Spatial Humanities 2024

Rosie Wood

Research Data Scientist/ Software Engineer at the Alan Turing Institute.
Lead developer for MapReader.


Session

09-25
09:00
180min
MapReader Workshop: Using Machine Learning to Analyze Large Collections of Digitized Maps
Katherine McDonough, Rosie Wood, Kalle Westerling

UPDATE: Please register separately, in advance for this workshop, as space is limited. Apply here: https://forms.office.com/e/qvCrWMvEWP. We will operate on a first come, first serve basis and will close applications once we reach our max.

MapReader, which received the 2023 Roy Rosenzweig Prize for Innovation in Digital History from the American Historical Association, is a software library that was designed for humanities research with big digitised map collections. It was developed on the recently concluded Living with Machines project, but it has been created with the wider community of historians in mind as future users.

MapReader allows users to identify concepts of visual interest on maps, and then to define queries for predicting whether those concepts are present on hundreds or thousands of individual sheets. The power of this approach is its flexibility for any number of spatially-driven research questions.

This workshop aims to bring together historians and others with an interest in using digitised historical map collections as primary sources for digitally-inflected research. By bringing together peers working in this space, we aim to learn about and discuss ways to encourage open research in the humanities through skill development and shared digital resources and infrastructure.

During the workshop, participants will:
- Learn about the research and theoretical motivations behind MapReader, and how it fits in a growing ecosystem of computer vision tools for humanities research
- Test a demo of MapReader with sample data
- Learn the basics of computer vision and machine learning as applied to computational maps research
- Discuss how to apply MapReader to your own map collections
- Reflect on the opportunities for using “automatic” methods for analysing maps in humanistic research

MG2 01.10