Home About Subscribe Search Member Area

Humanist Discussion Group


< Back to Volume 32

Humanist Archives: Dec. 13, 2018, 7:46 a.m. Humanist 32.266 - wanted: software engineers; DH fellow

                  Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 32, No. 266.
            Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London
                   Hosted by King's Digital Lab
                       www.dhhumanist.org
                Submit to: humanist@dhhumanist.org


    [1]    From: Mia Ridge 
           Subject: Come and work with the British Library and the Alan Turing Institute! Digital Humanities Research Systems Engineer, Living with Machines (152)

    [2]    From: Alex Humphreys 
           Subject: JSTOR Digital Humanities Fellow (88)

    [3]    From: James Cummings 
           Subject: Newcastle University, Digital Institute, 5 Research Software Engineer posts. (69)


--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Date: 2018-12-12 13:01:46+00:00
        From: Mia Ridge 
        Subject: Come and work with the British Library and the Alan Turing Institute! Digital Humanities Research Systems Engineer, Living with Machines

Dear all,

The Living with Machines project (on which I'm a co-investigator) is
looking for a 'research software engineer' with experience in the digital
humanities to help deliver web-based outputs for a new project combining
data science and historical research methods to examine digitised
collections at scale. I've pulled some points from the job ad below, and
I'm happy to answer questions about it, as I know that our job profiles can
be a little obscure. And as always, some elements will be more essential
than others, so I might be able to provide more background to help
potential applicants. Please help us spread the word as widely as possible!

To my mind, work in 'digital scholarship' or 'digital humanities' includes
work in museums, libraries and archives as well as academic or other
research environments. I'm looking for a user-focused, problem solver who
enjoys collaboration to help us meet the challenges and ambitions of the
project.

'Working as part of a multi-disciplinary team (including curators,
historians, data scientists, computational linguists and other software
engineers), the successful candidate will help identify requirements, and
design and implement online interfaces that integrate different project
outputs to support the collections, questions and methods of the project.
They'll create outputs including creative, intuitive visualisations and
interfaces for digitised collections and derived datasets, crowdsourcing
tasks and data science outputs for project specialists, academic and public
users.'

You may have experience as a Research Software Engineer, software
developer, creative technologist, data or visualisation specialist or
digital humanities researcher. Excellent oral and written communication
skills are also essential for this post. As with other Research Software
Engineer (https://rse.ac.uk/) posts, you'll have the opportunity to develop
their skills and play an active part in all aspects of research and
outreach, including analysis and publication.

The link is
https://britishlibrary.recruitment.northgatearinso.com/birl/pages/vacancy.jsf?latest=01001799
 *Applications closes January 6th.*

(If that link doesn't work the reference number is COL02505 /
https://britishlibrary.recruitment.northgatearinso.com/birl/pages/main.jsf )

Cheers,

Mia
(Posting as Digital Curator, Western Heritage Collections, British Library,
and Co-Investigator, Living with Machines)


Digital Humanities Research Systems Engineer, Living with Machines
Salary: £39,000 per annum
Location: St Pancras
Full Time, Fixed Term to 30 March 2023

Living with Machines (LwM) is an ambitious large-scale project in data
science and the digital humanities. LwM proposes a new research paradigm --
a radical collaboration between historians, data scientists, geographers,
computational linguists, and curators -- using computational techniques and
very large textual datasets from a variety of sources in order to ask
questions about the ways in which technology altered the very fabric of
life in Britain. We will create spatial and temporal representations of
complex historical datasets, and interfaces for specific research methods
and technologies.

We are looking for a Digital Humanities Research Software Engineer (DH RSE)
to complement our team and create online interfaces that help deliver our
goals. This is an exciting opportunity to contribute to the development and
implementation of the digital scholarship and public outreach streams of
the LwM project by assembling, designing, implementing, developing and
integrating a range of tools.

Working as part of a multi-disciplinary team (including curators,
historians, data scientists, computational linguists and other software
engineers), the successful candidate will help identify requirements, and
design and implement online interfaces that integrate different project
outputs to support the collections, questions and methods of the project.
The DH RSE will create outputs including creative, intuitive visualisations
and interfaces for digitised collections and derived datasets,
crowdsourcing tasks and data science outputs for project specialists,
academic and public users.

The DH RSE will have a good understanding of digital scholarship,
preferably gained from working in a research library, academic or other
appropriate environment. This may include work as a Research Software
Engineer, software developer, creative technologist, data or visualisation
specialist or digital humanities researcher. They will have excellent
information technology skills, including experience of the tools and
technologies that support digital scholarship. Excellent oral and written
communication skills are also essential for this post. As with other
Research Software Engineer (https://rse.ac.uk/) posts, the post holder will
have the opportunity to develop their skills and play an active part in all
aspects of research and outreach, including analysis and publication.

