Comments on: Digital Video Scholarship http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/ The Humanities and Technology Camp Wed, 23 May 2012 10:37:45 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 By: Marjorie McLellan http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/#comment-20 Fri, 15 Jan 2010 01:33:11 +0000 http://thatcampcolumbus.org/?p=312#comment-20 I hope that you can reprise this as a short as well as in a session so that we can all see the tools.

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By: William Cowan http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/#comment-19 Wed, 23 Dec 2009 15:28:06 +0000 http://thatcampcolumbus.org/?p=312#comment-19 Anne, For the Ethnographic Video for Instruction and Analysis project, having the annotated video taken as a serious academic work was very important. As part of that process, we developed a peer review mode for the Annotator’s Workbench which allowed reviewers to see the video and annotations (but not be able to modify them) and then enter their own comments on the video content as well as the annotations. Then the original annotator would be able to see these comments and decide what modifications would be best for the project. The increased use of video for a variety of subject areas makes this question of how does video (other than as a creative work) fit into the whole academic/research context of universities, very important.

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By: Anne Helmreich http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/#comment-18 Tue, 22 Dec 2009 21:25:24 +0000 http://thatcampcolumbus.org/?p=312#comment-18 Hi
We just had Tara McPherson from USC speak at CWRU and she introduced the journal that they support VECTORS, www.vectorsjournal.org/
which uses embedded video for some of the authors. I am interested in how this type of work gets represented and understood as “research” in an academic/research university context (e.g. peer review, etc.).

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By: Marjorie McLellan http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/#comment-17 Wed, 09 Dec 2009 20:15:09 +0000 http://thatcampcolumbus.org/?p=312#comment-17 This will be useful in regards to teaching and scholarship in oral history and fieldwork. I have signed up to look at the EVIADA archives and I look forward to this discussion.

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By: William Cowan http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/#comment-16 Thu, 03 Dec 2009 17:54:45 +0000 http://thatcampcolumbus.org/?p=312#comment-16 The Annotator’s Workbench is not yet open source but will soon be. I have to finish the documentation and get the paperwork done at IU to make it so. It will probably be available on SourceForge or something similar. I hope by early 2010. There’s a lot to discuss about video archiving, formats, etc. The AWB is a Java desktop app and uses Quicktime for Java playback video. So any file type that Quicktime can load can be loaded into AWB, including audio. However, the metadata we collect is focused on video so there needs to be some tweaking done to work effectively with audio. But we are working on a version of the AWB that can work with audio and images.

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By: douglambert http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/#comment-15 Wed, 02 Dec 2009 20:12:02 +0000 http://thatcampcolumbus.org/?p=312#comment-15 I’ve been involved with these issues through my oral history work for the past 6 years. I like what you say about “the tools are just the start”… While librarians, archives, publishers are still trying to figure out what the digital age means for access to existing but now digital media, the potential for real access to audio/video “data” in linear format is wide open. But there are no print/physical metaphors to guide us and these data are complex. That’s why I think the most important tools are ones that help the indexer and user visualize collections fluidly. I will talk about some tools we’ve started with next month and hope to get some new ideas about visualization of large sets of complex data… www.randforce.com

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By: Erin Bell http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/#comment-14 Wed, 02 Dec 2009 14:53:04 +0000 http://thatcampcolumbus.org/?p=312#comment-14 s Workbench openly available (or, if not, will it be in the future)? It looks pretty comprehensive from what I found online (here: http://www.eviada.org/element.cfm?mc=6&ctID=31&eID=1 ). I wonder also how HTML5's video capabilities might compete in this arena (albeit on a somewhat simplified level) as that becomes a new standard. What about audio? In any case, I think this is something that a lot of people have been hoping for and trying to attain for a while now, so I'm very excited.]]> This sounds great. I haven’t yet been confirmed to look at the EVIADA archives, so I cannot comment specifically about that, but I’d love to see the tools you use and brainstorm about some applications in other areas. Is Annotator’s Workbench openly available (or, if not, will it be in the future)? It looks pretty comprehensive from what I found online (here: www.eviada.org/element.cfm?mc=6&ctID=31&eID=1 ). I wonder also how HTML5’s video capabilities might compete in this arena (albeit on a somewhat simplified level) as that becomes a new standard. What about audio? In any case, I think this is something that a lot of people have been hoping for and trying to attain for a while now, so I’m very excited.

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By: William Cowan http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/#comment-13 Tue, 01 Dec 2009 19:19:08 +0000 http://thatcampcolumbus.org/?p=312#comment-13 I definitely see cross over for these issues with lots of other areas of study beyond field work. Another project I am currently working with is called AHEYM. In this project, they have collected video interviews for the past several years with Yiddish speakers in Eastern Europe and they are using the Annotator’s Workbench, the main tool for the EVIADA project, to segment, annotate and transcribe/translate these video interviews.

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By: James Calder http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/12/01/digital-video-scholarship/#comment-12 Tue, 01 Dec 2009 18:40:58 +0000 http://thatcampcolumbus.org/?p=312#comment-12 This is really interesting. Although there are obvious differences when dealing with video, I remember having several challenging but insightful conversations about how to properly archive, make available, teach with oral history interviews. It came down to the difficulties of actually indexing the material in ways that made it a more useful and accessible tool. Anyways, love the topic. Could also be some crossover here between yourself and some of the oral history folks that are attending.

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