Skip to content

Spatial Humanities

TEXTS, GIS & PLACES

  • Home
  • Project & Work Packages
    • Our Aims
    • Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
    • Corpus Linguistics & NLP
    • Mapping Lake District Literature
      • Lakeland Geo-text Explorer
      • Corpus of Lake District Writing, 1622-1900
    • Working with 19th-Century Sources
    • Skills Development & Training
  • Staff
    • Research Assistants
  • Publications
    • Past Conferences and Presentations
    • Recognition & Awards
  • Gallery
    • Maps
    • Lakeland Geo-text Explorer
    • Presentations
    • Posters
  • Resources
  • Contact
  • Events & Training
  • Media Appearances

Presentations

Please follow the links below to view some recent presentations of our research. Many of there are available on our YouTube channel.

Ian Gregory, “British Library Labs Award for Research, 2015”, 02/11/2015.

Christopher Donaldson, “Provincial Pleasures: Early Travels in the English Lakes”, 23/1/13.

Ian Gregory, “Geographical Information Systems–An Overview”, Technical Innovations in the Humanities, National Library of Israel, Jerusalem, IL, 16-17/1/13. (Advance video to 0:28:40.)

“Using Texts to Explore Historical Geographies”, Technical Innovations in the Humanities, National Library of Israel, Jerusalem, IL, 16-17/1/13. (Advance video to 0:33:45.)

“Using Texts in GIS”, Technical Innovations in the Humanities, National Library of Israel, Jerusalem, IL, 16-17/1/13. (Advance video to 1:25:00.)

Patricia Murrieta-Flores, “Spatial Humanities: Exploring and Analysing Texts within a GIS Environment”, 18/9/12.

Paul Rayson, Alistair Baron and Andrew Hardie, “Which ‘Lancaster’ do you mean? Disambiguation challenges in extracting place names for Spatial Humanities”, Digital Humanities Congress, Sheffield, UK, 6-8/9/12.

cropped-bg1_021.jpg
© Spatial Humanities: Texts, GIS & Places

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Recent Comments

    Archives

    Categories

    • No categories

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org
    Proudly powered by WordPress