User:MatteoRomanello: Difference between revisions
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* PhD candidate (2009-2012) in Digital Humanities - Centre for Computing in the Humanities,King’s College London | * PhD candidate (2009-2012) in Digital Humanities - Centre for Computing in the Humanities,King’s College London | ||
* matteo.romanello@kcl.ac.uk | * matteo.romanello@kcl.ac.uk | ||
=== Summary === | |||
* Matteo Romanello received a BA in Classics and an MA in Digital Humanities from Università Ca' Foscari di Venezia. | |||
* He was recently Visiting Research Scholar at the [Perseus Project] where he worked with Gregory Crane and Monica Berti on a project aiming at providing the Perseus Digital Library with a corpus of Greek fragmentary authors. | |||
* Currently, Matteo is PhD candidate in Digital Humanities at King's College, London. His research interests are mainly focused on the retrieval and encoding of semantic information within electronic resources on classical texts, and on the applications of ontological modelling to the Classical Studies knowledge domain. | |||
=== Publications === | === Publications === | ||
An always up-to-date list of publications is accessible via [http://www.citeulike.org/profile/mromanello56k/publications CiteULike]. |
Revision as of 17:14, 1 October 2009
Matteo Romanello
- PhD candidate (2009-2012) in Digital Humanities - Centre for Computing in the Humanities,King’s College London
- matteo.romanello@kcl.ac.uk
Summary
- Matteo Romanello received a BA in Classics and an MA in Digital Humanities from Università Ca' Foscari di Venezia.
- He was recently Visiting Research Scholar at the [Perseus Project] where he worked with Gregory Crane and Monica Berti on a project aiming at providing the Perseus Digital Library with a corpus of Greek fragmentary authors.
- Currently, Matteo is PhD candidate in Digital Humanities at King's College, London. His research interests are mainly focused on the retrieval and encoding of semantic information within electronic resources on classical texts, and on the applications of ontological modelling to the Classical Studies knowledge domain.
Publications
An always up-to-date list of publications is accessible via CiteULike.