December 04, 2009, 02:03 PM ET
 A 'New Digital Class' Digs Into Data

By Jennifer 
Howard<http://chronicle.com/blogAuthor/Wired-Campus/5/Jennifer-Howard/9/>

Fifty-three thousand 18th-century letters. Twenty-three thousand hours of
digitized world music. The records of more than 197,000 individual trials
held in Britain over 240 years. What can humanities scholars and social
scientists do with such large tracts of raw material? This year the Digging
Into Data Challenge <http://www.diggingintodata.org/> invited research teams
to submit proposals for big-scale, computer-enabled "cyberscholarship" or
"data-driven inquiry."

On Thursday the National Endowment for the Humanities, one of the
challenge's sponsors, announced that the first Digging Into Data grants have
gone to eight international (mostly trans-Atlantic) teams. Other sponsors
include the National Science Foundation, the Joint Information Systems
Committee in Britain, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research
Council in Canada.

So a team of scholars from Stanford University, the University of Oklahoma,
and the University of Oxford will investigate "Digging Into the
Enlightenment: Mapping the Republic of Letters." Their goal is "to analyze
the degree to which the effects of the Enlightenment can be observed in the
letters of people of various occupations." A team from the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the University of Southhampton, and McGill
University will attempt a "Structural Analysis of Large Amounts of Music
Information." They aim "to develop tools to tag and analyze the underlying
structures" of music from "a wide range of styles, regions, and time
periods." And a team from George Mason University, the University of
Hertfordshire, and the University of Alberta will focus on "Using Zotero and
TAPoR on the Old Bailey Proceedings," a project with the *CSI*-like subtitle
"Data Mining With Criminal Intent."

Announcing the awards at a Research Council of Canada meeting in Ottawa,
James A. Leach, the NEH's new chairman, invoked that old C.P. Snow "two
cultures" chesnut. The divide between the humanities and the scientists
persists, the chairman said, but a new breed of scholars is changing that.

"While the Digging Into Data Challenge signifies interactive, international
scholarship of a distinctive kind, the bigger picture is that the initiative
is a reflection of the emergence of a 'new digital class' composed of
humanists as well as scientists and engineers," the chairman said.
"Divisions continue between scientific logic and cultural reasoning, but
math-based technology can now be utilized as readily by the linguistically
oriented as by the scientifically inclined."

Ladies and gents, start your machines.


-- 
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J. T. Johnson
Institute for Analytic Journalism -- Santa Fe, NM USA
www.analyticjournalism.com
505.577.6482(c)                                    505.473.9646(h)
http://www.jtjohnson.com                 [email protected]

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