Scholars, librarians, archivists, graduate students and others gathered at Rice University’s BioScience Research Collaborative on September 22-23, 2016 for the fifth annual Digital Frontiers conference. Rice was well-represented by a range of presentations and posters, including:
- Don Johnson, “Quantifying Artist Canvas with Digital Signal Processing Tools“
- Farès el-Dahdah and Alida C. Metcalf, “imagineRio: A Diachronic Atlas of the Social and Architectural Evolution of Rio de Janeiro”
- Dara Flinn, “Recital Preservation: before they fade away”
- Scott Carlson, “Grateful Data: Digital Humanities, Data Cleaning, and the Grateful Dead”
- Kirsten Ostherr, “Digital Medical Humanities: An Applied Media Studies Community of Practice”
- Anne S. Chao, “Gephi visualization and text-mining with R in the study of Chen Duxiu, a Chinese political and cultural iconoclast”
- John North Hopkins, “Digital Inputs, Cultural Outputs: Collaborative, Online Tools for Education, Research and Publication in the History of Art and Cultural Heritage Preservation”
- Sean Morey Smith, “Digitizing Directories: Lessons Learned from Digitizing Historical Directories of Physicians“
- S. Wright Kennedy, “Project Management and Digital Workflows for Big-Data Humanities Projects”
- John Connor Mulligan, “Digital humanities and the history of printing”
- Ying Jin, “Integrating databases with physical objects”
- Matthew Wettergreen, “Media fabrication and experiential learning”
- Benjamin Rasich on “Electronic Vesalius”
- Brian Riedel and John Mulligan (with co-panelists Larry Criscione, Judy Reeves and Jeanette Sewell), “Real Talk: Connecting Classrooms and Public Archives”
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