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Event
Cyberinfrastructure for Global Cultural Heritage

Dr. Gregory Crane

April 24, 2008 11:00 AM  to 
April 24, 2008 12:00 PM
Stafford I Room 110

CISE Distinguished Lecture

Thursday, April 24th, 2008 at 11:00am, Rm. 110 *

Cyberinfrastructure for Global Cultural Heritage

Dr. Gregory Crane

Tufts University

§§§

Abstract: Cultural heritage materials are traditionally accessible either to highly trained professionals or in the form of manually produced translations with hand-crafted background information.  The challenge today is to design fields that are accessible across barriers of language, culture and immediate intent:  we are beginning to design fields for translation, customization and personalization. This talk looks at the interaction between wholly automated and largely general systems and the knowledge structures on which particular domains depend.

On the one hand, we need to update our models of intellectual activity to keep pace the already present and rapidly emerging practices. At the same time, as we identify new services to support new activities, we need to develop methods whereby we can mine the machine actionable data from vast libraries of legacy print data available as page images and scalable accept user contributions of every type. One goal in the next five years is to have available for speakers of Arabic and Chinese the core data about Greco-Roman culture and then to make available corresponding materials about Chinese and Arabic culture to the English speaking public.  This involves a suite of data driven services that provide high performance results for particular domains.

 

§§§

Bio: Gregory Crane is Professor of Classics and Winnick Family Chair of Technology and Entrepreneurship at Tufts University. He is also the founder and director of the Perseus Project, which has been working on digital libraries and cyberinfrastructure for twenty years.  He is directing projects aimed at developing a coherent cyberinfrastructure for cultural heritage in general and for Greco-Roman culture in particular.

 

* If you would like to arrange a meeting with Dr. Crane, please contact Dawn Patterson (ext. 7097).

This event is part of Distinguished Lecture Series.

Meeting Type
Lecture

Contacts
Dawn Patterson, (703) 292-8910 dpatters@nsf.gov

NSF Related Organizations
National Science Foundation
Division of Computing and Communication Foundations

 



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National Science Foundation Computer & Information Science & Engineering (CISE)
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Last Updated:
June 5, 2008
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Last Updated: June 5, 2008