Abstract is missing.
- To Hold Up a Mirror: Preservation and Interpretation of Performance in a Digital AgeCharles J. Henry. 7 [doi]
- Humanities Computing in an Age of Social ChangeJoseph Raben. 8 [doi]
- Present, Not Voting: Digital Humanities in the PanopticonMelissa Terras. 9-12 [doi]
- Vanishing Point(s) and CommunionMichael Takeo Magruder, Hugh Denard. 13-16 [doi]
- The Embroidered Digital Commons: RescensionEle Carpenter. 17-20 [doi]
- Access to the Grid: Interfacing the Humanities with Grid TechnologiesStuart Dunn. 21
- Content, Compliance, Collaboration and Complexity: Creating and Sustaining InformationJoanne Evans, Nikki Henningham, Helen Morgan. 22
- Text Mining in the Digital HumanitiesGerhard Heyer, Marco Büchler, Thomas Eckart, Charlotte Schubert. 23-24
- Introduction to Text Analysis Using JiTR and VoyeurStéfan Sinclair, Geoffrey Rockwell. 25
- Designing a Digital Humanities LabAngela Veomett. 26
- Peer Reviewing Digital Archives: the NINES modelDana Wheeles, Laura Mandell. 27-30
- Digital Literacy for the Dumbest Generation - Digital Humanities Programs 2010Tanya E. Clement, Fotis Jannidis, Willard McCarty. 31-36 [doi]
- Computational approaches to textual variation in medieval literatureKarina van Dalen-Oskam, Jacob Thaisen, Mike Kestemont. 37-43 [doi]
- Building the Humanities Lab: Scholarly Practices in Virtual Research EnvironmentsCharles van den Heuvel, Smiljana Antonijevic, Tobias Blanke, David J. Bodenhamer, Fotis Jannidis, Bethany Nowviskie, Geoffrey Rockwell, Joris van Zundert. 44-45 [doi]
- Wargames in a Digital AgeMatthew Kirschenbaum, Patrick Juola, Philip Sabin. 46-51 [doi]
- Scanning Between the Lines: The Search for the Semantic StoryK. Faith Lawrence, Paolo Battino, Paul Rissen, Michael O. Jewell, Tarcisio Lancioni. 52-60 [doi]
- Standards, Specifications, and Paradigms for Customized Video PlaybackJarom McDonald, Alan K. Melby, Harold Hendricks. 61-67 [doi]
- The Origins and Current State of Digitization of Humanities in JapanA. Charles Muller, Kozaburo Hachimura, Shoichiro Hara, Toshinobu Ogiso, Mitsuru Aida, Koichi Yasuoka, Ryo Akama, Masahiro Shimoda, Tomoji Tabata, Kiyonori Nagasaki. 68-70 [doi]
- Born Digital: The 21st Century Archive in Practice and TheoryGabriela Redwine, Matthew Kirschenbaum, Michael Olson, Erika L. Farr. 71-75 [doi]
- Networks of Stories, Structures and Digital HumanitiesAlkim Almila Akdag Salah, Wouter de Nooy, Zoe Borovsky. 76-81 [doi]
- Understanding the 'Capacity' of the Digital Humanities: The Canadian Experience, GeneralisedRay Siemens, Michael Eberle-Sinatra, Lynne Siemens, Stéfan Sinclair, Susan Brown, Meagan Timney, Geoffrey Rockwell. 82-83 [doi]
- Coalition of Humanities and Arts Infrastructures and Networks - CHAINMartin Wynne, Sheila Anderson, Neil Fraistat, Chad Kainz, Steven Krauwer, David Robey, Harold Short. 84-86 [doi]
- Character Encoding and Digital Humanities in 2010 - An Insider's ViewDeborah Anderson. 87-88 [doi]
- Semantic Cartography: Using RDF/OWL to Build Adaptable Tools for Text ExplorationAndrew Thomas Ashton. 89-91 [doi]
- Using Wikipedia to Enable Entity Retrieval and Visualization Concerning the Intellectual/Cultural HeritageSofia J. Athenikos. 92-93 [doi]
- Mapping the World of an Ancient Greek Historian: The HESTIA ProjectElton T. E. Barker, Chris Pelling, Stefan Bouzarovski, Leif Isaksen. 94-97 [doi]
- TEI P5 as a Text Encoding Standard for Multilevel Corpus AnnotationPiotr Banski, Adam Przepiórkowski. 98-99 [doi]
- Developing a Collaborative Online Environment for History - the Experience of British History OnlineJonathan Blaney. 100 [doi]
- From Codework to Working Code: A Programmer's Approach to Digital LiteracyJohn Bork. 101-102 [doi]
