Transcript HASTAC
HASTAC
Humanities, Arts, Sciences and
Technology Advanced Collaboratory
Mission
HASTAC (pronounced “Haystack”) is a
consortium of humanists, artists, scientists,
and engineers dedicated to working
together to develop innovative computing
and information systems that support
interdisciplinary research and teaching in
the humanities and arts and that stretch the
possibilities and applications of existing
computational technologies.
HASTAC Members
Duke University’s John Hope Franklin Center in collaboration with ISIS
(Information Science + Information Studies), Jenkins Chair in New
Technologies and Society, Arts Warehouse, Fitzpatrick Photonics Center,
Visualization Lab, Program in Cultural Studies in Science and Technology at
UNC and RENCI, UNC
University of California Humanities Research Institute, based in Irvine and
supporting the entire UC system, with the San Diego Supercomputing
Center, CalIT2 (based at both UC-San Diego and UC-Irvine)
University of Southern California’s Program in Critical Media Studies, School
of Cinema-TV, with the Institute for Media Literacy, the Annenberg Center,
and Vectors electronic multi-media journal
Stanford Humanities Lab with the Center for Information Technology
Research in the Interest of Society at UC-Berkeley
Simpson Center for the Humanities at the University of Washington with
computer scientists and engineers at both U Washington and in industry in
Seattle
University of Illinois, Urbana, with the National Center for Supercomputing
Applications
Institute for the Humanities at the University of Michigan and partners across
the computational and engineering sciences
Questions
The questions researchers are asking are increasingly
complex.
Intertwined issues of biology, geography, the
environment, technology, the arts, humanities, and
social sciences.
Legal, ethical, social, historical, and aesthetic issues
must also be carefully considered as we expand our
capacities for accumulating and analyzing data.
We are pushing the boundaries of science and what it
means to be human: this is the age-old territory of the
humanities.
Interdisciplinary
No single academic discipline or point of view is sufficient to
comprehend all the implications of this evolution. Yet in
order to bring together the relevant perspectives, these
critical needs must be addressed:
more and better collaboration with colleagues across
distance, time, and discipline;
better technological tools in order to facilitate this
collaboration; and
a new generation of scholars: humanities scholars who
value and are expert in dialogue with the most advanced
work in technology development, and scientists and
technologists who value and are expert in dialogue with the
content-rich and data-intensive environment provided by
advanced humanities research.
Computational Challenges in
the Sciences
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey is one of
the most ambitious astronomical survey
projects ever undertaken. It includes
millions of x-ray, infrared, and visible
light images of over a hundred million
celestial objects and maps one-quarter
of the entire sky. It measures the
distances to more than a million
galaxies and quasars. It entails over 40
terabytes of information.
By Comparison…In the Arts
and Humanities
The Survivors of the Shoah project is a
compilation of 52,000 video interviews of
Holocaust survivors, representing 32 languages
and 56 countries. This project uses over 180
terabytes of memory.*
In addition, the Shoah project requires us to
think about intellectual property, privacy,
access, violence, ethics, use, and other
delicate, controversial, and significant “realworld” issues.
*Example cited by ACLS commission on “Cyberinfrastructure and the
Humanities”
Solution
Collaboratories of humanists, artists,
designers, IP legal theorists, eticists,
sociologists, anthropologists,
historians, media analysts, engineers,
and computational scientists working
together on problem- or issue-based
projects, often with real-world
applications and implications.
HASTAC Projects
The Sikh 3-D Virtual Museum: “THE
FUTURES OF OUR PASTS: ThreeDimensional Representations of Culturally
Significant Objects and Their Humanistic
Implications—the Case of Sikh Cultural
Artifacts”
Social software that allows diasporic
community of users to come together
virtually.
Co-PI’s: UCHRI, CITRIS at Berkeley, Smithsonian Institution,
Sikh Foundation, and Getty Institute.
Projects (cont.)
“Cultural California” is an ambitious online
project bringing together mappings of the
history of cultural developments and
contributions throughout the state of
California, including visual and
environmental arts, literature, music,
performance, theater, film, architecture,
digital art (including video games), cuisine,
and sports.
Projects (cont)
New 3-D imaging tools that use gaming
environments, humanities data sets, and a
sensor space to recreate virtually the
experience of walking through the Cathedral
at St. Pierre de Beauvais, France. Data
provided by Professor Peter Allen from
Columbia University (see
http://www1.cs.columbu.edu/~allen/ITR/__)
Projects (cont)
The Labyrinth Project at USC’s
Annenberg Center for Communication
is developing on-line college
courseware on Modernism in general
and Russian Modernism in particular.
The courseware serves as a model to
demonstrate the unique pedagogical
potential of interactive digital media.
