header
Home

Program of OSDH2011

Monday, 28th March

Room 1 Room 2
9:30 Opening ceremony: MC: Tomoji Tabata
Masahiro Shimoda, Lisa Lena Opas-Hänninen, Harold Short, Raymond Siemens (Video letter), Makoto Goto, Kiyonori Nagasaki
10:30 Coffee/Tea
11:00 Chair: Gerhard Brey Chair: Lisa Lena Opas-Hänninen
Large-Scale Music Audio Analyses Using High Performance Computing Technologies: Creating New Tools, Posing New Questions
(J. Stephen Downie (Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), David De Roure, Ichiro Fujinaga)
Graph Representation of the Connotations of Classical Japanese Poetic Vocabulary
(Hilofumi Yamamoto, Tokyo Institute of Technology)
Scaling Digital Humanities on (and utilising) the Web
(David De Roure (Oxford e-Research Centre, University of Oxford), Kevin R. Page, Benjamin Fields, Tim Crawford, J. Stephen Downie, Ichiro Fujinaga)
Features of authors of Noh drama from mathematical analyses of words and phrases
(Yoshimi IWATA (Doshisha University), Tamaki Yano)
Use of Labanotation to Describe Japanese Traditional Noh-Play
(Worawat Choensawat (School of Science and Engineering, Ritsumeikan University), Sachie Takahashi, Minako Nakamura, Kozaburo Hachimura)
Poetry as a game – An Analysis of Online New Poetry Games
(Jeneen Naji, National University of Ireland Maynooth)
12:30 Lunch/13:30–14:00 AGM
14:00 Chair: Masahiro Shimoda Chair: A. Charles Muller
Buddhist Philology in the Age of Digital Humanities: Retro- and Prospect
(Toru Tomabechi, International Institute for Digital Humanities)
A Curriculum for An Interdisciplinary Program in Digital Humanities
(Kazushi OHYA, Tsurumi University)
Report on Developing a Digital Glossary of Buddhist Terminology by using TEI-P5
(Koichi TAKAHASHI, Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology, University of Tokyo)
Constructing a Platform for Situated Learning of Japanese Traditional Culture in the 3D Metaverse
(Michiru TAMAI (Digital Humanities Center for Japanese Arts and Cultures, Ritsumeikan University), Mitsuyuki Inaba, Koichi Hosoi, Ruck Thawonmas, Masayuki Uemura, Akinori Nakamura)
Digitizing the Hōbōgirin Following the Mark-up Guidelines of TEI: Potentialities and Problems
(Kuninori MATSUDA (Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, University of Tokyo), Nobumi Iyanaga, Kiyonori Nagasaki)
Accessing Multiple Japanese Humanities Databases Using English Queries
(Biligsaikhan Batjargal (Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Ritsumeikan University), Fuminori Kimura, Akira Maeda)
15:30 Coffee/Tea
15:50 Panel 1-A: A case study in Nikko: For the better access of quality information on sites of World Heritage by enhancement of AR Technology
(Junko Iwabuchi (Graduate School of Media and Governance, Keio University), Kazuyoshi Takeuchi, Tomoharu Watanabe, Yusuke Hirakawa)
Panel 2-A: Research Tools for the Taiwan History Digital Library
(Jieh Hsiang, Shih-Pei Chen, Research Center for Digital Humanities, National Taiwan University)
17:05
17:15 Plenary (Lisa Lena Opas-Hänninen)
18:00 Reception

Tuesday, 29th March

Room 1 Room 2
9:30 Plenary (Espen S. Ore)
10:30 Coffee/Tea
11:00 Chair: Tomoji Tabata Chair: Harold Short
Toward a Syntactic Analysis of Classical Chinese Texts (Koichi Yasuoka, Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University) Online support network: A content analysis of an online support groups for people living with depression
(Sayaka Sugimoto, Faculty of Information, University of Toronto)
Toward Syntactic Frame Retrieval of Classical Chinese Rhymes using Japanese 'kun' readings and Syntactic parallelism of couplets
(Naoki YAMAZAKI, Faculty of Foreign Language Studies, Kansai University)
An Interdisciplinary Digital Humanities Project on Canadian Health Information Design
(Stan Ruecker (University of Alberta), Lisa Given)
A Prototype of a Classical Chinese Morphological Analyzer based on MeCab
(Tomohiko MORIOKA, Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University)
Implementing Rhetorical Structure Database System for Digital Archive
(Hajime Murai, Tokyo Institute of Technology)
12:30 Lunch/Tea ceremony
14:00 Chair: Lisa Lena Opas-Hänninen Chair: Espen S. Ore
Publicly performing private secrets
(Stephanie Hendrick, HUMlab, Umeå University)
Multiple-policy character annotation based on CHISE
(Tomohiko MORIOKA, Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University)
Panel 1-B: Statistical text-mining on English Woman’s Journal
(Tomoji Tabata (University of Osaka), Harold Short, Gerhard Brey, Maki Miyake, Yuichiro Kobayashi, Matteo Romanello)
A Support Method for Text Structuring of Japanese Historical Documents
(Taizo Yamada
(National Institutes for the Humanities), Satoshi Inoue, Tamaki Endo, Noriko Kurushima)
Text Representation and Collaboration -- Reclaiming the Electronic Text as a Base for Research
(Christian Wittern, Institute for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University)
15:30 Coffee/Tea
15:50 Panel 1-C: Multi-language parallel corpora and XML annotation tools
(Kazunari HORI (Osaka University), Shin Takehara, Junichi Uehara, Kazuhide Kojima, Kensaku Mamiya, Shingo Suzuki, Naoki Yamazaki)
Panel 2-B: Digital Humanities for Japanese Arts and Cultures
(Mitsuyuki INABA (Digital Humanities Center for Japanese Arts and Cultures, Ritsumeikan University),Ryo Akama, Kozaburo Hachimura, Keiji Yano, Mika Tomita, Keiko Suzuki)
17:05
17:15 Plenary + round-up (Harold Short), Closing
18:00 Banquet