CORDIS bietet Links zu öffentlichen Ergebnissen und Veröffentlichungen von HORIZONT-Projekten.
Links zu Ergebnissen und Veröffentlichungen von RP7-Projekten sowie Links zu einigen Typen spezifischer Ergebnisse wie Datensätzen und Software werden dynamisch von OpenAIRE abgerufen.
Leistungen
The Data Management Plan DMP includes how to administer data and ensure the longterm sustainability of the project and it will deliver on moth 6 The researcher will have overall responsibility for data management during the project and she will be assisted by the Research Support Office and the Data Protection OfficeData description Geosemantic annotations data will be submitted in CVS and RDFXML formats ontology information will be stored as RDF triple data code files will be saved in RData format and documentation will be preserved using TXT XMLTEI and PDFA formats Project metadata will be created in compliance with the Text Encoding Initiative TEI standardStorage and preservation Universidade Nova da Lisboa UNL manages its research outputs via PURE institutional CRIS system which is connected with UNLs Repository RUN So the project data will be uploaded into RUN to ensure that the research community and society have longterm access to the information Data will be stored following FAIR principles of findability accessibility interoperability and reusability In addition georeferences will be associated with an URI and connected to the Pelagios linkeddata network TXT dataset and metadata will be provided with DOI to facilitate attribution by a permanent identification that will always be found at the URL specified RUN will place a master copy of each digital file and all publications will be doublechecked by UNL library services to assure compliance with the Open Access and Creative Commons Licenses
Connecting different societies through cultural heritage is just one of the many possibilities Digital Humanities offers to promote tolerance, respect, and admiration for different cultural identities. The results of the actions will be disseminated through outputs designed to the particular target audience. Academic community: The researcher will take part in scientific forums. To maximise the impact of the project, both methodological approaches and results will be published in high-quality international peer-reviewed Open Access journals. 1) A paper about mapping travel books will be submitted in Literary Geographies, 2) a paper about analysis of ECH using DH methodologies will be published in Digital Humanities Quarterly; and 3) a paper about Latin American women writers’ perceptions about ECH will be aimed at Gender, Place, and Culture. Dr Comino will also participate in international conferences delivering oral communication to present the project, such as “Humanidades Digitales Hispánicas” (2023) and “European Association for Digital Humanities” (2024) meetings. And the project results will be shared by mailing to Digital Humanities research groups “Humanidades Digitales Hispánicas” and “Humanist mailing list”.Non-academic audiences: Engaging society is the best way to change historical narratives regarding past women’s roles and the impact of the meaning of European Cultural Heritage in our lives. The researcher will promote REWIND via the project website with a blog in which updates the research progress. The website will not be limited to an exhibition purpose, but it will also seek the collaboration of the general public through StoryMaps using the ArcGIS platform, interactive timelines, and literary fragments that will help users to understand the multiple relationships between Geography, History, Literature, and Cultural Heritage. REWIND will have an active presence on Twitter and LinkedIn from the beginning of the project because these social media are excellent for strategies of dissemination and democratisation of research, making a wide audience participant in the project and promote a more egalitarian society. Complementing this plan of communication, Dr Comino will record a podcast of the episodes narrating biographies and travel experiences of C. Matto, I. Carrasquilla, I. Echeverría, M. E. Camarillo, and Z. A. Cáceres. The researcher will participate in the outreach events such as the UNL Open Doors and the European Researchers’ Night. She will also organise an exhibition in the UNL Library about the travel books of the project on Women Writers Day. Lastly, she will collaborate with “Giner de los Ríos” High School to promote Digital Humanities and inspire and empower students with different resources, backgrounds, nationalities, and gender through workshops where she will explain the impact of technology applied to Humanities, different items of the European Cultural Heritage referred to in travel books will be analysed, and the feelings they arouse in students will be explored. Through these events, she will share both the project results and strategies to be involved with this research from the local scale to favour access to culture.The impact reach of this investigation will be assessed by gathering statistical information of feedback: 1) the number of viewers of the website and the StoryMaps, 2) the number of listeners of the podcast, 3) the number of visitors to UNL Library exhibition, 4) the number of downloads of datasets in UNL’s Repository (RUN), 5) the survey of the high school’s students, and 6) social media engagement rates, such as the number of followers and impressions.
Veröffentlichungen
Autoren:
Bénédicte Miyamoto, Maija Ojala-Fulwood, Veronika Čapská, Fiona Eva Bakas, Igor Lyman, María Amor Barros-del Río, Maria Bostenaru Dan, Alba Comino, Pirita Frigren, Victoria Konstantinova, Heidi Martins, Lívia Prosinger, Pauliina Räsänen, Biljana Ristovska-Josifovska, Marie Ruiz
Veröffentlicht in:
Open Research Europe, Ausgabe 4, 2024, ISSN 2732-5121
Herausgeber:
F1000 Research Ltd
DOI:
10.12688/openreseurope.18433.1
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