Can someone recommend a good conceptual/theoretical article on #Annotation in the #Humanities/#DigitalHumanities, particularly #ArtHistory/#DigitalArtHistory? So not about specific tools, vocabularies etc., but on the very act of annotation, its purpose and its status as an intellectual activity?
I have always said that the digital transformation will lead to a new look at our history and culture. But I never thought that this view would be so fictional.
This is Sora by OpenAI: an AI model to create videos from text with the ability to generate realistic scenes and adhere to prompts for up to a minute. https://openai.com/sora #sora#AI#VideoCreation
But perhaps we just need to get used to a new medium that, like cinema, takes us into a different world, where the tightrope walk between historical accuracy and contemporary fiction is precisely what makes it so appealing. #digitalarthistory#arthistory
Exploring 'meaningful' human-AI collaboration in humanities research! This study delves into art historical image retrieval using computer vision tools: transparency, epistemic awareness, data context, and interaction support. #ArtHistory#AIResearch#DigitalArtHistory
🎨💻🤝 @kaglinka
Great new publication by @zentralwerkstatt et al. delves into the transformative potential of large-scale vision models, epistemic implications and methodological shifts.
📄 https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2308.07464