This project aims to use computational techniques and very large datasets
in order to ask questions about the ways in which technology altered the
very fabric of human existence on a hitherto unprecedented scale. The
project exploits a corpus of digitised sources, including newspapers, trade
directories, census data, and patents, and other resources yet to be
digitised (the unstamped press, trade press, business archives and
autobiographies). By developing intuitive computational interfaces and a
philosophy of interdisciplinary collaboration we will enable close
interaction between computational methods and historical inquiry.

Living with Machines is carried out in partnership between the Alan Turing
Institute, the British Library, and the Universities of Exeter, London
(QMUL) Cambridge, and East Anglia. The project is led by Ruth Ahnert
(QMUL), and co-led by Mia Ridge (BL), Adam Farquhar (BL), Emma Griffin
(UEA), James Hetherington (Alan Turing Institute), Jon Lawrence (Exeter),
and Barbara McGillivray (Alan Turing Institute and Cambridge).

As one of the world’s great libraries, our duty is to preserve the nation’s
intellectual memory for the future. At present we have well over 150
million items, in most known languages, with three million new items added
every year. We have manuscripts, maps, newspapers, magazines, prints and
drawings, music scores, and patents. We operate the world’s largest
document delivery service providing millions of items a year to customers
all over the world. What matters to us is that we preserve the national
memory and enable knowledge to be created both now and in the future.

In return we offer a competitive salary and a number of excellent
benefits.  Our pension scheme is one of the most valuable benefits we
offer, as our staff can become members of the Alpha Pension Scheme where
the Library contributes 20.9%. Another significant benefit the Library
provides is the provision of a flexible working hours scheme which could
allow you to work your hours flexibly over the week and to take up to 5
days flexi leave in a 3 month period. This is on top of 25 days holiday
from entry and public and privilege holidays.

For further information and to apply, please visit www.bl.uk/careers
quoting vacancy ref:02505




*Closing date: 6 January 2019Interview date: 15 & 16 January 2019*

We are a Disability Confident employer, and make a commitment to recruit
and support disabled people. We guarantee an interview for disabled
candidates who meet the minimum (essential) requirements for a vacancy.

In order to apply for this vacancy, you must be able to supply the required
answers to the following questions: Do you currently have the right to work
in the United Kingdom? Are you currently a British Library employee or
agency member of staff?


--------------------------------------------
http://openobjects.org.uk/
http://twitter.com/mia_out
Check out my book! http://bit.ly/CrowdsourcingOurCulturalHeritage
P.S. I mostly use this address for list mail and don't check it daily

--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Date: 2018-12-12 22:24:59+00:00
        From: Alex Humphreys 
        Subject: JSTOR Digital Humanities Fellow

ITHAKA is looking for a digital humanities practitioner and educator to 
drive adoption and use of JSTOR's suite of tools, APIs and content aimed 
at digital scholars. The Digital Humanities Fellow will create teaching 
materials and teach workshops and webinars related to digitization and 
metadata production, text and data mining, and linked open data. Funded 
in part by a grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, this 
two-year-term position starting June 1, 2019 is ideal for the recent 
Digital Humanities Masters or PhD graduate seeking to apply their skills 
towards expanding the impact of digital scholarship. For the right 
candidate, this position can be held while still a student. The Digital 
Humanities Fellow will be a member of the innovative and collaborative 
JSTOR Labs team.


         *Responsibilities*

The Digital Humanities Fellow will play a key role on the Plant 
Humanities Initiative 
, 
a partnership between JSTOR and Dumbarton Oaks, a research institute, 
museum and historic garden affiliated with Harvard University and 
located in Washington D.C. The Plant Humanities Initiative will pilot a 
new model for integrating digital humanities with scholarly programming 
to support the development of a new and emerging field. During the 
course of this project, the JSTOR Labs team will develop a new digital 
tool supporting plant humanities research and fellows at Dumbarton Oaks 
will employ this tool toward the creation of new scholarship. One of the 
aims of the digital tool will be connecting, contextualizing, and 
disseminating digitized primary sources. It will be the Digital 
Humanities Fellow’s responsibility to teach these fellows digital 
humanities skills and to support their use of the new tool. Upon 
completion of the tool, the Digital Humanities Fellow will assist in 
disseminating and gathering feedback on the digital tool through means 
such as presenting at appropriate conferences and contributing to a 
written report.

