital Humanities under these evolving circumstances, and to investigate new possibilities for crossing traditional disciplinary boundaries. Through this examination, we hope to illuminate future pathways for the development of Digital Humanities and to foster productive dialogue on the potential trajectories of collaborative research.

In this context, we welcome presentations that will stimulate discussion of a rethinking of the boundaries between the Humanities and Informatics. This encompasses a broad spectrum, from theoretical discussions to practical applications. We are also keen to include research that reflects the diverse global practices in Digital Humanities, continuing the tradition of previous conferences.

However, it's important to clarify that the conference's scope extends beyond the theme. We invite proposals on all aspects of Digital Humanities and especially encourage papers that deal with practices that cross borders, for example, between academic fields, media, languages, cultures, organizations, and so on, as related to the field of Digital Humanities. Topics of interest span a wide range, including AI, data mining, information design and modeling, software studies, and humanities research enabled through the digital medium; computer-based research and computer applications in literary, linguistic, cultural, and historical studies, including electronic literature, public humanities; and interdisciplinary aspects of modern scholarship. Examples might include text analysis, corpora, corpus linguistics, language processing, language learning, and endangered languages; the digital arts, architecture, music, film, theater, new media, and related areas; the creation and curation of humanities digital resources; and the role of Digital Humanities in academic curricula. The range of topics covered by Digital Humanities can also be consulted in the journal Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (http://dsh.oxfordjournals.org/), Oxford University Press.
Abstracts submitted should be of 500-1000 words in length in English, including the title and authors’ names.

Please submit abstracts via the ConfTool website below, which will open soon, by 11:59 PM, 15 Apr, 2025 (HAST).

https://www.conftool.net/jadh-2025/

Submissions for presentation papers will be accepted starting around February at the same URL above.

Presenters will be notified of acceptance on May 30, 2025.

Type of proposals:

Interactive presentations: Interactive poster session presentations may include work-in-progress on any of the topics described above as well as demonstrations of computer technology, software, and digital projects.

Short papers: Short papers are allotted 10 minutes (plus 5 minutes for questions) and are suitable for describing work-in-progress and reporting on shorter experiments and software and tools in early stages of development.

Long papers: Long papers are allotted 20 minutes (plus 10 minutes for questions) and are intended for presenting substantial unpublished research and reporting on significant new digital resources or methodologies.

Panels: Panels (90 minutes) are comprised of either: (a) Three long papers on a joint theme. All abstracts should be submitted together with a statement, of approximately 500-1000 words, outlining the session topic and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities; or (b) A panel of four to six speakers. The panel organizer should submit a 500-1000 words outline of the topic session and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities as well as an indication from all speakers of their willingness to participate.
Use of generative AI language tools:

Recently, while chatbots as a new text-generating tool are becoming widespread, various problems such as authorship, accuracy, and ethical implications have been pointed out. Since the Digital Humanities field needs to respond constructively to this situation, the JADH Program committee does not prohibit their use. However, at least at present, generative AI language tools will not be recognized as an author. Instead, please report the significant use of generative AI language tools, as described in the arXiv's policy.

https://blog.arxiv.org/2023/01/31/arxiv-announces-new-policy-on-chatgpt-...

After the conference:

JADH strongly encourages you to improve your contribution to this conference based on the discussion that will take place during your presentation and submit them to our open-access journal, the Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jjadh/list/-char/en).

  •  

Call for Papers: JADH2025

作者adminweb

JADH2025: “Crossing the Gap: Rethinking Boundaries between the Humanities and Informatics”

The deadline has been extended to 30 April 2025, 18:59 (JST)

The Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (JADH) is pleased to announce its 14th annual conference, to be held in person at Osaka University on September 19-21, 2025.

Where is the boundary between the Humanities and Informatics, and how can we cross it? This theme has long been considered in Digital Humanities. The concept of Methodological Commons has become a vital foundation for the effective realization of interdisciplinary collaboration and the advancement of Digital Humanities. The sharing of methodologies in Digital Humanities has developed in various ways through the interplay between technology, techniques, and research subjects.

In recent years, the emergence of generative AI has brought about a profound shift in the balance between the Humanities and Informatics. In both fields, the areas where generative AI can take over seem to be expanding, simultaneously creating new possibilities for development and raising issues within these fields. In doing so, this development foregrounds critical issues regarding the very roles of the Humanities and Informatics—disciplines that form the core of Digital Humanities.

This symposium aims to explore how these disciplines can and should function within Digital Humanities under these evolving circumstances, and to investigate new possibilities for crossing traditional disciplinary boundaries. Through this examination, we hope to illuminate future pathways for the development of Digital Humanities and to foster productive dialogue on the potential trajectories of collaborative research.

In this context, we welcome presentations that will stimulate discussion of a rethinking of the boundaries between the Humanities and Informatics. This encompasses a broad spectrum, from theoretical discussions to practical applications. We are also keen to include research that reflects the diverse global practices in Digital Humanities, continuing the tradition of previous conferences.

However, it's important to clarify that the conference's scope extends beyond the theme. We invite proposals on all aspects of Digital Humanities and especially encourage papers that deal with practices that cross borders, for example, between academic fields, media, languages, cultures, organizations, and so on, as related to the field of Digital Humanities. Topics of interest span a wide range, including AI, data mining, information design and modeling, software studies, and humanities research enabled through the digital medium; computer-based research and computer applications in literary, linguistic, cultural, and historical studies, including electronic literature, public humanities; and interdisciplinary aspects of modern scholarship. Examples might include text analysis, corpora, corpus linguistics, language processing, language learning, and endangered languages; the digital arts, architecture, music, film, theater, new media, and related areas; the creation and curation of humanities digital resources; and the role of Digital Humanities in academic curricula. The range of topics covered by Digital Humanities can also be consulted in the journal Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (http://dsh.oxfordjournals.org/), Oxford University Press.

