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Session Submission Type: Organized Session
The digital revolution has significantly reshaped society, the economy, and the academic landscape, including research in the history of science. Digitalization has enabled the construction of large-scale, web-based infrastructures containing vast quantities of structured texts, images, and data. Traditional scholarly editions have increasingly been supplemented or replaced by collaborative digital editions that follow established standards, integrate multimodal sources, and support advanced forms of annotation and interoperability.
Since the emergence of the Digital Humanities (DH) in the late 1990s, the field has progressed from text encoding and the consolidation of TEI standards to data modeling, computational text analysis, historical network research, GIS-based spatial history, and semantic web technologies that link datasets and authority information across repositories. Visualization tools now allow complex representations of time, space, and intellectual networks. Virtually all these methods depend on the digitization of sources and the automated transcription of printed or handwritten materials to generate machine-readable corpora, usually developed and maintained by research software engineers. While these approaches have introduced empirical, data-driven research paradigms, they also raise concerns about sustainability, long-term preservation, and interoperability, and have prompted debates over their relation to traditional hermeneutic scholarship.
The latest and potentially most transformative development concerns Artificial Intelligence, particularly large language models (LLMs) and generative systems. These technologies support tasks such as automatic transcription, named-entity recognition, translation, and the identification of correspondence networks or conceptual relationships.
The symposium will highlight projects exemplifying the mentioned opportunities and challenges of the digital turn in the history of science, with an emphasis on recent AI-driven approaches. It will further address the epistemological and ethical implications of these developments and AIs broader impact on society.
RAG in Practice: Closing the Usefulness Gap for Humanities Research - Jochen Büttner
The Database of Scientific Illustrators 1450–1950 (DSI) ‒ a fruit of the digital revolution - Klaus Hentschel, University of Stuttgart, Germany; Torsten Himmel, University of Stuttgart, Germany
Artificial intelligence, historical research and the importance of considering non-Anglo-American perspectives - Kostas Tampakis, National Hellenic Research Foundation
The Hidden Costs of Digital Humanities: Labour, Rights, and Infrastructures in the History of Science - Rana Brentjes, independent