°ÄÃÅÀúÊ·¿ª½±¼Ç¼

XClose

Institute of Archaeology

Home
Menu

Digital Heritage in a World of Big Data

24 May 2019

Institute researchers were co-organisers of the conference 'Digital Heritage in a World of Big Data', held at the University of Stirling, on 14 May 2019.

AHRC Heritage Priority Area (logo)

The ‘’ conference was envisaged as an exploration into the potential of big data to study and implement contemporary interventions of the past. It brought together key scholars from both the UK and international heritage sector and academic community of heritage and data science to discuss challenges and opportunities of researching, collecting and curating big data within the heritage sector.

The conference was organised as a collaborative event between Rodney Harrison (UCL Professor of Heritage Studies/AHRC Heritage Leadership Fellow), Daniel Pett (Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge), and Chiara Bonacchi (Lecturer in Heritage in History, University of Stirling), with the intention to create a digital heritage knowledge exchange space for discussion of the role of data and its deeper implications in heritage research.

Key objectives were to:Ìý

  • Explore current structures of data and how more informed knowledge of how data is structured and constructed contribute to better practice for heritage data
  • Develop a broader understanding of how data/datasets could be usefully aggregated and/or linked, and what data could be extracted
  • Establish a better understanding of legal and policy protections and obstacles and how this might help frame a sounder code of ethics

The conference was one of a series of activities undertaken by the AHRC Heritage Priority Area to explore its research theme ‘’, drawing on questions addressed in itsÌýÌýof theÌýÌýorganised by the AHRC Heritage Priority Area, British Library and Alan Turing Institute at the British Library (2017).

Rodney Harrison speaking at the Digital Heritage in a World of Big Data conference (Stirling, May 2019)

The , in which invited speakers were organised into three sessions focusing specifically on:

  • Researching heritage through ‘big’ data
  • Collecting ‘big’ heritage data
  • Curating arts and heritage through ‘big’ data

The two keynote speakers at the event were:

  • Ìýof the University of AmsterdamÌý
  • Ìýof the University of Washington

Other speakers included:Ìý

  • Mark Altaweel, Reader in Near Eastern Archaeology, UCL Institute of Archaeology
  • , Lecturer in Heritage, University of Stirling
  • ÌýandÌý, Lead curator and Curator of Web Archives, The British Library
  • Rodney Harrison, Professor of Heritage Studies, UCL Institute of Archaeology
  • , Lecturer, University of Loughborough
  • Marta Krzyzanska, PhD Candidate, Cambridge University
  • , Associate Director of Digital, National Library of Scotland
  • , Senior Lecturer and Head of Communication Design, University of Dundee
  • , Head of Digital and IT, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge University
  • , Professor of Digital Cultural Heritage, Edinburgh Futures Institute, University of Edinburgh
  • , Lecturer in Digital Media and Professional Education, University of Stirling

The event was recorded and will be available on theÌýÌýwebsite, with some of the discussions to be published in a Special Issue volume (pending).

Ìý