Ausgabe 3/2022
AURA Special Issue-Born Digital (819 - 999) // CILa Special Issue (1001 - 1318)
Inhalt (38 Artikel)
Transformational AI: seeing through the lens of digital heritage and ‘cybersyn’
Karamjit S. Gill
“Born digital” shedding light into the darkness of digital culture
Larry Stapleton, Lise Jaillant
Unlocking digital archives: cross-disciplinary perspectives on AI and born-digital data
Lise Jaillant, Annalina Caputo
Using AI and ML to optimize information discovery in under-utilized, Holocaust-related records
Kirsten Strigel Carter, Abby Gondek, William Underwood, Teddy Randby, Richard Marciano
Finding light in dark archives: using AI to connect context and content in email
Stephanie Decker, David A. Kirsch, Santhilata Kuppili Venkata, Adam Nix
Jumping into the artistic deep end: building the catalogue raisonné
Todd Dobbs, Aileen Benedict, Zbigniew Ras
Digital cultural heritage standards: from silo to semantic web
Brenda O’Neill, Larry Stapleton
Born digital or fossilised digitally? How born digital data systems continue the legacy of social violence towards LGBTQI + communities: a case study of experiences in the Republic of Ireland
Noeleen Donnelly, Larry Stapleton, Jennifer O’Mahoney
Using Linked Data to create provenance-rich metadata interlinks: the design and evaluation of the NAISC-L interlinking framework for libraries, archives and museums
Lucy McKenna, Christophe Debruyne, Declan O’Sullivan
The role of born digital data in confronting a difficult and contested past through digital storytelling: the Waterford Memories Project
Jennifer O’Mahoney
Dark archives or a dark age for reasoning over archives?
Mark Bell, Jenny Bunn
Managing and accessing web archives: Irish practitioners’ perspectives
Maria Ryan, Della Keating, Joanna Finegan
Will archivists use AI to enhance or to dumb down our societal memory?
Titia van der Werf, Bram van der Werf
Born free: a tale of two rivers
Tauriq Jenkins, Richard Ennals, June Bam-Hutchison
Openness and privacy in born-digital archives: reflecting the role of AI development
Angeliki Tzouganatou
Back and forth: cybernetics interrelations and how it spread in Latin America
Ignacio Nieto Larrain, José-Carlos Mariátegui, David Maulén de los Reyes
Capsaicin and cybernetics: Mexican intellectual networks in the foundation of cybernetics
Andrés Burbano, Everardo Reyes
On the relationships between philosophy of technology, cybernetics, and aesthetics with their impacts on Latin America
Cornelie Leopold
Cybernetics, operations research and information theory at the Ulm School of Design and its influence on Latin America
David Oswald
After the “new aesthetic”: a short history of the cybernetic turn in Brazil
Nathaniel Wolfson
Cybernetics and systems art in Latin America: the art and communication center (CAyC) and its pioneering art and technology network
José-Carlos Mariátegui
Waldemar Cordeiro and Arteônica: rewritings of digital art in Brazil and Latin America
Priscila Almeida Cunha Arantes
Cultural, scientific and technical antecedents of the Cybersyn project in Chile
Juan Alvarez, Claudio Gutierrez
Operative communication: project Cybersyn and the intersection of information design, interface design, and interaction design
Sebastian Vehlken
Democracy and second-order cybernetics: the ascent of participation and creativity
Carlos Senna Figueiredo
Jaime Garretón’s cybernetic theory of the city and its system: a missing link in contemporary urban theory
Claudio Araneda
URUCIB: a technological revolution in post-dictatorship Uruguay (1986–88)
Víctor Ganón
The capabilities approach and variety engineering. A case for social cocreation of value
Alfonso Reyes Alvarado
From cybersin to cybernet. Considerations for a cybernetics design thinking in the socialism of the XXI century
Leonardo Lavanderos
Conjectural artworks: seeing at and beyond Maturana and Varela’s visual thinking on life and cognition
Sergio Rodríguez Gómez