OpenMethods

OpenMethods

HIGHLIGHTING DIGITAL HUMANITIES METHODS AND TOOLS

Menu
Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
  • Who we are
    • Editorial Team
    • Volunteer Editors
  • Join us
  • Submit a content
  • RSS feeds
  • Log in
  • Posted on September 29, 2017November 9, 2017
  • by Delphine Montoliu

Les sciences de l’information historique : l’apport des technologies sémantiques

https://openmethods.dariah.eu/2017/09/29/les-sciences-de-linformation-historique-lapport-des-technologies-semantiques-introduction-aux-humanites-numeriques/ OpenMethods introduction to: Les sciences de l’information historique : l’apport des technologies sémantiques 2017-09-29 14:49:10 Introduction: This post highlights digital methods and standards for an efficient analysis of historical data. Delphine Montoliu http://archinfo41.hypotheses.org/435 Blog post Analysis Capture Cluster Analysis Code Collaboration Collocation Analysis Commenting Community Building Creation Crowdsourcing Data Data Recognition Dissemination Enrichment French Information Retrieval Interpretation Language Link Linked open data Meta-Activities Metadata Methods Named Entity Recognition Pattern Recognition Programming Projects Relational Analysis Research Activities Research Objects Research Process Research Results Research Techniques Searching Standards Stilistic Analysis Storage Structural Analysis Tools Transcription Visualization Web development Writing via bookmarklet

Introduction by OpenMethods Editor (Delphine Montoliu): This post highlights digital methods and standards for an efficient analysis of historical data.

Les défis sémantiques dans les sciences de l’information historiques concernent principalement les problèmes de sources, de leurs relations, de l’analyse, de la présentation des données mais aussi de leurs visualisations.

Ainsi pour faire  face à ses défis sémantiques avec lesquels les sciences de l’information historique sont confrontées lors du traitement, du stockage et de la diffusion des données. Les technologies sémantiques  qui sont considérées un ensemble de technologies développé par le W3C (l’un des principaux organismes de normalisation du Web) visant à faciliter l’exploitation des données structurées, notamment en permettant leur interprétation par des machines tentent d’y apporter des solutions.

C’est dans cette perspective qu’on se demande qu’apportent les technologies du web dans la sémantisation des données en histoire? Quelles sont les technologies qui peuvent apporter des solutions aux défis sémantiques des sciences de l’information historiques?

 

Original publication date: 25/12/2013.

Source: Les sciences de l’information historique : l’apport des technologies sémantiques – Introduction aux humanités numériques

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
Posted in Analysis, Capture, Cluster Analysis, Code, Collaboration, Collocation Analysis, Commenting, Community Building, Creation, Crowdsourcing, Data, Data Recognition, Dissemination, Enrichment, French, Information Retrieval, Interpretation, Language, Languages, Link, Linked open data, Meta-Activities, Metadata, Methods, Named Entity Recognition, Pattern Recognition, Programming, Projects, Relational Analysis, Research Activities, Research Objects, Research Process, Research Results, Research Techniques, Searching, Standards, Stilistic Analysis, Storage, Structural Analysis, Tools, Transcription, Visualization, Web development, WritingTagged via bookmarklet

Post navigation

Prev John Coleman : « Mining a year of speech »
Next Scholarly editing around Europe

logo_isidoreIsidore suggestions

    Interested in blogging about your research? The Digital Humanities Tools and Methods blog is for you!

    In cooperation with

    OPERAS

    Categories

    Recent Posts

    • Collaborative Digital Projects in the Undergraduate Humanities Classroom: Case Studies with Timeline JS
    • Getting started with OpenRefine – Digital Humanities 201
    • Annotation Guidelines For narrative levels, time features, and subjective narration styles in fiction (SANTA 2).
    • GitHub – CateAgostini/IIIF
    • Topic-specific corpus building: A step towards a representative newspaper corpus on the topic of return migration using text mining methods – Journal of Digital History

    Archives

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
    OpenMethods © 2017-2018.
    All site content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a CC BY license. This is in line with DARIAH’s Open Access Policy
    Privacy Notice
    Hosted by – We use
    HaS received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 675570
    Bezel Theme by SimpleFreeThemes ⋅ Powered by WordPress