Workshop - Computational Approaches to ancient Greek and Latin
From: | Tu 14-03-2023 |
Until: | We 15-03-2023 |
Where: | Norman Building, Lutkenieuwstraat 5, Groningen (The Netherlands) or online |
We are organizing at the Centre for Language and Cognition of the University of Groningen the hybrid workshop Days of Computational Approaches to Ancient Greek and Latin (2nd edition), you can find the programme below.
The use of computational approaches (Natural Language Processing) to study classical languages is a new and exciting scholarly domain. This conference aims at exploring the potential of NLP to Ancient Greek and Latin, and at forging working relationships and collaborations between scholars pioneering this field.
The conference is of interest to classicists interested in digital resources, to computational linguists, especially those interested in low resource languages, and to others working on historical data and in the various branches of Digital Humanities. Attendance is free (both ‘live’ and online).
Programme
14th March 2023 (hybrid)
16.30-17.00 Coffee and Welcome
17.00-18.00 Martina Rodda (Oxford), Should philologists think computationally? Some Homeric thoughts about what AI can bring us, plus discussion
18.00 Drinks
19.00 Conference Dinner
15th March 2023 (hybrid)
09.00-09.45 Francesco Mambrini (Milan), The syntax of the Homeric heroes. A treebank based investigation
09.45-10.30 Barbara McGillivray (King’s College London), Semantic change and semantic variation in Latin: lessons learnt from computational methods
10.30-11.00 Coffee
11.00-11.45 Marco Passarotti (Milan) and Rachele Sprugnoli (Parma), Interoperability and Sentiment Analysis in the LiLa Knowledge Base
11.45-12.30 Evelien de Graaf (KU Leuven), Evaluation of a Method for Automated Sentiment Analysis for Latin epic
12.30-13.45 Lunch
13.45-14.30 Paschalis Agapitos and Andreas van Cranenburgh (RUG), A Stylometric Analysis of Seneca's Disputed Plays: Authorship Verification of Octavia and Hercules Oetaeus
14.30-15.15 Lukas Fischer (Zürich), Nunc profana tractemus. Detecting Code-Switching in a Large Corpus of 16th Century Letters
15.15-15.45 Coffee
15.45-16.30 Alek Keersmaekers and Wouter Mercelis (Leuven), Lemmatization for Ancient Greek
16.30-17.15 Vojtěch Kaše (West Bohemia), A Distributional Semantic Approach to the Religious and Moral Dynamics in the Ancient Greek Texts
18.00 Informal Dinner