Abstracts submitted should be of 500-1000 words in length in English, including the title and authors’ names.

Please submit abstracts via the ConfTool website below, which will open soon, by 11:59 PM, 15 Apr, 2025 (HAST).

https://www.conftool.net/jadh-2025/

Presenters will be notified of acceptance on May 30, 2025.

Type of proposals:

Interactive presentations: Interactive poster session presentations may include work-in-progress on any of the topics described above as well as demonstrations of computer technology, software, and digital projects.
Short papers: Short papers are allotted 10 minutes (plus 5 minutes for questions) and are suitable for describing work-in-progress and reporting on shorter experiments and software and tools in early stages of development.

Long papers: Long papers are allotted 20 minutes (plus 10 minutes for questions) and are intended for presenting substantial unpublished research and reporting on significant new digital resources or methodologies.
Panels: Panels (90 minutes) are comprised of either: (a) Three long papers on a joint theme. All abstracts should be submitted together with a statement, of approximately 500-1000 words, outlining the session topic and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities; or (b) A panel of four to six speakers. The panel organizer should submit a 500-1000 words outline of the topic session and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities as well as an indication from all speakers of their willingness to participate.

Use of generative AI language tools:
Recently, while chatbots as a new text-generating tool are becoming widespread, various problems such as authorship, accuracy, and ethical implications have been pointed out. Since the Digital Humanities field needs to respond constructively to this situation, the JADH Program committee does not prohibit their use. However, at least at present, generative AI language tools will not be recognized as an author. Instead, please report the significant use of generative AI language tools, as described in the arXiv's policy.

https://blog.arxiv.org/2023/01/31/arxiv-announces-new-policy-on-chatgpt-...

After the conference:

JADH strongly encourages you to improve your contribution to this conference based on the discussion that will take place during your presentation and submit them to our open-access journal, the Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jjadh/list/-char/en).

Contact

Please direct inquiries about any aspect of the conference to:

conf2025 [ at ] jadh.org

Program Committee:

  • Natsuko Nakagawa (Kyushu University, Japan), Co-chair
  • Satoru Nakamura (University of Tokyo, Japan), Co-chair
  • Naoya Iwata (Nagoya University, Japan), Vice-chair
  • Yuho Kitazaki (Osaka University, Japan), Vice-chair
  • Paul Arthur (Edith Cowan University, Australia)
  • Marcus Bingenheimer (Temple University, USA)
  • Elisa Beshero-Bondar (Penn State Erie, The Behrend College, USA)
  • James Cummings (Newcastle University, UK)
  • J. Stephen Downie (University of Illinois, USA)
  • Maciej Eder (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland)
  • Øyvind Eide (University of Cologne, Germany)
  • Makoto Goto (National Museum of Japanese History, Japan)
  • Yuta Hashimoto (National Museum of Japanese History, Japan)
  • Bor Hodošček (Osaka University, Japan)
  • ​​Jae-Yon Lee (Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, Korea)
  • JenJou Hung (Dharma Drum Institute of Liberal Arts, Taiwan)
  • Jieh Hsiang (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
  • Akihiro Kawase (Doshisha University, Japan)
  • Nobuhiko Kikuchi (National Institute of Japanese Literature, Japan)
  • Asanobu Kitamoto (ROIS-DS Center for Open Data in the Humanities / National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
  • Naoki Kokaze (Chiba University, Japan)
  • Chao-Lin Liu (National Chengchi University, Taiwan)
  • Hajime Murai (Future University Hakodate, Japan)
  • Kiyonori Nagasaki (Keio University / International Institute for Digital Humanities, Japan)
  • Chifumi Nishioka (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
  • Ikki Ohmukai (University of Tokyo, Japan)
  • Geoffrey Rockwell (University of Alberta, Canada)
  • Christof Schöch (Trier University, Germany)
  • Martina Scholger (University of Graz, Austria)
  • Masahiro Shimoda (Musashino University, Japan)
  • Raymond Siemens (University of Victoria, Canada)
  • Tomoji Tabata (Osaka University, Japan)
  • Toru Tomabechi (International Institute for Digital Humanities, Japan)
  • Richard Tzong-Han Tsai (National Central University, Taiwan)
  • Ayaka Uesaka (Osaka Seikei University, Japan)
  • Raffaele Viglianti (University of Maryland, USA)
  • Christian Wittern (Kyoto University, Japan)
  • Taizo Yamada (University of Tokyo, Japan)
  • Hilofumi Yamamoto (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
  • Hiroyuki Yamauchi (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)
  • Natsuko Yoshiga (Osaka University, Japan)
  •  

Journal of JADH: CFP for vol.8

作者adminweb

Deadline has been extended to March 1st 2025!

The Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (in
English) is now inviting submissions for Volume 8 of the journal to be
issued in October 2025.

The JJADH is a peer-review and open-access journal, hosted with
J-STAGE, a platform for scholarly publications in Japan. It is developed
and managed by the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST). The
journal can be accessed at:

https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jjadh/6/0/_contents/-char/en

The JJADH is not limited to Japanese studies. The editorial board
encourages international submissions and will consider papers pertaining
to DH on a broad range of disciplinary interests. We are also welcoming
proposals for special issues with papers that cluster on a similar
topic.

