Latest Updates
Startwords Issue 3, “Parrots,” features three leading digital humanities researchers discussing the implications of “Stochastic Parrots” for humanities research employing NLP methods.
Congratulations to recent Ph.D. alums Lizabel Mónica *22 (Spanish and Portuguese) and Kristen Starkowski *21 (English)!
The Big Picture Alliance released a short documentary on PCW’s work installing community-owned and -operated mesh networks in Philadelphia neighborhoods.
Ines Montani, co-founder and CEO of Explosion AI, spoke at the New Languages for NLP: Building Linguistic Diversity in the Digital Humanities Conference in May.
Jessica’s thesis analyzed the complicated relationship between the McAlester Army Ammunition Plant (McAAP) in McAlester, Oklahoma, and the community members in McAlester.
Ilia Curto Pelle ’22 presents the main highlights and conclusions from the FLAME Project’s March conference, “Networks in Transition: Monetary Exchange from Antiquity to the Middle Ages.”
Team members and friends of the Princeton Geniza Project recently gathered to recognize the team’s accomplishments.
Data Fellows learn about the analytical and technological practices of working with humanities data.
The new collaboration is intended to support scholars interested in learning the analytical and technological practices of working with humanities data that aligns with the mission of Princeton’s Seeger Center.
Jessica Lambert ’22 won this year’s prize, with Charlotte Root ’22 earning an honorable mention.
Jeffrey Himpele (Anthropology) and Lara Buchak (Philosophy) will collaborate with the CDH on projects examining Princeton’s Lenapehoking history and risk and game theory, respectively.
The Working Group connects students and researchers from a variety of interests and disciplines, with the goal of exploring research questions and case studies in machine learning applied to the humanities.