Work Cited
Chang, D., Ge, Y., Song, S., Coleman, N., Christensen, J., & Heer, J. (2009). Visualizing the republic of letters. Stanford: Stanford University. Retrieved April, 21, 2014.
Edelstein, D., Findlen, P., Ceserani, G., Winterer, C., & Coleman, N. (2017). Historical Research in a Digital Age: Reflections from the Mapping the Republic of Letters Project. Historical Research in a Digital Age. The American Historical Review, 122(2), 400–424.
Kretzschmar Jr, W. A. (2009). Large-Scale Humanities Computing Projects: Snakes Eating Tails, or Every End is a New Beginning? Digital Humanities Quarterly, 3(2).
Michel, J.-B., Shen, Y. K., Aiden, A. P., Veres, A., Gray, M. K., Team, G. B., Pickett, J. P., Hoiberg, D., Clancy, D., Norvig, P., & others. (2011). Quantitative analysis of culture using millions of digitized books. Science, 331(6014), 176–182.
Terras, M. (2009). The potential and problems in using high performance computing in the arts and humanities: The Researching e-Science Analysis of Census Holdings (ReACH) project. Digital Humanities Quarterly, 3(4).
Terras, M., Baker, J., Hetherington, J., Beavan, D., Zaltz Austwick, M., Welsh, A., O’Neill, H., Finley, W., Duke-Williams, O., & Farquhar, A. (2018). Enabling complex analysis of large-scale digital collections: humanities research, high-performance computing, and transforming access to British Library digital collections. Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, 33(2), 456–466.
Urberg, M. (2020). Digital humanities projects and standards: Let’s get this conversation started! Information Services & Use, Preprint, 1–12.