Event box

Humanities researchers are often not accustomed to treating their objects of study as “data,” rather focusing on texts, collections, or cultural objects as the base unit of their research. However, the rich variety of data analysis tools in common practice allows for an incredible opportunity for expanded research avenues when humanities sources are treated as sources for data extraction.

 

This 1-hour, hands-on workshop will introduce Penn students to the ways humanities scholars of all levels can create, analyze, decode, and visualize data drawn from humanities sources. Participants will explore what it means to treat texts, places, and cultural artifacts as data, considering both the possibilities and limitations of computational approaches in humanities research. The session will provide an introduction to several tools for rapid data analysis, while underscoring how humanists already work with data in everyday research in critical, ethical, and responsible ways.

 

Workshop attendees will learn how to apply basic text analysis methods using Voyant, allowing participants to explore patterns across literary works, archival materials, and other textual corpora. Finally, students will briefly be exposed to exploring geospatial humanities data, learning to extract location information from narratives for rapid visualization using Palladio. No prior experience is required.

Registration is required. There are 19 in-person seats available. There are 29 online seats available.

Date:
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Time:
11:00am - 12:00pm
Location:
Research Data and Digital Scholarship Exchange
Audiences:
Penn Graduate Students Only
Audiences:
Penn Students Only
Audiences:
Penn Students, Faculty, and Staff
Categories:
Data Science, Data Visualization, Love Data Week, Textual Analysis

Event Organizer

Matthew Hunter