- Non-traditional Prosodic Features for Automated Phrase-Break PredictionClaire Brierley, Eric Atwell. 103-104 [doi]
- How Do You Visualize a Million Links?Susan Brown, Jeffery Antoniuk, Michael Bauer, Jennifer Berberich, Milena Radzikowska, Stan Ruecker, Terence Yung. 105-107 [doi]
- Digital Libraries of Scholarly EditionsGeorge Buchanan, Kirsti Bohata. 108-109 [doi]
- Digital Mediation of Modernist Literary Texts and their DocumentsMark Byron. 110-112 [doi]
- Detection of Citations and Textual Reuse on Ancient Greek Texts and its Applications in the Classical Studies: eAQUA ProjectMarco Büchler, Annette Geßner, Gerhard Heyer, Thomas Eckart. 113-114 [doi]
- No Representation Without Taxonomies: Specifying Senses of Key Terms in Digital HumanitiesPaul Caton. 115-117 [doi]
- Modes of Seeing: Case Studies on the Use of Digitized Photographic ArchivesPaul Conway. 118-119 [doi]
- Digital Humanities Internships: Creating a Model iSchool-Digital Humanities Center PartnershipPaul Conway, Neil Fraistat, Patricia Galloway, Kari Kraus, Dean Rehberger, Katherine L. Walter. 120-122 [doi]
- Authorship Discontinuities of El Ingenioso Hidalgo don Quijote de la Mancha as detected by Mixture-of-ExpertsChristopher Coufal, Patrick Juola. 123 [doi]
- Entropy and Divergence in a Modern Fiction CorpusHugh Craig. 124-125 [doi]
- Objective Detection of Plautus' Rules by Computer SupportMarcus Deufert, Judith Blumenstein, Andreas Trebesius, Stefan Beyer, Marco Büchler. 126-127 [doi]
- The ecology of longevity: the relevance of evolutionary theory for digital preservationPeter Doorn, Dirk Roorda. 128-129 [doi]
- Joanna Baillie's : from Hypermedia Edition to Resonant ResponsesMichael Eberle-Sinatra, Tom C. Crochunis, Jon Sachs. 130-131 [doi]
- Does Size Matter? Authorship Attribution, Small Samples, Big ProblemMaciej Eder. 132-134 [doi]
- Finding Stories in the Archive through Paragraph AlignmentMaria Esteva, Weijia Xu. 135-137 [doi]
- Naming the unnamed, speaking the unspoken, depicting the undepicted: storyJoanne Evans, Helen Morgan, Nikki Henningham. 138-139 [doi]
- The Social Lives of Books: Mapping the Ideational Networks of Toni MorrisonEdward Finn. 140-142 [doi]
- Codifica digitale e semiotica della cultura: un esperimentoDomenico Fiormonte, Laura Guadalupi. 143-145 [doi]
- Open vs. Closed: Changing the Culture of Peer ReviewKathleen Fitzpatrick. 146-147 [doi]
- Using ODD for Multi-purpose TEI DocumentationJulia Flanders, Syd Bauman. 148-149 [doi]
- Xiakou: A Case Study in Digital EthnographyJohn Flower, Pamela Leonard, Worthy Martin. 150-152 [doi]
- Challenges of Linking Digital Heritage Scientific Data with Scholarly Research: From Navigation to PoliticsFenella G. France, Michael B. Toth, Eric F. Hansen. 153-155 [doi]
- Building Dynamic Image Collections from InternetLiuliu Fu, Kurt Maly, Harris Wu, Mohammad Zubair. 156-158 [doi]
- GIS, Texts and Images: New approaches to landscape appreciation in the Lake DistrictIan N. Gregory. 159 [doi]
- Capturing Visitor Experiences for Study and PreservationGeorgina Guy, Stuart Dunn, Nicolas Gold. 160-162 [doi]
- The Diary of a Public Man: A Case Study in Traditional and Non-Traditional Authorship AttributionDavid I. Holmes, Daniel W. Crofts. 163-164 [doi]
- Using the Universal Similarity Metric to Map Correspondences between WitnessesMartin Holmes. 165-167 [doi]
- Teasing Out Authorship and Style with T-tests and ZetaDavid L. Hoover. 168-170 [doi]
- A New Digital Method for a New Literary Problem: A Proposed Methodology for Briding the "Generalist" - "Specialist" Divide in the Study of World LiteratureSonia Howell, John G. Keating, Margaret Kelleher. 171-173 [doi]
- "Litmap": Networked NarrativesBarbara Hui. 174 [doi]