To submit your paper, please access the online submission system
at:

https://journals24.jadh.org/index.php/jadh/submission

First please register with the journal by clicking the “register”
link. Make sure to register as “Author.” Once you have registered, you
can submit your paper by clicking “New submission.” Please read the
instructions on the pages carefully. We ask that papers be submitted
according to the guidelines and web-submission process stipulated.

  1. Papers should be between 10 and 18 pages in length (4,000 to
    8,000 words) A4 or letter, double-spaced, 12-point, Times New
    Roman.

  2. Please submit your paper (written in English) in MS-Word
    (.doc, .docx) or LibreOffice (*.odt) format.

  3. Because this journal is an online publication, you may include
    hyperlinks, images, graphics, and so forth, as necessary.

  4. For your references/bibliography, please follow the Chicago
    Manual of Style (CMS) guidelines (readily available online).

  5. Please also follow CMS guidelines for other aspects of prose
    styling, such as italicization of foreign words, monograph titles, and
    so forth.

  6. If you are not a native speaker of English, please have your
    paper proofread by a scholar who is a native speaker before
    submission.

  7. Except in cases where a scholar is invited to submit, papers will
    undergo a double-blind review by academic peers, with reader’s comments
    made available upon completion of the review.

Submissions will be accepted until March 1st, 2025.

JJADH Editorial Board

  • Christian Wittern (Kyoto University, Japan) Editor in Chief
  • Gaétan Rappo (Doshisha University) Managing Editor
  • Kiyonori Nagasaki (International Institute for Digital Humanities,
    Japan) Technical Editor
  • Hilofumi Yamamoto (Tokyo Institute of Technology) Advisory
    Editor
  • Ikki Ohmukai (University of Tokyo)
  • Thomas Dabbs (Aoyama Gakuin University)
  • A. Charles Muller (University of Tokyo)
  • Paul Arthur (University of Western Sydney, Australia)
  • Susan Brown (University of Guelph)
  • Bor Hodošček (Osaka University)
  • Asanobu Kitamoto (National Institute of Informatics)
  • Maki Miyake (Osaka University)
  • Hajime Murai (Future University Hakodate)
  • Yusuke Nakamura (University of Tokyo)
  • Geoffrey Rockwell (University of Alberta, Canada)
  • Ray Siemens (University of Victoria, Canada)
  •  

Administrators 2018-2024

作者adminweb

Executive Board:
President: 田畑智司(大阪大学) / Tomoji Tabata
Christian Wittern(京都大学)
北本朝展(国立情報学研究所) / Asanobu Kitamoto
後藤真(国立歴史民俗博物館)/ Makoto Goto
大向一輝(東京大学) / Ikki Ohmukai
ターウォン マット ラック(立命館大学) / THAWONMAS Ruck
A. Charles Muller(武蔵野大学)
Chair: 永崎研宣(一般財団法人人文情報学研究所) / Kiyonori Nagasaki
原正一郎(京都大学) / Shoichiro Hara
山田太造(東京大学) / Taizo Yamada

Co-opted member:
上阪彩香(大阪大学) / Ayaka Uesaka
下田正弘(東京大学) / Masahiro Shimoda
河瀬彰宏(同志社大学)/ Akihiro Kawase
菊池信彦(国文学研究資料館)/ Nobuhiko Kikuchi
小風尚樹(千葉大学)/ Naoki Kokaze
苫米地等流(一般財団法人人文情報学研究所)/ Toru Tomabechi

Auditors:
村井源 (公立はこだて未来大学)/ Hajime Murai
山元啓史 (東京工業大学)/ Hilofumi Yamamoto

Nominating Committee:
苫米地等流 / Toru Tomabechi
三宅真紀(大阪大学) / Maki Miyake
赤間啓之(東京工業大学) / Hiroyuki Akama

  •  

JADH2024: Call for Papers

作者adminweb

JADH2024: Call for Papers
“Leveraging AI and Digital Humanities for Sustainable Infrastructure”

The deadline has been extended to 11:59 PM, April 29, 2024 (HAST).

The Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (JADH) is pleased to announce its 13th annual conference, to be held at the University of Tokyo on September 18-20, 2024.

We invite proposals on all aspects of Digital Humanities, and especially encourage papers treating topics that deal with practices that cross borders, for example, between academic fields, media, languages, cultures, organizations, and so on, as related to the field of Digital Humanities.

The recent advent of Artificial Intelligence has had a significant impact on Digital Humanities, and many presentations have been made at recent DH-related conferences. Furthermore, there's a global push towards establishing digital infrastructure in the humanities, with Japan beginning to witness policy-level support in this domain. The program committee seeks to explore sustainable methods for applying, critiquing, designing, and investigating AI in Digital Humanities, covering a range of activities from analyzing current systems to developing independent AI solutions.

In this context, we welcome presentations that delve into sustainable AI usage within Digital Humanities. This encompasses a broad spectrum, from theoretical discussions to practical applications. We are also keen to include research that reflects the diverse global practices in Digital Humanities, continuing the tradition of previous conferences.

However, it's important to clarify that the conference's scope extends beyond just AI. Topics of interest span a wide range, including data mining, information design and modeling, software studies, and humanities research enabled through the digital medium; computer-based research and computer applications in literary, linguistic, cultural, and historical studies, including electronic literature, public humanities; and interdisciplinary aspects of modern scholarship. Examples might include text analysis, corpora, corpus linguistics, language processing, language learning, and endangered languages; the digital arts, architecture, music, film, theater, new media and related areas; the creation and curation of humanities digital resources; and the role of Digital Humanities in academic curricula. The range of topics covered by Digital Humanities can also be consulted in the journal Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (http://dsh.oxfordjournals.org/), Oxford University Press.

