Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 14, No. 352. Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London <http://www.princeton.edu/~mccarty/humanist/> <http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/> [1] From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org> (144) Subject: Funding (NSF): Last Humanities DLI-2 projects announced; new NSF program welcomes "computational humanities" [2] From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org> (71) Subject: Funding (NEH/NEA): Budgets Increased (NHA Release) --[1]------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Oct 2000 12:08:26 +0100 From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org> Subject: Funding (NSF): Last Humanities DLI-2 projects announced; new NSF program welcomes "computational humanities" NINCH ANNOUNCEMENT News on Networking Cultural Heritage Resources from across the Community October 13, 2000 NEH & NSF ANNOUNCE DLI-2 PHASE TWO RECIPIENTS <http://www.dli2.nsf.gov/projects.html>http://www.dli2.nsf.gov/projects.html NEW NSF PROGRAM (INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH) WELCOMES HUMANITIES PROPOSALS <http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2000/nsf00126/nsf00126.htm>http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2000/nsf00126/nsf00126.htm http://www.itr.nsf.gov/ The last of the humanities-related DLI-2 funded projects have been announced by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Science Foundation. More than $4.8-million in grants for five new information-technology projects was awarded, providing technological solutions to research problems in the humanities. As the DLI-2 funding project has closed "computational humanities" applications are being welcomed in the second year of the NSF's Information Technology Research initiative: see <http://www.itr.nsf.gov/>http://www.itr.nsf.gov/ for information on the initiative. $192 million has been requested for ITR in FY01. At the recent NINCH "Building Blocks" workshop, the NSF's Michael Lesk encouraged humanities scholars and librarians to apply with projects that demonstrate that humanities research poses challenges to computer science in a way that both the humanities and the computer science/information technology fields benefit. As examples of technical limits exposed by humanities research projects, he cited multilingual searching and presentation; OCR of pre-20th-century printing; the fusion of geographic, numeric, image and text information; and inter-institutional cooperation on sophisticated electronic projects. David Green =========== Here are the five projects recently funded by the DLI-2, with the abstracts printed below. Indiana University at Bloomington, Digital Music Library, $3,056,913, Michael McRobbie. <https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=9909068>https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=9909068 Stanford University, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Creating Standards and Procedures for Online Encyclopedias), $528,896, John Perry and Edward N. Zalta. <https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=9981549>https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=9981549 University of California at Los Angeles, Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative, $650,000, Robert Englund. <https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=0000629>https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=0000629 University of Hawaii-Manoa, Classical Chinese Digital Database, $146,859, Roger Ames and Mary Tiles. <https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=9910808>https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=9910808 University of Massachusetts at Amherst, Indexing Handwritten Manuscripts, $450,000, Raghavan Manmatha. <https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=9909073>https://www.fastlane.nsf.gov/servlet/showaward?award=9909073 Digital Music Library This project is to establish a Digital Music Library (DML) testbed. The testbed will focus on system architectures, content representation and metadata and network services. Although the project will address a wide range of multimedia digital libraries issues, it is unique in it's comprehensive approach to musical content and the internet - pressing contemporary issues capturing intense public and commercial interest. The project will involve a large team of interdisciplinary researchers at multiple sites. There is as of yet no comparabledigital music library to that presented in the proposal. As a digital library system, the DML will provideintegrated multimedia access to a large corpus of musical material. As a research and educational resource for alarge, diverse group of communities, the project promises to draw out new uses and user needs and stimulatecreative activities in many areas. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy This project will attempt to organize the topical matter of an academic discipline in a comprehensive and innovative way by creating a dynamic reference work of exceptionally large scope using information technologies. The goals of the project are: - to design and implement a customized work-flow system through which academic philosophers can collaboratively write, maintain, track and summarize the new ideas being published in print and electronic media-to produce a comprehensive reference work useful notonly to scholars, but to the general public as well- to develop XML standards for the materials of philosoph yapplicable to other topical areas research funds from the Digital Libraries Initiative would be part of alarger base of support for the project and targeted toward advances in work-flow system development and building user interface tools that can fully exploit the features of a dynamic reference work. Examples of these include evolving concept maps, dynamic cross-referencing based on user needs, etc. The methods used to achieve this can serve as an example for other disciplines in the humanities and sciences. Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative The Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative proposes to develop tools and techniques leading to the systematic digital documentation and new electronic publication of cuneiform sources. Despite the 150 years that have passed since first decipherment of cuneiform many basic research tools remain to be developed that will allow this material to be studied in depth by specialists and generally made available to the public. This project, conducted in close collaboration with a number of organizations (including the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science and the California Digital Library) will: Create virtual archives of widely dispersed early cuneiform tablets Implement an integrative platform of data presentation combining raster, vector and 3D imaging with text translation and markup Establish for collaborating museums a lasting archive procedure for fragile and often decaying collection of cuneiform records The project's dataset will be built using platform-independent text encoding and markup conventions and linked to accurate, high-resolution images. Typologies and extensive glossaries of technical terms will be included, later supplemented by linguistic tools for accessing the primary sources by non-specialists. "Shuhai Wenyuan Classical Digital