- The Open Annotation Collaboration: A Data Model to Support Sharing and Interoperability of Scholarly AnnotationsJane Hunter, Timothy W. Cole, Robert Sanderson, Herbert Van de Sompel. 175-177 [doi]
- A corpus approach to cultural keywords: a critical corpus-based analysis of ideology in the Blair years (1998-2007) through print news reportingLesley Jeffries, Brian David Walker. 178-180 [doi]
- The Modern Art Iraq Archive (MAIA): Web tools for Documenting, Sharing and Enriching Iraqi Artistic ExpressionsSarah Whitcher Kansa, Nada Shabout, Saleem Al-Bahloly. 181-183 [doi]
- A Data Model for Digital Musicology and its Current State - The Music Encoding InitiativeJohannes Kepper. 184 [doi]
- From Text to Image to Analysis: Visualization of Chinese Buddhist CanonLewis R. Lancaster. 185-186 [doi]
- Crossing the Boundary: Exploring the Educational Potential of Social Networking SitesAnouk Lang. 187-189 [doi]
- Queste del Saint Graal: Textometry Platform on the Service of a Scholarly EditionAlexei Lavrentiev, Serge Heiden, Adrien Yepdieu. 190-191 [doi]
- The Graceful Degradation Survey: Managing Digital Humanities Projects Through Times of Transition and DeclineBethany Nowviskie, Dot Porter. 192-193 [doi]
- LAP, LICHEN, and DASS - Experiences combining data and toolsLisa Lena Opas-Hänninen, Ilkka Juuso, William A. Kretzschmar Jr., Tapio Seppänen. 194-195 [doi]
- Re-linking a Dictionary Universe or the Meta-dictionary Ten Years LaterChristian-Emil Ore, Espen S. Ore. 196-198 [doi]
- Digital Resources for Art-Historical Research: Critical ApproachNuria Rodríguez-Ortega. 199-201 [doi]
- Towards Hermeneutic Markup: An architectural outlineWendell Piez. 202-205 [doi]
- Works, Documents, Texts and Related Resources for EveryonePeter Robinson 0003, Federico Meschini. 206-207 [doi]
- A Day in the Life of Digital HumanitiesGeoffrey Rockwell, Stan Ruecker, Peter Organisciak, Megan Meredith-Lobay, Kamal Ranaweera, Stéfan Sinclair. 208-210 [doi]
- Letters, Ideas and Information Technology: Using digital corpora of letters to disclose the circulation of knowledge in the 17th centuryDirk Roorda, Erik-Jan Bos, Charles van den Heuvel. 211-213 [doi]
- Pointless Babble or Enabled Backchannel: Conference Use of Twitter by Digital HumanistsClaire Ross, Melissa Terras, Claire Warwick, Anne Welsh. 214-216 [doi]
- The State of Non-Traditional Authorship Attribution Studies - 2010: Some Problems and SolutionsJoseph Rudman. 217-218 [doi]
- Deeper Delta Across Genres and Languages: Do We Really Need the Most Frequent Words?Jan Rybicki, Maciej Eder. 219-224 [doi]
- Reading Darwin Between the Lines: A Computer-Assisted Analysis of the Concept of Evolution inMaxime B. Sainte-Marie, Jean Guy Meunier, Nicolas Payette, Jean-François Chartier. 225-227 [doi]
- The TEI's Extramural Journal Project: Exploring New Digital Environments and Defining a New Genre in Academic PublishingStephanie A. Schlitz. 228-229 [doi]
- The Specimen Case and the Garden: Preserving Complex Digital Objects, Sustaining Digital ProjectsMelanie Schlosser, H. Lewis Ulman. 230-231 [doi]
- A Tale of Two Cities: Implications of the Similarities and Differences in Collaborative Approaches within the Digital Libraries and Digital Humanities CommunitiesLynne Siemens, Richard Cunningham, Wendy Duff, Claire Warwick. 232-234 [doi]
- Unfolding History with the Help of the GIS Technology: a Scholar-Librarian Quest for Creating Digital CollectionsNatasha Smith, Robert C. Allen, Anne Whisnant, Kevin Eckhardt, Elise Moore. 235-237 [doi]
- WW1 and WW2 on a Specialist E-forum. Applying Corpus Tools to the Study of Evaluative LanguageMalgorzata Sokól. 238 [doi]
- Visualization and Analysis of Visiting Styles in 3D Virtual MuseumsKingkarn Sookhanaphibarn, Ruck Thawonmas. 239-243 [doi]
