Fedora: an architecture for complex objects and their relationships
International Journal on Digital Libraries
E-SCIENCE '06 Proceedings of the Second IEEE International Conference on e-Science and Grid Computing
Survey of Text Mining II: Clustering, Classification, and Retrieval
Survey of Text Mining II: Clustering, Classification, and Retrieval
Rule-based curation and preservation of data: A data grid approach using iRODS
Future Generation Computer Systems
Arts and humanities e-science-Current practices and future challenges
Future Generation Computer Systems
Future Generation Computer Systems
DILIGENT: a digital library infrastructure for supporting joint research
LGDI '05 Proceedings of the 2005 IEEE International Symposium on Mass Storage Systems and Technology
E-SCIENCE '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Fifth IEEE International Conference on e-Science
Open source historical OCR: the OCRopodium project
ECDL'10 Proceedings of the 14th European conference on Research and advanced technology for digital libraries
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In this article we bring together the results of a number of humanities e-research projects at King's College London. This programme of work was not carried out in an ad hoc manner, but was built on a rigorous methodological foundation, firstly by ensuring that the work was thoroughly grounded in the practice of humanities researchers (including 'digitally-aware' humanists), and secondly by analysing these practices in terms of 'scholarly primitives', basic activities common to research across humanities disciplines. The projects were then undertaken to provide systems and services that support various of these primitives, with a view to developing a research infrastructure constructed from these components, which may be regarded as a 'production line' for humanities research, supporting research activities from the creation of primary sources in digital form through to the publication of research outputs for discussion and re-use.