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Championing Open Research to Drive Cultural Transformation

Date
, 1.00-2.00pm
Category

Supported by Open Research Adviser Kikachukwu Oluonye from the Library, DoRIs are uniquely placed to advocate for open research within their disciplinary specialism and to help us understand discipline specific challenges and barriers. At this online event we will hear from Kikachukwu about progress since the launch, and from Dr Myles Gould and Dr Roger Beecham, DoRIs both based...

Workshop on AI and data driven methods for Health Challenges Invitation

Date
, 09.30-15.00
Category

Workshop for staff designed to foster collaboration and the development of interdisciplinary research ideas for external grant applications that address Health  Challenges. There are huge opportunities in developing and applying AI techniques to health challenges, ranging from using tools to analyse MRI images, applying physics-inspired machine learning to understand blood flow in the heart, through...

DCCH/PRiA Workshop: Using the Gale Digital Scholar Lab to enhance students’ research skills in AHC

Date
, 12.00-14.00
Category

Bringing digital humanities into the classroom is an exciting discipline-specific way to develop research skills and enhance digital literacy within the arts and humanities. This workshop will explore how to use textual analysis and data exploration in your teaching, through the Gale Digital Scholar Lab. You may already be familiar with the Gale online archives...

Hands-on workshop: How to study books with computer vision: a practical introduction

Date
, 11.00-13.00
Category

Staff are warmly invited to a hands-on workshop on computer vision, hosted as part of the School of English 'Digital Horizons in English Studies' seminar series, taking place on 26 February 11am-1pm. Giles Bergel (Senior Researcher in Digital Humanities, University of Oxford): 'How to study books with computer vision: a practical introduction' Computer vision — or the...

Reconstructing the Legacies of Colonial Detention through Co-Creation: Digital Heritage, Memory, and the Mau Mau Conflict, 1952-1960

Date
, 13.00-14.30
Category

This talk by Dr Bethany Rebisz examines the legacies of colonial detention in Kenya and considers the adaptive digital heritage practices used by the Museum of British Colonialism (MBC) to hold space for the individual experiences of survivors. The histories of British atrocities committed in colonial Kenya during its Emergency period have been contested, both...