- Two representations of the semantics of TEI LiteC. M. Sperberg-McQueen, Yves Marcoux, Claus Huitfeldt. 244-245 [doi]
- Thinking Archivally: Search and Metadata as Building Blocks for a New Digital HistoriographyJoshua Sternfeld. 246-248 [doi]
- e-Vocative Cases: Digitality and Direct AddressLisa Swanstrom. 249-250 [doi]
- Digitizing the Act of Papyrological Interpretation: Negotiating Spurious Exactitude and Genuine UncertaintySégolène M. Tarte. 251-253 [doi]
- Reimagining the Dictionary, or Why Lexicography Needs Digital HumanitiesToma Tasovac. 254-256 [doi]
- Contexts, Narratives, and Interactive Visual Analysis of Names in the Japanese Hyohanki DiaryAlejandro Toledo, Ruck Thawonmas. 257-259 [doi]
- "Quivering Web of Living Thought": Mapping the Conceptual Networks of Swinburne'sJohn A. Walsh, Pin Sym Foong, Kshitiz Anand, Vignesh Ramesh. 260-261 [doi]
- "It's Volatile": Standards-Based Research & Research-Based Standards DevelopmentJohn A. Walsh, Wally Hooper. 262-263 [doi]
- Quelques réflexions sur l'effet propédeutique des catalogues des collections des musées en ligneCorinne Welger-Barboza. 264-266 [doi]
- "Any more Bids?": Automatic Processing and Segmentation of Auction CatalogsKris West, Clare Llewellyn, John Burns. 267-270 [doi]
- Mandoku - An Incubator for Premodern Chinese Texts - or How to Get the Text We Want: An Inquiry into the Ideal WorkflowChristian Wittern. 271-272 [doi]
- Towards a Computational Narration of Inner WorldJichen Zhu. 273-278 [doi]
- An Approach to Ancient-to-modern and Cross-script Information Access for Traditional Mongolian Historical CollectionsBiligsaikhan Batjargal, Garmaabazar Khaltarkhuu, Fuminori Kimura, Akira Maeda. 279-281 [doi]
- A Digital Archive of Buddhist Temple GazetteersMarcus Bingenheimer, Jen-Jou Hung. 282-283 [doi]
- Preparing the DARIAH e-InfrastructureTobias Blanke, Eric Haswell. 284 [doi]
- Cultures of Knowledge: An Intellectual Geography of the Seventeenth-Century Republic LettersJames Brown, Howard Hotson, Neil Jefferies. 285-286 [doi]
- Supporting User Search for Discovering Collections of InterestGeorge Buchanan, Helen Dodd. 287-289 [doi]
- An Inter-Disciplinary Approach to Web Programming: A Collaboration Between the University Archives and the Department of Computer ScienceJanet Marie Bunde, Deena Engel. 290-291 [doi]
- Citation Rhetoric ExaminedTeresa Dobson, Michael Eberle-Sinatra, Stan Ruecker, Shannon Lucky. 292-293 [doi]
- Evidence of Intertextuality: Investigating Paul the Deacon'sChristopher W. Forstall, Sarah L. Jacobson, Walter J. Scheirer. 294-295 [doi]
- Historical Interpretation through Multiple Markup: The Case of Horatio Nelson Taft's Diary, 1861-62Susan Garfinkel, Jurretta Jordan Heckscher. 296-298 [doi]
- Diple, modular methodology and tools for heterogeneous TEI corporaFrédéric Glorieux, Olivier Canteaut, Vincent Jolivet. 299-300 [doi]
- A New Spatial Analysis of the Early Chesapeake ArchitectureWayne Graham. 301-302 [doi]
- The Importance of Pedagogy: Towards a Companion to Teaching Digital HumanitiesBrett D. Hirsch, Meagan Timney. 303 [doi]
- A Bilingual Digital Edition of Trinity College Cambridge MS O.1.77Alpo Honkapohja. 304-305 [doi]
- The Craig Zeta SpreadsheetDavid L. Hoover. 306-308 [doi]
- The Dickens Lexicon and its Practical Use for Linguistic ResearchMasahiro Hori, Osamu Imahayashi, Tomoji Tabata, Miyuki Nishio. 309-310 [doi]
- Dingler-Online - The Digitized "Polytechnisches Journal" on Goobi Digitization SuiteMarius Hug, Christian Kassung, Sebastian Meyer. 311-312 [doi]
- The MLCD Overlap Corpus (MOC)Claus Huitfeldt, C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, Yves Marcoux. 313-316 [doi]
