Mind Technologies: Humanities Computing and the Canadian Academic Community

Front Cover
Raymond George Siemens, David Moorman
University of Calgary Press, 2006 - 317 pages
In recent years, the application of computing technology to the arts and humanities has been a topic of increased focus in the post-secondary environment. With growing understanding of how these applications can serve the ongoing mission of humanities research, teaching, and training, technology is playing a larger role than ever before in these disciplines. Arising in part from a joint venture between the Consortium for Computers in the Humanities / Consortium pour ordinateurs en sciences humaines (COCH/COSH; now SDH/SEMI, the Society for Digital Humanities / Soci t pour l' tude des m dias interactifs) and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), Mind Technologies: Humanities Computing and the Canadian Academic Community is the first volume to broadly document the internationally significant work of the Canadian academic community in the area of humanities computing. With Contributions By: Michael Best John Bonnett Susan Brown Alan Burk Terry Buttler Lisa Charlong James Chartrand Charles Clarke Patricia Clements Renee Elio Natasha Flora Paul Fortier Scott Gerrity Robert Good Sean Gouglas Nicholas Griffin Isobel Grundy Ian Lancashire Peter Liddell Karen McCloskey Murray McGillivray Andrew Mactavish France Martineau David Moorman Aimee Morrison Stephen Reimer Geoffrey Rockwell Ray Siemens Stefan Sinclair David Strangway Elaine Toms Christian Vandendorpe Russon Wooldridge
 

Contents

Papers
1
Building a Portal for Text Analysis Geoffrey Rockwell
285
Contributors
301
Index
307
Back Cover
319
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

David Moorman is a Senior Policy Advisor with the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. His responsibilities include developing policies and support programs for research infrastructure. Dr. Moorman holds a PhD in History from the University of Ottawa.

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