Date: Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Time: 11:00 A.M. – 12:00 P.M.
Location: Tanner Humanities Center, Jewel Box, (in the Carolyn Irish Tanner Humanities Building)
Refreshments will be served
If archives provide first-hand evidence of the past, how is this evidence changing when it’s studied in digital environments, with digital tools? This discussion-based seminar will provide a snapshot of ways in which AI is changing research and teaching with archives.
First, Dr. Laura Blomvall from AM [Adam Matthew] will share case studies of doctoral and postdoctoral researchers who have made original discoveries in archives through research methods that utilize AI programmes like Handwritten Text Recognition. Then, she will share examples of university instructors who have turned to primary sources, both in digitized archives and in special collections, to create teaching and learning environments that resist the use of generative AI in student assignments.
The presentation will be punctuated by group discussion with the aim of exchanging experiences and ideas on the impact of AI and digital methods in research and teaching in the humanities across different disciplines.
Note: The Marriott Library recently subscribed to the Adam Mathew database , which contains millions of pages of digitized primary source content from Special Collections across the world. Free and open to all students, staff and faculty!
More information on this event, as well as other news and event info, can be found on the Marriott Library’s blog.