Abstracts submitted should be of 500-1000 words in length in English, including the title and authors’ names.

Please submit abstracts via the ConfTool website below, which is not yet open, by 11:59 PM, 1529 Apr, 2024 (HAST).

https://www.conftool.net/jadh-2024/

Submissions for presentation papers will be accepted starting around February at the same URL above:
Presenters will be notified of acceptance on May 27, 2024.

Type of proposals:

Interactive presentations: Interactive poster session presentations may include work-in-progress on any of the topics described above as well as demonstrations of computer technology, software, and digital projects.

Short papers: Short papers are allotted 10 minutes (plus 5 minutes for questions) and are suitable for describing work-in-progress and reporting on shorter experiments and software and tools in early stages of development.

Long papers: Long papers are allotted 20 minutes (plus 10 minutes for questions) and are intended for presenting substantial unpublished research and reporting on significant new digital resources or methodologies.

Panels: Panels (90 minutes) are comprised of either: (a) Three long papers on a joint theme. All abstracts should be submitted together with a statement, of approximately 500-1000 words, outlining the session topic and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities; or (b) A panel of four to six speakers. The panel organizer should submit a 500-1000 words outline of the topic session and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities as well as an indication from all speakers of their willingness to participate.

Use of generative AI language tools:

Recently, while chatbots as a new text-generating tool are becoming widespread, various problems have been pointed out. Since the Digital Humanities field needs to respond constructively to this situation, the JADH Program committee does not prohibit it. However, at least at present, generative AI language tools will not be recognized as an author. Instead, please report the significant use of generative AI language tools, as described in the arXiv's policy.

https://blog.arxiv.org/2023/01/31/arxiv-announces-new-policy-on-chatgpt-...

After the conference:

JADH strongly encourages you to improve your presentations at this conference based on the discussions during your presentation and submit them to our open-access journal, the Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jjadh/list/-char/en).

Contact:

Please direct inquiries about any aspect of the conference to:

conf2024 [ at ] jadh.org

Program Committee:

  • Natsuko Yoshiga (Osaka University, Japan), Co-chair
  • Satoru Nakamura (University of Tokyo, Japan), Co-chair
  • Paul Arthur (Edith Cowan University, Australia)
  • Marcus Bingenheimer (Temple University, USA)
  • Elisa Beshero-Bondar (Penn State Erie, The Behrend College, USA)
  • James Cummings (Newcastle University, UK)
  • J. Stephen Downie (University of Illinois, USA)
  • Maciej Eder (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland)
  • Øyvind Eide (University of Cologne, Germany)
  • Makoto Goto (National Museum of Japanese History, Japan)
  • Yuta Hashimoto (National Museum of Japanese History, Japan)
  • Bor Hodošček (Osaka University, Japan)
  • JenJou Hung (Dharma Drum Institute of Liberal Arts, Taiwan)
  • Jieh Hsiang (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
  • Akihiro Kawase (Doshisha University, Japan)
  • Nobuhiko Kikuchi (National Institute of Japanese Literature, Japan)
  • Asanobu Kitamoto (ROIS-DS Center for Open Data in the Humanities / National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
  • Naoki Kokaze (Chiba University, Japan)
  • Chao-Lin Liu (National Chengchi University, Taiwan)
  • Yoko Mabuchi (Wayo Women's University, Japan)
  • Hajime Murai (Future University Hakodate, Japan)
  • Kiyonori Nagasaki (International Institute for Digital Humanities, Japan)
  • Chifumi Nishioka (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
  • Ikki Ohmukai (University of Tokyo, Japan)
  • Geoffrey Rockwell (University of Alberta, Canada)
  • Christof Schöch (Trier University, Germany)
  • Martina Scholger (University of Graz, Austria)
  • Masahiro Shimoda (Musashino University, Japan)
  • Raymond Siemens (University of Victoria, Canada)
  • Tomoji Tabata (Osaka University, Japan)
  • Ruck Thawonmas (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)
  • Toru Tomabechi (International Institute for Digital Humanities, Japan)
  • Ayaka Uesaka (Osaka Seikei University, Japan)
  • Raffaele Viglianti (University of Maryland, USA)
  • Christian Wittern (Kyoto University, Japan)
  • Taizo Yamada (University of Tokyo, Japan)
  • Hilofumi Yamamoto (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
  •  

『デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ』論文募集(2024年5月7日締切り)

作者adminweb

デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ(人文情報学)の査読付きオープンアクセス日本語論文誌『デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ』第4号の論文募集を行っております。

投稿規定は以下のURLにてご確認ください。

https://www.jadh.org/jjdh

投稿は以下のURLからお願いいたします。

https://journals.jadh.org/index.php/jjdh/login

締切りは2024年5月7日です。

論文誌のバックナンバーは以下のURLにてご覧ください。

https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jadh/-char/ja

ぜひともご投稿いただきますよう、よろしくお願いいたします。

  •  

CFP: JADH2021: “Digital Humanities and COVID-19”

作者adminweb

CFP: JADH2021: “Digital Humanities and COVID-19”

The deadline has been extended to 11:59 PM, June 21, 2021 (HAST).
Notification of acceptance of the submissions will also be delayed to July 21, 2021.

The Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (JADH) is pleased to announce its 11th annual conference, to be hosted virtually by the Historiographical Institute, The University of Tokyo on September 6-8, 2021, around 9am to 6pm in Japanese Standard Time.

We invite proposals on all aspects of Digital Humanities, and especially encourage papers treating topics that deal with practices that cross borders, for example, between academic fields, media, languages, cultures, organizations, and so on, as related to the field of Digital Humanities.

During the pandemic, researchers have also been affected in various aspects. However, the digital environment has been instrumental in alleviating some of the hardships. Overall the contribution to DH has been positive, since much of the digital research environment was in place before the pandemic. Moreover, DH-related research may help to improve this difficult situation. Therefore, we welcome presentations related to the theme of Digital Humanities and COVID-19. Although this is one suggested focus, we nonetheless welcome papers on a broad range of DH topics, detailed below.

Research issues, including data mining, information design and modeling, software studies, and humanities research enabled through the digital medium; computer-based research and computer applications in literary, linguistic, cultural, and historical studies, including electronic literature, public humanities, and interdisciplinary aspects of modern scholarship. Examples might include text analysis, corpora, corpus linguistics, language processing, language learning, and endangered languages; the digital arts, architecture, music, film, theater, new media and related areas; the creation and curation of humanities digital resources; the role of digital humanities in academic curricula; The range of topics covered by Digital Humanities can also be consulted in the journal Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (http://dsh.oxfordjournals.org/), Oxford University Press.
Abstracts submitted should be of 500-1000 words in length in English, including the title.

Please submit abstracts via the open conference system (link below) by 11:59 PM, June 7, 2021 (HAST).

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=jadh2021

Presenters will be notified of acceptance on July 7, 2021.

Type of proposals:

Poster presentations: Interactive poster session presentations may include work-in-progress on any of the topics described above as well as demonstrations of computer technology, software and digital projects.

Short papers: Short papers are allotted 10 minutes (plus 5 minutes for questions) and are suitable for describing work-in-progress and reporting on shorter experiments and software and tools in early stages of development.

Long papers: Long papers are allotted 20 minutes (plus 10 minutes for questions) and are intended for presenting substantial unpublished research and reporting on significant new digital resources or methodologies.

Panels: Panels (90 minutes) are comprised of either: (a) Three long papers on a joint theme. All abstracts should be submitted together with a statement, of approximately 500-1000 words, outlining the session topic and its relevance to current directions in the Digital Humanities; or (b) A panel of four to six speakers. The panel organizer should submit a 500-1000 words outline of the topic session and its relevance to current directions in the Digital Humanities as well as an indication from all speakers of their willingness to participate.

Contact

Please direct enquiries about any aspect of the conference to:

conf2021 [ at ] jadh.org

Program Committee:

Paul Arthur (Edith Cowan University, Australia)

Marcus Bingenheimer (Temple University, USA)

James Cummings (Newcastle University, UK)

J. Stephen Downie (University of Illinois, USA)

Øyvind Eide (University of Cologne, Germany)

Makoto Goto (National Museum of Japanese History, Japan)

Shoichiro Hara (Kyoto University, Japan)

Yuta Hashimoto (National Museum of Japanese History, Japan), Chair

Bor Hodošček (Osaka University, Japan)

JenJou Hung (Dharma Drum Institute of Liberal Arts, Taiwan)

Jieh Hsiang (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)

Akihiro Kawase (Doshisha University, Japan)

Nobuhiko Kikuchi (Kansai University, Japan)

Asanobu Kitamoto (ROIS-DS Center for Open Data in the Humanities / National Institute of Informatics, Japan)

Maciej Eder (Pedagogical University of Kraków, Poland)

Yoko Mabuchi (National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics, Japan)

A. Charles Muller (University of Tokyo, Japan)

Hajime Murai (Future University Hakodate, Japan)

Kiyonori Nagasaki (International Institute for Digital Humanities, Japan)

Satoru Nakamura (University of Tokyo, Japan)

Chifumi Nishioka (Kyoto University, Japan)

Ikki Ohmukai (University of Tokyo, Japan)

Geoffrey Rockwell (University of Alberta, Canada)

Martina Scholger (University of Graz, Austria)

Masahiro Shimoda (University of Tokyo, Japan)

Raymond Siemens (University of Victoria, Canada)

Tomoji Tabata (Osaka University, Japan)

Ruck Thawonmas (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)

Toru Tomabechi (International Institute for Digital Humanities, Japan)

Kathryn Tomasek (Wheaton College, USA)

Ayaka Uesaka (Osaka University, Japan)

Raffaele Viglianti (University of Maryland, USA)

Christian Wittern (Kyoto University, Japan)

Taizo Yamada (University of Tokyo, Japan)

Natsuko Yoshiga (Saga University, Japan)

  •  

Call for Papers: JADH2023

作者adminweb

JADH2023: “Possibilities for Data-Driven Humanities”

The Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (JADH) is pleased to announce its 12th annual conference, to be held virtually by the National Institute of Japanese Literature on September 20-22, 2023, around 9am to 6pm in Japanese standard time.

We invite proposals on all aspects of Digital Humanities, and especially encourage papers treating topics that deal with practices that cross borders, for example, between academic fields, media, languages, cultures, organizations, and so on, as related to the field of Digital Humanities.

