An interesting on-line meeting about  AI and Oral History

Date: 25 November 2024
Time: 14:25 –15:45
How: Online

We are pleased to welcome Maria Dermentzi (digital humanities consultant) and Hugo Scheithauer (Inria Paris ALMAnaCH) for this 'Voices Unbound?' seminar.

All welcome to join this online seminar. Please register to receive the joining details .

Background

This lecture will focus on the application of Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR) technology, specifically OpenAI's Whisper model, to transcribe oral testimonies from the Holocaust. We will discuss what makes ASR for oral Holocaust testimonies challenging and present examples of successes and failures. The lecture will also cover post-processing techniques for automatically generated transcripts, including Named Entity Recognition (NER). Participants will gain insights into how AI tools can support oral history research and why domain expertise is key to correcting and interpreting the results of these tools.

About the Speakers

Maria Dermentzi

Digital humanities consultant

Previously, she worked at King's College London, where she developed AI-powered tools for history research in the context of the European Holocaust Research Infrastructure. She holds an MSc in Digital Humanities from KU Leuven, an MA in Digital Culture and Society from King's College London, and a degree in Law from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Hugo: PhD student in the Inria Paris ALMAnaCH project-team, Hugo Scheithauer works on document layout analysis, automatic text recognition, and information extraction for historical documents. He holds a dual MA in Art History from Columbia University and Sorbonne University, and an MA in Digital Humanities from the École nationale des chartes (National School of Charters), Paris

 

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Voices unbound? Exploring new and/or possible directions in digital and experimental oral history

A lecture series co-organised by TU Darmstadt, UCL Centre for Digital Humanities, Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C²DH) and the Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte.
The series is convened by Julianne Nyhan (TU Darmstadt), Andrew Flinn, Andreas Vlachidis, and Marco Humbel (UCL), Shih-Pei Chen (Max Planck Institute), and Gerben Zaagsma (C²DH), offering an important way of keeping up to date with the methodological and theoretical state of the art in digital oral history. We invited speakers to present work on recent technological developments that may hold promise for digital oral history. In this way, the seminar series appeals to (digital) oral historians, digital humanists and scholars of the history of information, memory and knowledge systems.

 

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