#ccls24 — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #ccls24, aggregated by home.social.
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🎉 Today, we celebrate the publication of the final article from @jcls' 2024 conference track #JCLS 3 (1). We’re thrilled to see groundbreaking research in computational literary studies and can’t wait for what’s next! #CCLS24 #CLS #CCLS25 #DigitalHumanities #DH #Computing
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In #2024, our lab took over a crucial part of editing the conference issue of the Journal of Computational Literary Studies. @EvelynGius as one of the editors, supported by @JulianHaeussler and @SvenjaGuhr as editorial assistants, ensured the smooth copyediting and publication process of @jcls 3 (1).
#CLS #CCLS24 #Journal #JCLS https://jcls.io -
After #JCLS 3(1) conference track #CCLS24 is before #CCLS25. We look forward to your submissions! Please find our Call for Papers for the conference track 2025 at https://jcls.io/site/cfp/ #ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CCLS25 #CfP #Literary #Computing #CLS
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The conference issue's final article of 2024 is by Szemes and Nagy: "Repetition and Innovation in Dramatic Texts. An Attempt to Measure the Degree of Novelty in Character's Speech" (10.48694/jcls.3923). Check it out at: https://jcls.io/issue/109/info/ #JCLS #CCLS24 #Shakespeare
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As the final days of 2024 approach, we are excited to announce the final article of the JCLS 3 (1) conference issue, concluding the JCLS year of 2024. #DigitalHumanities #CCLS24 #JCLS #2024 https://jcls.io
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Mélanie-Becquet et al. introduce BookNLP-fr, a French adaptation of the #BookNLP pipeline by @dbamman et al., enhancing #genre classification with interpretable features and expanding tools for #distantreading in #CLS. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3924 #CCLS24 #NLP #DigitalHumanities #DH
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This week, we announce another article from JCLS 3 (1): Mélanie-Becquet et al. "BookNLP-fr, the French Versant of BookNLP. A Tailored Pipeline for 19th and 20th Century French Literature" (10.48694/jcls.3924). Check it out at: https://jcls.io/issue/109/info/ #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities #CCLS24 #BookNLP
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Agapitos and van Cranenburgh use computational #stylometry to show that while 'Octavia' and 'Hercules Oetaeus' were largely written by #Seneca, a closer analysis of the text segments reveals signs of mixed #authorship. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3919 #CLS #CCLS24 #Classics #AuthorshipVerification
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This week, we announce the seventh article from JCLS 3 (1): Agapitos and van Cranenburgh "A Stylometric Analysis of Seneca's Disputed Plays. Authorship Verification of Octavia and Hercules Oetaeus" (10.48694/jcls.3919). Check it out at: https://jcls.io/issue/109/info/ #ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities #CCLS24
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Feldkamp et al. reveal diverse perspectives on literary quality and show that expert opinion often conflicts with crowd-sourced ratings & award nominations, highlighting the complexity of measuring literary quality. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3908 #CLS #CCLS24 #LiteraryQuality #CulturalAnalytics
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Feldkamp et al. reveal diverse perspectives on literary quality and show that expert opinion often conflicts with crowd-sourced ratings & award nominations, highlighting the complexity of measuring literary quality. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3908 #CLS #CCLS24 #LiteraryQuality #CulturalAnalytics
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Feldkamp et al. reveal diverse perspectives on literary quality and show that expert opinion often conflicts with crowd-sourced ratings & award nominations, highlighting the complexity of measuring literary quality. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3908 #CLS #CCLS24 #LiteraryQuality #CulturalAnalytics
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Feldkamp et al. reveal diverse perspectives on literary quality and show that expert opinion often conflicts with crowd-sourced ratings & award nominations, highlighting the complexity of measuring literary quality. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3908 #CLS #CCLS24 #LiteraryQuality #CulturalAnalytics
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Feldkamp et al. reveal diverse perspectives on literary quality and show that expert opinion often conflicts with crowd-sourced ratings & award nominations, highlighting the complexity of measuring literary quality. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3908 #CLS #CCLS24 #LiteraryQuality #CulturalAnalytics
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And the publication series continues: Today we announce the sixth article from JCLS 3 (1): Feldkamp et al. "Measuring Literary Quality. Proxies and Perspectives" (10.48694/jcls.3908). Check it out at: https://jcls.io/issue/109/info/
#ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities #CCLS24 -
Koolen et al. analyzed 634,614 reader reviews to identify how genre-specific terms relate to the impact novels have on readers, revealing insights into readers' motivations. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3927
#CLS #CCLS24 -
Today we're announcing the fifth article from JCLS 3 (1): Koolen et al. "From Review to Genre to Novel and Back" (10.48694/jcls.3927). Check it out at https://jcls.io/issue/109/info/
#ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities #CCLS24 -
Brodén et al. revisit Samuelsson's (2013) comparative literature study by analyzing 700 digitized reviews from 1906, 1956, and 2006 through data visualizations, using Shklovsky's "defamiliarization" to uncover new insights. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3926
#CLS #CCLS24 -
We're thrilled to announce the fourth article from JCLS 3 (1): Brodén et al. "Visualization as Defamiliarization" (10.48694/jcls.3926). The article can be found at: https://jcls.io/issue/109/info/
#ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities #CCLS24 -
It's an exciting week for JCLS! We're delighted to announce the fourth article of JCLS 3 (1) as well as the call for papers for next year's conference issue!