The recent global spread of open science has led to data-driven science, and expectations are also growing for the humanities. Data-driven research in the humanities is still in its infancy, and in many fields, it is rather necessary to construct data for this purpose. Therefore, this conference welcomes a wide range of presentations not only on methods and results of data-driven research but also on data construction in anticipation of such research. Moreover, research topics related to the world's diverse practices in digital humanities are welcome, as in previous years.

Various research issues require attention, including data mining, information design and modeling, software studies, and humanities research enabled through the digital medium; computer-based research and computer applications in literary, linguistic, cultural, and historical studies, including electronic literature, public humanities, and interdisciplinary aspects of modern scholarship. Examples might include text analysis, corpora, corpus linguistics, language processing, language learning, and endangered languages; the digital arts, architecture, music, film, theater, new media and related areas; the creation and curation of humanities digital resources; the role of Digital Humanities in academic curricula; the range of topics covered by Digital Humanities can also be consulted in the journal Digital Scholarship in the Humanities (http://dsh.oxfordjournals.org/), Oxford University Press.
Abstracts submitted should be of 500-1000 words in length in English, including the title.

Please submit abstracts via the open conference system (link below) by 11:59 PM, May 7, 2023 (HAST).

https://www.conftool.net/jadh-2023/

Presenters will be notified of acceptance on May 29, 2023.

Type of proposals:

Interactive presentations: Interactive poster session presentations may include work-in-progress on any of the topics described above as well as demonstrations of computer technology, software, and digital projects.

Short papers: Short papers are allotted 10 minutes (plus 5 minutes for questions) and are suitable for describing work-in-progress and reporting on shorter experiments and software and tools in early stages of development.

Long papers: Long papers are allotted 20 minutes (plus 10 minutes for questions) and are intended for presenting substantial unpublished research and reporting on significant new digital resources or methodologies.

Panels: Panels (90 minutes) are comprised of either: (a) Three long papers on a joint theme. All abstracts should be submitted together with a statement, of approximately 500-1000 words, outlining the session topic and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities; or (b) A panel of four to six speakers. The panel organizer should submit a 500-1000 words outline of the topic session and its relevance to current directions in the digital humanities as well as an indication from all speakers of their willingness to participate.

Use of generative AI language tools:
Recently, while chatbots as a new text-generating tool are becoming widespread, various problems have been pointed out. Since the digital humanities field needs to respond constructively to this situation, the JADH Program committee does not prohibit it. However, at least at present, generative AI language tools should not be recognized as an author. Instead, please report the significant use of generative AI language tools, as described in the arXiv's policy.
https://blog.arxiv.org/2023/01/31/arxiv-announces-new-policy-on-chatgpt-...

After the conference:

JADH strongly encourages you to improve your presentations at this conference based on the discussions during your presentation and submit them to our open-access journal, the Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jjadh/list/-char/en).

Contact:

Please direct inquiries about any aspect of the conference to:

conf2023 [ at ] jadh.org

Program Committee:

Natsuko Yoshiga (Osaka University, Japan), Co-chair
Kiyonori Nagasaki (International Institute for Digital Humanities, Japan), Co-chair
Paul Arthur (Edith Cowan University, Australia)
Marcus Bingenheimer (Temple University, USA)
James Cummings (Newcastle University, UK)
J. Stephen Downie (University of Illinois, USA)
Maciej Eder (Pedagogical University of Kraków, Poland)
Øyvind Eide (University of Cologne, Germany)
Makoto Goto (National Museum of Japanese History, Japan)
Shoichiro Hara (Kyoto University, Japan)
Yuta Hashimoto (National Museum of Japanese History, Japan)
Bor Hodošček (Osaka University, Japan)
JenJou Hung (Dharma Drum Institute of Liberal Arts, Taiwan)
Jieh Hsiang (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
Akihiro Kawase (Doshisha University, Japan)
Nobuhiko Kikuchi (National Institute of Japanese Literature, Japan)
Asanobu Kitamoto (ROIS-DS Center for Open Data in the Humanities / National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
Naoki Kokaze (Chiba University, Japan)
Chao-Lin Liu (National Chengchi University, Taiwan)
Yoko Mabuchi (Wayo Women's University, Japan)
A. Charles Muller (Musashino University, Japan)
Hajime Murai (Future University Hakodate, Japan)
Chifumi Nishioka (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
Ikki Ohmukai (University of Tokyo, Japan)
Geoffrey Rockwell (University of Alberta, Canada)
Martina Scholger (University of Graz, Austria)
Masahiro Shimoda (Musashino University, Japan)
Raymond Siemens (University of Victoria, Canada)
Tomoji Tabata (Osaka University, Japan)
Ruck Thawonmas (Ritsumeikan University, Japan)
Toru Tomabechi (International Institute for Digital Humanities, Japan)
Kathryn Tomasek (Wheaton College, USA)
Ayaka Uesaka (Osaka Seikei University, Japan)
Raffaele Viglianti (University of Maryland, USA)
Christian Wittern (Kyoto University, Japan)
Taizo Yamada (University of Tokyo, Japan)
Hilofumi Yamamoto (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)

  •  

Journal of JADH Vol.6及び『デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ』第三号を刊行しました

作者adminweb

当学会の論文誌2誌を本日刊行いたしました。ぜひご覧ください。

Journal of Japanese Association for Digital Humanities, Vol.6
https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jjadh/list/-char/ja

『デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ』第三号
https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jadh/3/0/_contents/-char/ja

  •  

CFP Volume 7 JJADH

作者adminweb

The Journal of the Japanese Association for Digital Humanities (in English) is now inviting submissions for Volume 7 of the journal to be issued in October 2023.

