19–21 Oct 2022 International conference on research infrastructures A major worldwide event where experts and stakeholders discuss challenges and emerging trends, highlighting the essential role of research infrastructures in science.
18 Oct 2022 Workshop with Dr. Georg Lutz 8:30 AM A unique opportunity to meet Dr. Georg Lutz, Chair of the ESFRI Strategy Working Group on Social and Cultural Innovation at the ICRI 2022 conference and learn more about how to benefit from the activities of European SSH infrastructures.
12–14 Oct 2022 Mutual Learning Workshop for Improving Cultural Heritage Bibliographical Data 1:30 PM – 12:00 AM The Bibliographical Data Working Group of the DARIAH-ERIC consortium is organising a workshop entitled Mutual Learning Workshop for Improving Cultural Heritage Bibliographical Data.
10 Oct 2022 Lexical Multilingual Zero-Shot Transfer in Low-Resource Settingsin Formal Semantics: History and Challenges 2:00 PM Gabriel Stanovsky (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) will present two recent works centered around multilingual zero-shot transfer, which occurs when models can solve instances without direct supervision in their target language.
10–12 Oct 2022 CLARIN Annual Conference 2022 CLARIN2022 is a conference for the wider community of humanities scholars to exchange ideas and experiences within the CLARIN infrastructure. This year's conference will take place in Prague, but it will also be possible to attend virtually.
7 Oct–9 Dec 2022 DARIAH Friday Frontiers: Autumn/Winter 2022 Series DARIAH is opening its popular "Friday Frontiers" series of internal webinars to a wider audience. Friday Frontiers webinars allow researchers, practitioners, and the broader DARIAH community and now beyond to learn about current research, best practices and societal impact, and various tools and methods in the digital humanities.
6–8 Oct 2022 Computing the Past: Computational approaches to the dynamics of cultures and societies The workshop pays special attention to the historical environment of the ancient Mediterranean (AM). As a widely studied historical environment, AM is also an area in which the computational approaches are thriving across numerous subdisciplines. The event will culminate in a panel discussion with several experts on the history of AM – including the keynote speakers – with the title “Computing the Ancient Mediterranean”. We hope that the discussion will help us to identify the most important issues impeding the study of the past in the digital age in general.