- Creative Engagement with Creative Works: a New Paradigm for CollaborationSteven E. Jones, Peter Shillingsburg, George K. Thiruvathukal. 317-318 [doi]
- Distant Reading and Mapping Genre Space via Conjecture-based Distance MeasuresPatrick Juola. 319 [doi]
- Psycholinguistically Plausible Events and Authorship AttributionPatrick Juola. 320 [doi]
- National Digital Library of Finland: Putting the Resources of Culture, Science and Teaching at Everyone's FingertipsHeli Kautonen, Tapani Sainio, Mikael Vakkari. 321-323 [doi]
- Towards Digital Built Environment Studies: An Interface Design for the Study of Medieval DelhiHussein Keshani. 324-326 [doi]
- Propp Revisited: Integration of Linguistic Markup into Structured Content Descriptors of TalesPiroska Lendvai, Thierry Declerck, Sándor Darányi, Scott Malec. 327-330 [doi]
- Extracting domain knowledge from tables of contentsHarald Lüngen, Henning Lobin. 331-334 [doi]
- Museums of the virtual futureMarie-Madeleine Martinet, Liliane Gallet-Blanchard. 335-336 [doi]
- Discursive Metadata and Controlled VocabulariesElli Mylonas, Heidi Wendts, John Bodel. 337-338 [doi]
- The Digital Ark: From Taxonomy to Ontology in 17th-century Collections of CuriositiesBrent Nelson. 339-340 [doi]
- "Inventing the Map: " from 19th-century Pedagogical Practice to 21st-century Geospatial ScholarshipBethany Nowviskie. 341-343 [doi]
- An Open Source Toolkit for Flexible Browsing of Historical Maps on the WebShin Ohno, Shinya Saito, Mitsuyuki Inaba. 344-346 [doi]
- Text-Image linking of Japanese historical documents: Sharing and exchanging data by using text-embedded image fileTakaaki Okamoto. 347-349 [doi]
- Knowledge and Conservation - Creating the Digital Library of New Hispanic ThoughtErnesto Priani, Isabel Galina, Alí Martínez, Guillermo Chávez. 350-352 [doi]
- Digital Forensics, Textual Criticism, and the Born Digital MusicalDoug Reside. 353 [doi]
- Literary Theory and Theatre Practice: A Comparative Study of Watching the Script and the Simulated Environment for TheatreJennifer Roberts-Smith, Teresa Dobson, Sandra Gabriele, Stan Ruecker, Stéfan Sinclair, Matthew Bouchard, Shawn DeSouza-Coelho, Annemarie Kong, David Lam, Omar Rodriguez-Arenas, Karen Taylor. 354-355 [doi]
- The Person Data RepositoryTorsten Roeder. 356-359 [doi]
- Structured and Unstructured: Extracting Information from Classics Scholarly TextsMatteo Romanello. 360-362 [doi]
- Original, Translation, Inflation. Are All Translations Longer than Their Originals?Jan Rybicki. 363-364 [doi]
- A Platform for Cultural Information Visualization Using Schematic Expressions of CubeShinya Saito, Shin Ohno, Mitsuyuki Inaba. 365-367 [doi]
- Generation of Emotional Dance Motion for Virtual Dance Collaboration SystemSeiya Tsuruta, Woong Choi, Kozaburo Hachimura. 368-371 [doi]
- "You don't have to be famous for your life to be history": The Dusenbery Journal and img2xmlNatasha Smith, Hugh Cayless. 372 [doi]
- Delivering virtual reality: a proposal for facilitating pedagogical use of three-dimensional computer models of historic urban environmentsLisa M. Snyder, Scott Friedman. 373-376 [doi]
- Digitizing Ephemera and Parsing an 1862 European ItineraryKathryn Tomasek, Zephorene L. Stickney. 377-379 [doi]
- Critical Editing of Music in the Digital Medium: an Experiment in MEIRaffaele Viglianti. 380-382 [doi]
- LogiLogi: The Quest for Critical MassWybo Wiersma. 383-385 [doi]
- Software Demonstration, "Emergent Time" timeline toolChristopher York, Whitney Anne Trettien. 386 [doi]
- Putting Edmonton on the (Google) MapHeather Zwicker, Maureen Engel. 387-389 [doi]
- Text Encoding and Ontology - Enlarging an Ontology by Semi-Automatic Generated InstancesAmélie Zöllner-Weber. 390-391 [doi]