The JJADH is a peer-review and open-access journal, online at:
https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jjadh/5/0/_contents/-char/en

To submit your paper, please access the online submission system at:
https://journals.jadh.org/index.php/jjadh/about/submissions

First please register with the journal by clicking the "register" link. Make sure to register as “Author." Once you have registered, you can submit your paper by clicking "New submission." Please read the instructions on the pages carefully. We ask that papers be submitted according to the guidelines and web-submission process stipulated.

The JJADH is not limited to Japanese studies. The editorial board encourages international submissions and will consider papers pertaining to DH on a broad range of disciplinary interests:

(1) Papers should be between 10 and 18 pages in length (4,000 to 8,000 words) A4 or letter, double-spaced, 12-point, Times New Roman.

(2) Please submit your paper (written in English) in MS-Word (*.doc, *.docx) or LibreOffice (*.odt) format.

(3) Because this journal is an online publication, you may include hyperlinks, images, graphics, and so forth, as necessary.

(4) For your references/bibliography, please follow the Chicago Manual of Style (CMS) guidelines (readily available online).

(5) Please also follow CMS guidelines for other aspects of prose styling, such as italicization of foreign words, monograph titles, and so forth.

(6) If you are not a native speaker of English, please have your paper proofread by a scholar who is a native speaker before submission.

(7) Except in cases where a scholar is invited to submit, papers will undergo a double-blind review by academic peers, with reader’s comments made available upon completion of the review.

Submissions will be accepted until February 1st, 2023.

JJADH Editorial Board

  • Thomas Dabbs (Aoyama Gakuin University) Editor in Chief
  • Christian Wittern (Kyoto University, Japan) Managing Editor
  • Kiyonori Nagasaki (International Institute for Digital Humanities, Japan) Technical Editor
  • Hilofumi Yamamoto (Tokyo Institute of Technology) Advisory Editor
  • Ikki Ohmukai (University of Tokyo)
  • A. Charles Muller (Musashino University)
  • Paul Arthur (University of Western Sydney, Australia)
  • Susan Brown (University of Guelph)
  • Bor Hodošček (Osaka University)
  • Asanobu Kitamoto (National Institute of Informatics)
  • Maki Miyake (Osaka University)
  • Hajime Murai (Future University Hakodate)
  • Yusuke Nakamura (University of Tokyo)
  • Geoffrey Rockwell (University of Alberta, Canada)
  • Ray Siemens (University of Victoria)
  •  

DH2022プレイベント SNS programming: Asian Diversity DHに5名を推薦しました

作者adminweb

DH2022実行委員会がDH2022のプレイベントとして実施しているSNS programming: Asian Diversity DHに、JADHから以下の5名の方々を推薦いたしました。

西岡千文
鹿内菜穂
村井源
李媛
中村覚

このプレイベントは、大会の趣旨である Responding to Asian Diversityに乗っ取り、世界各地で活躍する、アジアに関するDHに取り組む研究者をTwitter及びWeibo上でショートビデオで紹介するものであり、DH研究者の選定にあたっては、世界各地のDH学会からの推薦に基づいています。以下のURLでこのショートビデオ群をご覧いただけますので、この機会にぜひ世界のアジア系DH研究に触れてみてください。

Asian Diversity DH on Twitter

  •  

JADH SIGLITH第3回研究会「DHスタートアップ相談会」プログラム

作者adminweb

JADH SIGLITH第3回研究会「DHスタートアップ相談会」プログラム

日本デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ学会「人文学のための情報リテラシー」研究会(JADH SIG: Digital Literacy for the Humanities)では、下記の通り第3回研究会として「DHスタートアップ相談会」を開催いたします。

【会の趣旨】
 本会は、人文学諸分野におけるデジタル技術やデータサイエンス的知見の活用に取り組んでから日が浅く、またこのような研究手法に関する指導・教育環境に恵まれず、「アイデアは持ってるけどこれをどう研究発表に結びつけたらいいかわからない」「こういう研究発表を今度したいけどこの手の研究発表をしたことがないのでこれでいいかどうかわからない」とお困りの方を対象に、各々の発表内容に関連する分野で活躍する研究者からのアドバイスを得られる相談会です。
 本会におけるコメントややり取りの方向性としては、研究としての完成度を批判的に精査するというより、DH研究の種や芽を育てることを主たる目的とし、会全体で「DH研究としてどのように育てていくか」という観点での建設的コミュニケーションを取れたらと考えています。
 というのも、近年日本国内では、学部・大学院におけるデジタル・ヒューマニティーズの教育カリキュラムが少しずつ増えてきていますが、海外の状況と比べるとまだ充分とは言えません。また、海外ではサマースクールやオンライン学習教材が充実していることから、第二の研究キャリアとしてデジタル・ヒューマニティーズの分野に関心を持ったオーバードクターの研究者などの参入を支援する環境が整っています。日本国内ではこのような環境が充分に整っているとは言いがたい状況ですので、今回の「DHスタートアップ相談会」は、キャリアの如何を問わず、デジタル・ヒューマニティーズの世界に関心を持って歩み始めた、あるいは一歩を踏み出してみたい方々の手助けをする機会としたいと考えています。

【開催形式】
 基本的には、相談者とアドバイザーによるやり取りを中心としたクローズドな会、つまり少人数のゼミ形式にしたいと考えています。ただし、今後このような相談を持ちかけるかもしれない方は、事前申し込みのうえ聴講者として参加していただけます。
 聴講希望者は、次のGoogle Formからお申込みください。https://forms.gle/zaVW8hgPL5kn2K6Q8

