By way of #introduction, I am professor of #DigitalHumanities at the University of #Lausanne (#UNIL), #Switzerland.
I studied #ComputationalLinguistics and did a PhD in #ComputerScience on #ELearning. But these days my main research interest is #theory, #methodology and #epistemology of digital humanities.
Current research project (funded by @snsf_ch): Towards Computational Historiographical Modeling: Corpora and Concepts (http://dynalabs.de/mxp/research/2021-snsf)
Hi, great to meet you. While not the same I have worked with Natural Language Processing a lot, we might have some things to talk about. Either way I have no doubt you will make a great addition to the group.
I look forward to reading your posts. Feel free to reach out anytime if you want to chat or have any questions.
@true_mxp Not like I'd be reading it for any actual need. It would be purely out of curiosity.
@freemo Yeah, for that it could still be interesting, also wrt. theoretical issues.
@freemo It’s in need of an update, tho. Shortly afterwards, machine learning changed everything. #OCR and even #HTR of historical texts are almost “solved problems” today.