The Digital Humanities Fellow will also drive adoption and use of 
JSTOR’s other digital humanities tools, APIs, services and content. 
These services include Data For Research, a text- and data-mining 
service which JSTOR is currently exploring expanding in partnership with 
other non-profit collections-holders. JSTOR Labs has a suite of APIs to 
support digital humanists, including those related to Text Analyzer, its 
award-winning document analysis and search tool, and Understanding Great 
Works, a new tool for studying primary literary and historical texts. To 
encourage adoption and use of these tools and services, the Digital 
Humanities Fellow will speak at conferences, give webinars, and create 
instructional materials like assignments and sample datasets. He or she 
will inform the development of these services by being the voice of the 
user to the developers. Last, the Digital Humanities Fellow will 
co-author with other Labs members articles for scholarly and popular 
journals about their work.


         Experience and Skills

   * A Masters or PhD in a scientific discipline (computer science /
     engineering / mathematics) with deep experience in digital
     humanities, or a Masters or PhD in humanities with a proven
     expertise in digital technologies.
   * Experience with and ability to teach digital humanities methods and
     technologies, including:
       o Natural language processing, including topic modeling (ideally
         using Mallet)
       o Text and Data Mining
       o Linked Open Data, including Wikidata and knowledge graphs
       o Data visualization
       o Commonly used text-processing and analytics languages (for
         example, Python and R)
       o Content markup including XML, ePub, PDF & TEI preferred
   * Stellar communication, collaboration and organizational skills, and
     the ability to learn new techniques and technologies on the job.
   * Experience working with archival/primary source materials for
     research and/or teaching preferred.
   * Experience with web application development preferred.
   * Committed to our organizational values of belonging, evidence,
     speed, teamwork, and trust.

For more details and to apply, follow this link: 
https://recruiting.ultipro.com/ITH1000ITHAK/JobBoard/5fe90ad4-9e26-490b-9c45-6c9669d4dcd0/OpportunityDetail?opportunityId=672ff2c1-90c7-4dd6-b4f6-ab317c31640d 

Regards,

Alex Humphreys
Associate Vice President, JSTOR and Director, JSTOR Labs
twitter: @abhumphreys

email:alex.humphreys@ithaka.org 
web: http://labs.jstor.org 

--[3]------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Date: 2018-12-12 15:56:06+00:00
        From: James Cummings 
        Subject: Newcastle University, Digital Institute, 5 Research Software Engineer posts.

I am told that those with a wide range of interdisciplinary skills, such as 
digital humanities, would be very welcome to apply for this post at 
Newcastle University's Digital Institute. (Indeed some of the 5 full-time 
posts they are hiring might be working on projects I'm involved in.)


===

Research Software Engineer
(https://bit.ly/2UDSZX1)

The Digital Institute has five openings in its Research Software 
Engineering Team. The team works across the whole university and 
with a range of external partners including the Alan Turing Institute. 
We develop high-quality software in collaboration with scientists, 
engineers and scholars from all research domains. You will be responsible 
for delivering technical software engineering expertise across multiple 
simultaneous projects.

You will have an MSc in a computationally based field (equivalent 
experience or close to completion), as well as proven experience of 
software development. We are especially interested in interviewing 
candidates with experience in any of the following areas: Cloud Computing 
Visualization, Geospatial or Temporal Statistics, Functional Programming 
and Machine Learning.

Applications are welcome from both software development generalists and 
from researchers with inter-disciplinary technology focused skills which 
either complement or extend our existing team.

If you are looking to apply your skills into research, we would love 
to hear from you.

The Digital Institute's goal is to transform research at Newcastle 
through the application of digital skills and technology. It's work 
spans research, teaching and innovation through engagement with external 
organisations. As a team we work across the university and with every 
academic discipline. Whether this means scaling GPU rendering of city-scale 
models across thousands of nodes in the cloud, creating new digital editions 
to breathe new life into medieval texts, helping researchers gain insight 
into human movement by running gait analysis algorithms at scale,
or working to help optimise the UK energy network -- we do it all.

We bring specialist programming expertise, modern development practices 
and engineering rigour to academic software. We provide expert software 
engineering consulting services to world-leading research teams, and 
collaborate with scientists and scholars to build software to meet the 
next generation of research challenges.

There are 5, full time posts available which are fixed term for 24 months 
from date of appointment.

For informal enquiries please contact Mark Turner at 
mark.turner@ncl.ac.uk

Mark Turner
Senior Research Software Engineer
Newcastle University

Urban Sciences Building, Room 4.037
Newcastle University
1 Science Square
Newcastle Helix
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE4 5TG

Email: mark.turner@newcastle.ac.uk




_______________________________________________
Unsubscribe at: http://dhhumanist.org/Restricted
List posts to: humanist@dhhumanist.org
List info and archives at at: http://dhhumanist.org
Listmember interface at: http://dhhumanist.org/Restricted/
Subscribe at: http://dhhumanist.org/membership_form.php


Editor: Willard McCarty (King's College London, U.K.; Western Sydney University, Australia)
Software designer: Malgosia Askanas (Mind-Crafts)

This site is maintained under a service level agreement by King's Digital Lab.