Of English and Director of Media Studies. Johanna Drucker is currently the Robertson Professor of Media Studies at the University of Virginia, where she is Professor in the Department Deegan has recently published a book, Digital Futures: Strategies for the Information Age, with Simon Tanner. She is Editor-in-Chief of Literary and Linguistic Computing, the Journal of the Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing, and Director of Publications for the Office for HumanitiesĬommunication based at King's College London. Studies Centre at Oxford University, a major digital library and portal for materials concerned with all aspects of refugee She is Director of Research Development, Centreįor Computing in the Humanities, King's College London, and was formerly Director of Forced Migration Online at the Refugee Widely in medieval studies, digital library research, and humanities computing. Marilyn Deegan has a PhD in medieval studies: her specialism is Anglo-Saxon medical texts and herbals and she has published and lectured Originally trained as a classicist, his current interests focus more generally on the application of information Greg Crane is Winnick Family Chair of Technology and Entrepreneurship, Professor of Classics and Director of the Perseus Project at His research in recent years has been inĬomputational stylistics, applying evidence from the frequencies of very common words to authorial and stylistic problems He also teachesĮnglish in the School of Language and Media where he is currently Head of School. Hugh Craig is Director of the Centre for Literary and Linguistic Computing at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia. He is internationally recognized as the pioneer of computational linguistics.
He is Professor of Philosophy at Aloisianum'sĭepartment of Philosophy in Gallarate, at Gregorian Pontifical University in Rome, and at the Catholic University in Milan. Busa entered the Jesuit order in 1933, and was ordained priest on May 20, 1940.
That occasion appeared in Computers and the Humanities (February 2003). In 2001 he became the second recipient of the Roberto Busa Award for Humanities Computing. His many publications in the field of computational stylistics includeĬomputation into Criticism (1987). John Burrows is Emeritus Professor of English at the University of Newcastle, NSW, Australia, and was the Foundation Director of the Centreįor Literary and Linguistic Computing in that university. Of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland, of the Stellenbibliographie zum "Parzival" Wolframs von Eschen-bach, of the Modern Poetry in Translation website, and a number of other research projects. He has played an important role in the design and implementation of systems behind the Prosopographies of the ByzantineĮmpire/World and of Anglo-Saxon England, of the Clergy of the Church of England, of the Corpus Vitrearum Medii Aevi and the Corpus His research interests focus on alternativeĪpproaches to computer-assisted textual analysis, and on issues that arise from the modeling of historical data in computing He now works within the Centre for Computing in the HumanitiesĪt King's College London, where he is involved in both teaching and research. John Bradley was the original author and designer of TACT from 1985 until 1992. He hasīeen extensively involved in the movement to construct digital libraries and museums, and has taught, researched, and publishedĮxtensively in the areas of technological change, and the social and cultural impact of new information environments.
Howard Besser is Director of the Moving Image Archive and Preservation Program at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.