Skip to main content

AI & SOCIETY

Ausgabe 3/2022

AURA Special Issue-Born Digital (819 - 999) // CILa Special Issue (1001 - 1318)

Inhalt (38 Artikel)

Open Access Original Article

Unlocking digital archives: cross-disciplinary perspectives on AI and born-digital data

Lise Jaillant, Annalina Caputo

Open Access Original Article

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

Open Access Original Article

Finding light in dark archives: using AI to connect context and content in email

Stephanie Decker, David A. Kirsch, Santhilata Kuppili Venkata, Adam Nix

Open Access Original Article

Jumping into the artistic deep end: building the catalogue raisonné

Todd Dobbs, Aileen Benedict, Zbigniew Ras

Open Access Original Article

Digital cultural heritage standards: from silo to semantic web

Brenda O’Neill, Larry Stapleton

Open Access Open Forum

Dark archives or a dark age for reasoning over archives?

Mark Bell, Jenny Bunn

Open Forum

Managing and accessing web archives: Irish practitioners’ perspectives

Maria Ryan, Della Keating, Joanna Finegan

Curmudgeon Corner

Will archivists use AI to enhance or to dumb down our societal memory?

Titia van der Werf, Bram van der Werf

Curmudgeon Corner

Born free: a tale of two rivers

Tauriq Jenkins, Richard Ennals, June Bam-Hutchison

Editorial

Back and forth: cybernetics interrelations and how it spread in Latin America

Ignacio Nieto Larrain, José-Carlos Mariátegui, David Maulén de los Reyes

Original Article

Cybernetics in Chile: a history with unexpected chapters

Juan-Carlos Letelier

Original Article

Bio-digital architecture

David Maulén de los Reyes

Original Article

Cybernetic governance of the Peruvian State: a proposal

Ricardo Rodriguez-Ulloa

Original Article

Why did cybernetics disappear from Latin America?

David Maulén de los Reyes