Machines Reading Maps: The Future of Historical Cartography as Data

Machines Reading Maps: The Future of Historical Cartography as Data

A Public Event to Introduce the Machines Reading Maps x David Rumsey Map Collection collaboration

By The David Rumsey Map Center at Stanford Libraries

Date and time

Thursday, April 20, 2023 · 1 - 4pm PDT

Location

The David Rumsey Map Center at Green Library

557 Escondido Mall Stanford, CA 94305

About this event

On April 20th, The David Rumsey Map Center at Stanford University will host a gathering of the MRM x David Rumsey Map Collection extended team, faculty, library specialists, developers and select invited guests to unveil the results of the MRM x David Rumsey Map Collection work, present technical details of the process and pipelines, and seek input on the future evolution of MRM from a project to a community-supported toolkit.

MRM and David Rumsey cordially invite you to attend the public presentation of this collaborative project.

What is Machines Reading Maps?

Over the course of the last year, Machines Reading Maps (MRM) has worked with the David Rumsey Map Collection and its partner Luna Imaging to make maps searchable by their text content, creating the possibility for humanities research that uses text on maps as a primary source and transforming map collection discovery. MRM began in 2021 as a collaborative project with researchers and librarians at the University of Southern California Digital Library, the University of Minnesota, The Alan Turing Institute, as well as heritage partners at the British Library, the Library of Congress, and the National Library of Scotland.

Why Machines Reading Maps?

Maps constitute a significant body of global cultural heritage, and they are being scanned at a rapid pace across the Gallery, Library, Archives and Museums (GLAM) community. However, most critical investigation of maps continues on a small scale, through close readings of a few maps. Individual maps communicate through visual grammars, supplemented by text. The text found on maps, particularly in aggregate, is a nearly untapped source about the construction of knowledge about place.

While we speak colloquially about reading maps, MRM concretely addresses how to make text on maps an accessible resource. Spatial searching will no longer be limited to metadata fields like place of publication, or general subject, but instead will allow queries based upon the labeled, spatial content of maps.

Details

All events for the MRM Summit will take place at the David Rumsey Map Center.

Due to the anticipated interaction of participants of the meeting, we principally envision in-person attendance. However, there is an option to register for remote participation. Details will be available during registration.

More information, as it is available, will be provided at https://machines-reading-maps.github.io/summit-2023

Organized by

The David Rumsey Map Center is a research and educational center that believes historic maps are an intrinsic part of our cultural heritage.

Sales Ended