An Ideas Exchange Blending Live Events and Humanities Journalism. An affiliate of Arizona State University. A not-for-profit. publishes original daily journalism syndicated to 189 media outlets worldwide. At a time when our country’s public sphere is narrow and polarized, Zócalo seeks to be a welcoming intellectual space where individuals and communities can tackle fundamental questions in an accessible, nonpartisan, and broad-minded spirit. committed to translating ideas to broad audiences and to engaging a new, young, and diverse generation in the public square.
Vossian antonomasia is a stylistic device which attributes a certain property to a person by naming another (more well-known, more popular) person as a reference point. For instance, when Jim Koch is described as “the Steve Jobs of Beer”, certain qualities of Steve Jobs, be it entrepreneurship or persuasiveness, are assigned to Jim Koch, co-founder and chairman of the Boston Beer Company. VAs consist of three parts: a source (in our example “Steve Jobs”) serves as paragon to elevate the target (“Jim Koch”) by applying a modifier (“of Beer”) that provides the corresponding context. VA is named after Gerardus Vossius (1577– 1649), the Dutch classical scholar and author of rhetorical textbooks, who first distinguished and described VA as a separate phenomenon.
VisualEyes is web-based authoring tool developed at the University of Virginia to weave images, maps, charts, video and data into highly interactive and compelling dynamic visualizations. VisualEyes enables scholars to present selected primary source materials and research findings while encouraging active inquiry and hands-on learning among general and targeted audiences. It communicates through the use of dynamic displays – or "visualizations" – that organize and present meaningful information in both traditional and multimedia formats, such as audio-video, animation, charts, maps, data, and interactive timelines. The effective use of the visualizations can reveal and illuminate relationships between multiple kinds of information across time and space far more effectively than words alone.
R. Wille. Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Conceptual Structures (ICCS 2008), Volume 5113 von Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Seite 62-73. Springer, (2008)
B. Pang, L. Lee, und S. Vaithyanathan. Proceedings of the ACL-02 conference on Empirical methods in natural language processing-Volume 10, Seite 79--86. Association for Computational Linguistics, (2002)
F. Hoppe, T. Tietz, D. Dess\`ı, M. Sprau, M. Alam, und H. Sack. Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Humanities in the Semantic Web (WHiSe 2020) co-located with 15th Extended Semantic Web Conference (ESWC 2020), Heraklion, Greece, June 2, 2020 (online), Volume 2695 von CEUR Workshop Proceedings, Seite 15--20. CEUR-WS.org, (2020)
E. Stamatatos, N. Fakotakis, und G. Kokkinakis. Proceedings of the 18th conference on Computational linguistics-Volume 2, Seite 808--814. Association for Computational Linguistics, (2000)
Y. Lee, und S. Myaeng. Proceedings of the 25th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval, Seite 145--150. ACM, (2002)