Projects (cont)
Vectors is a multimedia journal edited by
one of HASTAC’s leaders and published at
the Annenberg Center for Communication at
the University of Southern California. The
journal is committed to engaging crossdisciplinary debates surrounding the
changing role of the visual and the aural in
scholarship, media and daily life.
Projects (cont)
CITRIS, in partnership with the Stanford
Humanities Laboratory, has produced the
first ever interactive curatorial program
based on a gaming environment. The
Fuller Game couples the vast quantities of
multimedia materials that make up the
Buckminster Fuller Archive with userfriendly search tools and a real-time, multiuser 3-D world.
Projects (cont)
The alban eved dance troupe of Greensboro, North
Carolina and the Fitzpatrick Photonics Center teamed
up with Information Sciences + Information Studies at
Duke University for a performance and symposium
called Free Space. The performance exemplified the
melding of disciplines and the potential for new
academic collaborations and partnerships of the kind
that necessarily occur outside the academy (in the
world of business, entertainment, medicine, and other
areas). Panel discussions and a documentary film
addressed the difficulties, challenges, and rewards of
this project.
Projects (cont)
In 2005, UCHRI will roll out its new
virtual residency program, using
gaming environments such as
Croquet and/or Torque to allow
distance collaborators to interact
using avatars and other collaborative
systems to foster interaction.
Projects (cont)
HASTAC is currently consulting for the government of
Costa Rica on a project designed to provide academic,
nonprofit and industrial institutions throughout Costa
Rica with a world-class, wide-area distributed
computing Grid technology infrastructure. In February
2005, a VIP Summit will be hosted in Costa Rica to
bring together heads of state and more than three
dozen senior executives from some of the largest
industrial organizations worldwide, representing
academe, industry, and government.
2006-2007
“In Formation Year”
A year of synchronized, linked, collaborative events
distributed across the HASTAC consortium and
designed for faculty professional development, tool
and technology innovation, pedagogical impact and
national public awareness.
Intensive Summer Workshop
on Technological Humanities
Summer 2006: The University of
California Humanities Research
Institute and the San Diego
Supercomputing Center will co-host
an intensive two-week summer
workshop on technological humanism.
AY 2006-2007
In Formation Year
The participating institutions will be hosting semester-and
year-long seminars bringing together humanists, social
scientists, artists, engineers, designers, and
computational scientists to train faculty and exchange
ideas that will influence the next generation of technology
and humanistic scholarship.
Approximately 70 faculty, graduate students, and
undergraduates across the country will be participating in
this networked year.
HASTAC is working with the Woodrow Wilson Foundation
to raise additional funds for a national fellowship to
extend beyond 2006-2007 and bring dissertation students
and junior faculty (postdocs) to residential seminar sites.
Duke’s Topic (AY 20062007)
“Interface,” human-computer/humanmachine interactions, from a historical
and contemporary perspective
Co-convened by Jenkins Chair Tim
Lenoir and English Professor Priscilla
Wald.
Will include faculty from the humanities,
arts, social sciences, computational
sciences and engineering, and medicine.
Distributed Public Lecture
Series on “In Formation”
Each participating institution will host a lecture/panel
discussion featuring a giant in technology innovation and
a distinguished humanist as part of an “In Formation”
series.
Each talk will address a topic of national interest with a
catchy and graphically appropriate title: Interface,
Insecurity, Inauthenticity, In Vision, Intellectual Property,
Interaction, etc.
A number of local tv and radio stations have pledged to
broadcast these events.
Social software—blogs, wikis, real-time video annotation
systems—will help create a virtual audience and also be
used in courses coordinated with the lectures.
National Conferences
2 national conferences showcasing
state-of-the-art tools developed for the
arts, humanities, and the general
college classroom.
Needle
Humanities, Arts, Sciences, Technology @ Cutting-Edge
www.hastac.org
HASTAC’s on-line newsletter will
provide updates on HASTAC projects
and programs.
Launch: March 2005
We Welcome Your
Participation
We invite feedback on our Croquet-based 3-D
curatorial game. http://www.citrisuc.org/hosted/projects/ith/gallery. The actual
download is: http://www.citrisuc.org/hosted/projects/ith/gallery/dlpage.html
How can the AY 2006-2007 public educational year be
incorporated into other Duke planning?
How can we collaborate on events, projects, and
grants of mutual interest (esp. grants with an outreach
or a societal impact component)?
Thank you for your ideas and feedback!
HASTAC VISION STATEMENT
www.woodrowwilson.org/draft/HASTAC
WHY WE NEED THE HUMANITIES NOW: A MANIFESTO FOR THE HUMANITIES IN A TECHNOLOGICAL AGE
CATHY N. DAVIDSON and DAVID THEO GOLDBERG
http://www.uchri.org/humanities_manifesto.htm
End of Presentation