【プログラム】
(1) 13:00~13:35
原実李(千葉大学大学院総合国際学位プログラム修士課程)
「オリンピックにおけるナショナリズムー東京2020大会の新聞報道に着目してー」
メインコメンテーター:大向一輝(東京大学)

(2) 13:35~14:10
澤田望(駒澤大学総合教育研究部)
「歴史新聞に掲載された地域・主題のテキストマイニングについて」
メインコメンテーター:村井源(公立はこだて未来大学)

小休止(5分)

(3) 14:15~14:50
相田愛子(日本学術振興会・金沢大学)
「経典と仏教文学のテキスト解析の進め方」
メインコメンテーター:山元啓史(東京工業大学)

(4) 14:50~15:25
小林洵也(千葉大学大学院人文公共学府)
「テキストマイニングの解釈主義的研究への応用」
メインコメンテーター:永崎研宣(人文情報学研究所)

(5) 15:25~16:00
出川英里(千葉大学人文公共学府博士後期課程)
「裁判判例の数量的分析について」
メインコメンテーター:田畑智司(大阪大学)

*問い合わせ
siglith@jadh.org

*開催事務局
小風尚樹(主査:千葉大学)
石田友梨(岡山大学)
大向一輝(東京大学)
喜多千草(京都大学)
田畑智司(大阪大学)
永崎研宣(人文情報学研究所)
間淵洋子(和洋女子大学)

  •  

JADH SIGLITH第3回研究会「DHスタートアップ相談会」開催のお知らせ

作者adminweb

日本デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ学会「人文学のための情報リテラシー」研究会(JADH SIG: Digital Literacy for the Humanities)では、下記の通り第3回研究会の開催を予定しています。

人文学の様々な分野におけるデジタル技術の活用についての研究構想を育てる機会をお探しの皆さま、ぜひご応募ください。

*日程

日時:2022年3月8日(火)13〜16時

申込締切:2022年2月25日(金)

相談資料事前送付締切:2022年3月4日(金曜日)

*対象

 人文学諸分野におけるデジタル技術やデータサイエンス的知見の活用に取り組んでから日が浅く、またこのような研究手法に関する指導・教育環境に恵まれず、「アイデアは持ってるけどこれをどう研究発表に結びつけたらいいかわからない」「こういう研究発表を今度したいけどこの手の研究発表をしたことがないのでこれでいいかどうかわからない」とお困りの方を対象に、各々の発表内容に関連する分野で活躍する研究者からのアドバイスを得られる相談会を実施したいと考えています。

 なお当会では、今回の相談会を踏まえて情報処理学会の分科会である「人文科学とコンピュータ研究会発表会」をはじめとする学会発表や、学位論文などにデジタル・ヒューマニティーズ的手法を導入したいと考えている方を支援することも視野に入れています。

*背景・ねらい

 近年、日本国内では、学部・大学院におけるデジタル・ヒューマニティーズの教育カリキュラムが少しずつ増えてきていますが、海外の状況と比べるとまだ充分とは言えません。また、海外ではサマースクールやオンライン学習教材が充実していることから、第二の研究キャリアとしてデジタル・ヒューマニティーズの分野に関心を持ったオーバードクターの研究者などの参入を支援する環境が整っています。日本国内ではこのような環境が充分に整っているとは言いがたい状況ですので、今回の「DHスタートアップ相談会」は、キャリアの如何を問わず、デジタル・ヒューマニティーズの世界に関心を持って歩み始めた、あるいは一歩を踏み出してみたい方々の手助けをする機会としたいと考えています。

*開催方法

 基本的には、相談者とアドバイザーによるやり取りを中心としたクローズドな会、つまり少人数のゼミ形式にしたいと考えています。ただし、今後このような相談を持ちかけるかもしれない方のために、希望者には聴講者として参加していただけるようにしたいと思います。

*研究会の形式

 6名程度の相談者によるZoomを用いた口頭でのオンラインプレゼンテーション10~15分程度と、これについての質疑応答・コメントを15~20分程度想定しています。相談者の人数によって、時間が前後する可能性があります。

*申し込み方法

次のGoogle Formからお申込みください。https://forms.gle/zaVW8hgPL5kn2K6Q8

お申込みの際、以下の情報を入力していただきます。

氏名、相談か聴講のどちらを希望するか、連絡先、所属、専門分野、相談内容のタイトル、相談内容の概要(200~400字程度)、デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ関連学会での発表経験の有無、DH的な研究を活かしたいと思っている機会の詳細

*申し込みにあたって

発表者の方には、日本デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ学会の会員として入会していただくようお願いいたします。

この会員資格を得るには、デジタル・ヒューマニティーズ国際学会連合(ADHO)の会員として加盟することが必要となり、これはDHの国際的な研究コミュニティへとご自身の研究活動の場を広げることを意味します。

学生会員として入会される際は、 https://academic.oup.com/dsh/subscribe のページで「Members - Joint membership of all Associations in the Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations」のStudent membership only (あるいはMembership only)を選んでください。(学生£15.00、一般£25.00)

本会員資格の取得に関する情報は、https://www.jadh.org/joininadhoj のページからご覧いただけます。

*問い合わせ

dilh@jadh.org

*開催事務局

小風尚樹(主査:千葉大学)

石田友梨(岡山大学)

大向一輝(東京大学)

喜多千草(京都大学)

田畑智司(大阪大学)

永崎研宣(人文情報学研究所)

間淵洋子(和洋女子大学)

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