Database and Interactive Internet Worktable" This project entitled "Shuhai Wenyuan Classical Digital Database and Interactive Internet Worktable" willcreate a digital corpus and internet-based resources to allow world wide use of seminal texts from China's classical period. The project will involve bringing together specialists in Classical Chinese language, thought,and culture, and information technologists to produce tools and access methods to materials that have thus far been limited to a select group of students and scholars. By doing so the project intends to open up new areas ofstudy and research for learners of all ages. The data content will be freely available via the web and offer Chinese texts, English examples, cultural and philosophical notes, grammar notes, and a search engine designed for a variety of tasks. Indexing Handwritten Manuscripts This project will research and develop innovative techniques for indexing handwritten historical manuscripts. Automatic indexingof historical archives to create indexes similar to those at the back of most printed books would potentially make available a wholenew set of materials to scholars and students. Conversion of printed materials usually involves Optical Character Recognition(OCR) to convert them to machine-readable form. OCR does not work well on handwritten text. The investigators propose to use ascheme known as Word Spotting in which a document page is segmented into words and lists of words are created. By matchingword images against each other multiple instances of the same word are then identified. A user then provides the ASCII equivalentto a representative word image from the lists and links to the original documents are automatically generated. For this approach tosucceed, a number of problems need to be solved including new techniques for "cleaning up" a document by removingnon-meaningful visual artifacts, extending existing algorithms for word segmentation of handwritten documents, and building newalgorithms to find similarity between handwritten word images. ============================================================== NINCH-Announce is an announcement listserv, produced by the National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage (NINCH). The subjects of announcements are not the projects of NINCH, unless otherwise noted; neither does NINCH necessarily endorse the subjects of announcements. We attempt to credit all re-distributed news and announcements and appreciate reciprocal credit. For questions, comments or requests to un-subscribe, contact the editor: <<mailto:david@ninch.org>mailto:david@ninch.org> ============================================================== See and search back issues of NINCH-ANNOUNCE at <<http://www.cni.org/Hforums/ninch-announce/>http://www.cni.org/Hforums/ninch-announce/>. ============================================================== --[2]------------------------------------------------------------------ Date: Sat, 14 Oct 2000 12:08:40 +0100 From: NINCH-ANNOUNCE <david@ninch.org> Subject: Funding (NEH/NEA): Budgets Increased (NHA Release) NINCH ANNOUNCEMENT News on Networking Cultural Heritage Resources from across the Community October 13, 2000 NEH/NEA Budgets Increased >Date: Fri, 13 Oct 2000 13:25:29 -0400 (EDT) >From: John Hammer <jhammer@cni.org> >To: Multiple recipients of list <nha-announce@cni.org> >> >TO: NHA Members & Friends >FR: John Hammer and Jessica Jones > >RE: Short end-of-the-appropriations-cycle report for possible use in >newsletters --- * * * * * * * * * * * On October 11, President Clinton signed HR 4578, the Interior and Related Agencies appropriations bill for FY-2001. Flanked at the Rose Garden signing by NEA Chairman Bill Ivey and NEH Chairman Bill Ferris, the President hailed the bill as "a truly historic achievement, achieved in a genuine, bipartisan spirit to create a permanent basis for preserving our natural heritage and advancing our common artistic and cultural values". The bill includes $5 million additional for the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) bringing the total to $120.26 million. This is the second year in a row that the NEH has been increased. (In the years 1996-1999, NEH was flat funded at $110 million, down nearly 40% from the FY-95 appropriation of $177 million.) The important story in HR 4578 is that the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) was boosted $7 million, the first increase since 1995. The improved circumstances for the NEA reflect the declining power of the Conservative Action Team (CAT) in the House of Representatives. Although there was some hostility in the Senate after the 1994 elections in which the GOP captured control of both houses, the House has been the graveyard for improving arts funding up to this year. For NEH supporters, the NEA news could not be more welcome -- Some of NEH's closest and firmest supporters in Congress have been leaders in opposing further improvement of NEH funding until the NEA problem begins to be resolved. With the passage of this appropriation, both agencies will be in the best position to rebuild in years. Senator Slade Gorton (R-WA), chair of the interior appropriations subcommittee, deserves special praise for pressing the House leaders to relent. The face-saving strategy developed by Senator Gorton, probably in consultation with Rep. Ralph Regula (R-OH), his counterpart in the House, was to separate the $7 million increase for NEA into a different budget line tagged to Challenge America Arts Fund (i.e., synonymous with the major existing initiative of NEA) to be administered by NEA. Many were amazed that the House GOP leaders would settle for such a slight cover -- Apparently their reading was that it is time to step back from the issue. Here are the comparative appropriations figures for NEH, NEA, and the Institute of Museum and Library Services Table: Cultural Agency Appropriations (in millions of dollars) ........ FY-2000 .. FY-2001 .. FY-2001 .. FY-2001 .... FY-2001 . Conference ........ Enacted .. Request .... House ... Senate . Conference .vs. Enacted __________________________________________________________________________ NEH ... 115.260 .. 150.000 .. 115.260 .. 120.260 .... 120.260 ..... +5.000 NEA .... 97.628 .. 150.000 ... 98.000 .. 105.000 .... 105.000 ..... +7.372 IMLS ... 24.307 ... 33.378 ... 24.307 ... 24.907 ..... 24.907 ..... +0.600 Source: Conference Report 106-914 to accompany HR 4578 (29-Sep-00). _________________ Byline: John Hammer & Jessica Jones, National Humanities Alliance ============================================================== NINCH-Announce is an announcement listserv, produced by the National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage (NINCH). The subjects of announcements are not the projects of NINCH, unless otherwise noted; neither does NINCH necessarily endorse the subjects of announcements. We attempt to credit all re-distributed news and announcements and appreciate reciprocal credit. For questions, comments or requests to un-subscribe, contact the editor: <<mailto:david@ninch.org>mailto:david@ninch.org> ============================================================== See and search back issues of NINCH-ANNOUNCE at <<http://www.cni.org/Hforums/ninch-announce/>http://www.cni.org/Hforums/ninch-announce/>. ==============================================================
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