The Graduate School
Wednesday, April 16, 2025 at 11:00 AM until 12:00 PMUS Eastern Daylight Time UTC -04:00
247 Hesburgh Library, Navari Family Center for Digital ScholarsHesburgh Libraries, INUnited States
Learn the benefits of using computers to supplement the reading process; read at scale.
This hands-on class affords participants to learn the benefits of using computers to analyze textual corpora such as a collection of books or journal articles. Sometimes called "distant" or "scalable" reading, text mining is a way to analyze the words (or phrases) in a text in order to find patterns & anomalies within it. Based on the resulting analysis, it is possible to more quickly learn what a corpus is about when compared to reading in the more traditional manner. There are no prerequisites, but participants will want to bring their own laptop to the session.
Open to Graduate Students, Undergraduates, Faculty, Staff, Postdocs Instructed By Digital Initiatives Librarian, Eric Morgan emorgan@nd.edu
Eric Morgan is the Digital Initiatives Librarian in the Navari Family Center for Digital Scholarship. His current work focuses on assisting faculty and students with text mining and analysis. Though his work involves extensive computing expertise, Eric considers himself to be a librarian first, and a computer user second. His professional goal is to discover new ways to use computers to provide better library service. His research interests have included information retrieval, expert systems, and automated personalization.