This article uses Science and Technology Studies (STS) concepts to analyze the DECRYPT project, a cross-disciplinary digital humanities collaboration involving computational linguists, historians, computer scientists, AI experts, cryptologists, and others. The authors examine the project's use of trading zones, boundary objects, and interactional expertise to facilitate communication and collaboration among researchers from vastly different epistemic cultures. The study explores best practices and challenges in a truly cross-disciplinary digital humanities project.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
May 13, 2024
Authors
Benedek Láng, Beáta Megyesi
Tags
digital humanities
cross-disciplinary
collaboration
trading zones
boundary objects
interactional expertise
epistemic cultures
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