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Digital Research at the British Library

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Digital Research at the British Library Dr James Baker Curator, Digital Research @j_w_baker
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Page 1: Digital Research at the British Library

Digital Research at

the British Library

Dr James Baker

Curator, Digital Research

@j_w_baker

Page 2: Digital Research at the British Library

www.bl.uk 2

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www.bl.uk 3

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discipline camp and

camps sentence

Ngram Viewer ©

Google

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“Literary scholars and historians have in the past been limited in their

analyses of print culture by the constraints of physical archives and human

capacity. A lone scholar cannot read, much less make sense

of, millions of newspaper pages. With the aid of computational

linguistics tools and digitized corpora, however, we are working toward a

large-scale, systemic understanding of how texts were valued and

transmitted during this period”

David A. Smith, Ryan Cordell, and Elizabeth Maddock Dillon, ‘Infectious Texts:

Modeling Text Reuse in Nineteenth-Century Newspapers’ (2013)

http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/dasmith/infect-bighum-2013.pdf

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Newspaper Man photograph courtesy of

Flickr user Ed Stevenson / Creative

Commons Licensed

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Tumblr

interface ©

Tumblr

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‘Early users of medieval books of

hours and prayer books left signs

of their reading in the form of

fingerprints in the margins. The

darkness of their

fingerprints correlates to

the intensity of their use

and handling. A densitometer

-- a machine that measures the

darkness of a reflecting surface --

can reveal which texts a reader

favored.’ Kathryn M. Rudy, ‘Dirty Books: Quantifying

Patterns of Use in Medieval Manuscripts

Using a Densitometer’, Journal of

Historians of Nederlandish Art (2010)

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© UKWA/Conservative

Party

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Flickr interface © Flickr

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A Web of Rights, British Library, 19 February 2015 http://bldigicon7.eventbrite.co.uk/

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