AI can support research in the Humanities making it easier and more efficient. It is thus essential that AI practitioners and Humanities scholars take a Humanities-centred approach to the development, deployment and application of AI methods for the Humanities.
The presentations of the 3rd CHAI workshop were as follows:
Hagen Peukert: Keynote: Humanities-Centred AI: Where we are coming from! Where we are heading?
Simon Schiff, Ralf Möller: Persistent Data, Sustainable Information (download presentation)
Sabrina Göllner, Marina Tropmann-Frick: Bridging the Gap between Theory and Practice: Towards Responsible AI Evaluation (download presentation)
Magnus Bender, Kira Schwandt, Ralf Möller, Marcel Gehrke: FrESH – Feedback-reliant Enhancement of Subjective Content Descriptions by Humans (download presentation)
Nadja Redzuan, Marcel Gehrke, Ralf Möller, Tanya Braun: On Domain-specific Topic Modelling Using the Case of a Humanities Journal (download presentation)
Thomas Asselborn, Sylvia Melzer, Said Aljoumani, Magnus Bender, Florian Andreas Marwitz, Konrad Hirschler, Ralf Möller: Fine-tuning BERT Models on Demand for Information Systems Explained Using Training Data from Pre-modern Arabic (download presentation)
Hussein Mohammed: Multimodal Artefacts: Exploring Vision-Language Models to Bridge the Modalities of Historical Written Artefacts (download presentation)
Sylvia Melzer, Hagen Peukert, Eliana Dal Sasso, Charles Li, Thomas Asselborn, Ralf Möller: Federated Information Retrieval in Cross-Domain Information Systems (download presentation)
The KI2023 workshop – Humanities-Centred AI was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy - EXC 2176 'Understanding Written Artefacts: Material, Interaction and Transmission in Manuscript Cultures', project no. 390893796.