
Journée d’étude organisée par Léa Saint-Raymond (Observatoire des humanités numériques de l’ENS-PSL), en collaboration avec Marie-Laure Massot (CAPHÉS / Initiative Digit_Hum), Agnès Tricoche (AOROC / Initiative Digit_Hum) et Émile Gayoso (Guichet d’assistance aux projets numériques, EUR Translitterae).
The Observatory of Digital Humanities of ENS-PSL and the University of Tokyo are honored to officially launch the DatArt_Asie digital project, co-directed by Léa Saint-Raymond and Torahiko Terada. An afternoon symposium is organized on February 15, 2023, from 2 to 4 pm: it will welcome students from UTokyo, accompanied by Albéric Derible.
The Observatory of Digital Humanities of ENS-PSL and the University of Tokyo are honored to officially launch the DatArt_Asie digital project, co-directed by Léa Saint-Raymond and Torahiko Terada. This symposium will welcome students from UTokyo, accompanied by Albéric Derible.
Last session of the seminar Des chiffres et des arts (S1), animated by Léa Saint-Raymond, in the presence of students from the University of Tokyo, supervised by Albéric Derible.
Dans le cadre du séminaire "Les Liens qui font les Humanités numériques", organisé par le Guichet d'Assistance aux Projets Numériques (GAPN) et l'EUR Translitterae, Léa Saint-Raymond, postdoctorante à l’ENS, chercheuse associée à l’IHMC et directrice de l’ODHN, interviendra le mercredi 16 novembre de 10h à 12h. Son intervention s'intitulera "De la recherche comme tissage. Retour sur une expérience transdisciplinaire", et proposera un retour réflexif sur des recherches menées à la croisée des sciences économiques et sociales, de l'histoire de l'art et de la data science.
An intensive week of courses in digital humanities and AI is organized from November 21 to 25, 2022, entitled "Digital Humanities Meet Artificial Intelligence” course of the PSL Intensive Week". Pre-registration is now open!
The ENS-PSL Observatoire des humanités numériques and the University of Tokyo have formed a partnership around the DatArt_Asie digital project, co-directed by Léa Saint-Raymond and Torahiko Terada.
After more than six months of maturation, Datavirgo is online. This iconographic and digital visualization project aims to question the potentialities offered by the application of data science to Art History and more particularly to iconography.