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*​​**Learn How Researchers and Librarians Use Collections as Data in
September 27th Symposium at Library of Congress- Free and Open to the
Public*

What happens when researchers with powerful computing tools meet massive
digital collections? What discoveries are made? What new directions and
best practices in scholarly research emerge?

Hear from scholars who have used digital collections to expand human
understanding and from leaders in institutions that collect, organize,
preserve, and provide digital collections as data. We invite you to attend
the symposium, "Collections as Data: Stewardship and Use Models to Enhance
Access," which will be held from *8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Tuesday,
September 27th*, in the Coolidge Auditorium on the first floor of the
Thomas Jefferson Building, 101 Independence Ave. S.E., Washington, D.C. The
event is free and open to the public. Advance registration is required. For
a complete program of the day’s events, visit http://digitalpreservation.gov
/meetings/dcs16.html.

Jer Thorp, keynote speaker and co-founder of The Office for Creative
Research <http://ocr.nyc/>, will open the symposium with a look at his
organization’s work making complex data sets accessible, thought-provoking,
and ultimately more human.

Speakers will highlight efforts in the cultural heritage and digital
humanities communities to enhance access to digital collections, help
develop communities of practice and address rising concerns for data
scholarship. The symposium will conclude with steps towards supporting
computational research with “Collections as Data: Conditions of Possibility”
by Thomas Padilla, Humanities Data Curator at the University of California
Santa Barbara.

*This event will be live-streamed.* The link will be made available the day
of the event on the conference page. Join the conversation on Twitter using
#AsData.



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Jaime Mears

Library of Congress

National Digital Initiatives

National and International Outreach (NIO)

LM330 - 202-707-3979