I’d like to propose a session on exploratory data analysis. While it’s also useful to consider “confirmatory” analysis and visualization when making an argument, I’m interested in the messier, earlier stages of research. The first thing we might do when getting a new text, or corpus, or dataset is to graph/visualize it, map it, cluster it, and so on. What then? We might do a close reading of some of the intriguing passages or concepts turned up by the initial phase. But how can we redo our analysis and visualization in light of this close reading? This isn’t a process that I think any field, in the humanities or social or natural sciences, does very well at teaching. Could digital humanities perhaps become a leading field in practicing — and teaching — this cycle of playing with and remolding data and models?
THATCamp 2012 in a Nutshell
THATCamp New England is an unconference that brings together scholars working in digital humanities. The 2012 meeting will be held at Brown University. The main unconference will be held on Saturday, October 20, 2012. Workshops will be held the Friday before, October 19.-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
- Jon Hazell on Ethics of Data Visualization
- Ben Brumfield on a product from the undergrad curriculum workshop!
- Building a Professional Persona Online « On public humanities on Workshop on building an online professional persona
- Jadrian on Notes from “Regular Expressions, Text Processing, and Web Scraping” Workshop
- James on Lightning Talks (Dork Shorts)
Categories
This would be a fascinating session. I’ve been exploring the new Paper Machines plugin for Zotero – it gives you some wonderful quick visualizations of data based on your collected documents, or data available from JSTOR. But what to do with it once you’ve got the visualization? I think it’s an area where traditional knowledge and digital skills might make for a very useful synergy. Like you say, something that’s not much taught.
This is a great proposal. I’ve encountered this situation in my own research, and the process in transitioning from exploratory analysis to an appropriate theoretical framework and structure for the final analysis has involved a lot of blindly feeling my way towards that end result.
Pingback: Network Analysis in the Humanities: New Kinds of Networks (or Analysis)? | THATCamp New England 2012
I’m really interested in this as well as the session Ryan Cordell proposed.
Count me in.