#CCLS24 and #CCLS25 #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities -
Gittel et al. formalize "reflective passages" in literature, using a neural classifier to identify three types—COMMENT, GENERALISATION, and NON-FICTIONAL SPEECH—across 250 years of German fiction, uncovering peak periods of reflection around 1755, 1835, and 1920. https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3861 #CLS #CCLS24
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And the publication series continues: Today we're announcing another article from JCLS 3 (1): Gittel et al. "Neither Telling nor Describing" (10.48694/jcls.3861). Check it out at https://jcls.io/issue/109/info/ #ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities #CCLS24
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Ketzan and Eve introduce the term "anxiety of prestige" to explore how "popular" fiction authors, like Stephen King, address literary prestige. Using King as a case study, they analyze his stylistic choices to reveal latent anxieties about "low" vs. "high" literature.
https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3915 #LiteraryStudies #CLS #StephenKing #PopularFiction #Prestige #Fiction #CCLS24 #DigitalHumanities @mpe -
Ketzan and Eve introduce the term "anxiety of prestige" to explore how "popular" fiction authors, like Stephen King, address literary prestige. Using King as a case study, they analyze his stylistic choices to reveal latent anxieties about "low" vs. "high" literature.
https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3915 #LiteraryStudies #CLS #StephenKing #PopularFiction #Prestige #Fiction #CCLS24 #DigitalHumanities @mpe -
Ketzan and Eve introduce the term "anxiety of prestige" to explore how "popular" fiction authors, like Stephen King, address literary prestige. Using King as a case study, they analyze his stylistic choices to reveal latent anxieties about "low" vs. "high" literature.
https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3915 #LiteraryStudies #CLS #StephenKing #PopularFiction #Prestige #Fiction #CCLS24 #DigitalHumanities @mpe -
Ketzan and Eve introduce the term "anxiety of prestige" to explore how "popular" fiction authors, like Stephen King, address literary prestige. Using King as a case study, they analyze his stylistic choices to reveal latent anxieties about "low" vs. "high" literature.
https://doi.org/10.48694/jcls.3915 #LiteraryStudies #CLS #StephenKing #PopularFiction #Prestige #Fiction #CCLS24 #DigitalHumanities @mpe -
We're thrilled to announce the first two articles of JCLS 3 (1): Ketzan/Eve “The Anxiety of Prestige in Stephen King’s Stylistics” (10.48694/jcls.3915) and Wilkens/ Evans/Soni/Bamman/Piper “Small Worlds: Measuring the Mobility of Characters in English-Language Fiction” (10.48694/jcls.3917)
https://jcls.io/issue/109/info/ #ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities #CCLS24 -
It’s time for the next edition: We’re excited to start publishing the articles of this year’s #JCLS conference issue! Stay tuned! #CLS #DigitalHumanities #DH #CCLS24
RE: https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:ot6ls7y347zb6vqtpw74rjum/post/3l54zyma6bcx2 -
About 3.5 months ago, #CCLS24 took place in beautiful Vienna (https://jcls.io/site/ccls2024/). We had an exciting program of talks by researchers from the international Computational Literary Studies community. Following the pre-prints in the conference reader, the double peer-reviewed full papers of the conference issue will be published starting this week (/jcls.io/issue/109/info/). #ComputationalLiteraryStudies #CLS #JCLS #DigitalHumanities
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The 🧑🎓#ClsInfraTraining School: ExplorCor🧑🎓 in Vienna is the same week as #CCLS24, the @jcls Annual Conference, 10-14 June🌟.
Apply for the Training School, stay for the conference!
✍️Applications closing 15 Feb
https://clsinfra.io/events/training-school/