Criminal Tattoos
Analysing criminal tattoos through data mining and visualisation. Funded by BA/Jisc Digital Research in the Humanities.
MoreAnalysing criminal tattoos through data mining and visualisation. Funded by BA/Jisc Digital Research in the Humanities.
MoreHow discoverable are your digitised collections? The DHI developed a specification for a tool which would support discovery solutions for online research resources both at national and/or institutional level.
MoreTis project explored the feasibility of using cheap consumer-grade technology such as Microsoft’s Kinect controller to capture environments and artefacts in 3-dimensions.
MoreFederated searching of primary resources relating to written and early printed culture in Britain during the medieval period.
MoreA GIS interface for mapping textual and artefactual data relating to the 17th and 18th centuries against early maps of London.
MoreEnhancing user engagement for teaching and research with the Old Bailey Online website.
MoreSophisticated, federated searching of a wide range of electronic sources on the subject of early modern and nineteenth-century British history.
MoreThis project explored authorship across three digitised image datasets: medieval manuscripts, old maps and a collection of quilts.
MoreThis project illustrated how the tools of digital humanities can be used to wrest new knowledge from one of the largest humanities data sets currently available: the Old Bailey Online.
MoreThe project developed a Firefox extension called Scrutiny, which scans scan web pages selected by individual users and highlights entities that it thinks will interest them.
MoreVirtual Vellum produced a prototype image viewer making possible the retrieval, manipulation and annotation/hotspotting of very-high-resolution image datasets.
More