List of figures
List of tables
Glossary
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Lise Jaillant, Claire Warwick, Paul Gooding, Katherine Aske, Glen Layne-Worthey and J. Stephen Downie
Part I: The role of AI in preserving and making accessible digitised and born-digital records
1 The National Archives (UK)
Lise Jaillant, Katherine Aske and Annalina Caputo
2 Computer vision and cultural heritage
Catherine Nicole Coleman
3 Machine learning at the National Library of Norway
Javier de la Rosa
Part II: Text and beyond: AI applied to text, images and audio-visual archives
4 From preservation to access and beyond: the Role of AI in audio-visual archives
Julia Noordegraaf and Anna Schjøtt Hansen
5 Digital mapping and cultural heritage
Claire Warwick and Katherine Aske
6 Making more sense with machines: artificial intelligence at the HathiTrust Research Center
Glen Layne-Worthey and J. Stephen Downie with contributions from Janet Swatscheno, Nikolaus Parulian, Jill Naiman, Ben Schmidt, Peter Organisciak, Ted Underwood, and Ryan Dubnicek
Part III: Digitised collections and hand-written text: challenges and new methods
7 Distant viewing archives
Lauren Tilton and Taylor Arnold
8 The adoption of handwritten text recognition at the National Library of Scotland
Paul Gooding, Joseph Nockels and Melissa Terras
9 Conversing with the past: re-examining the legacy of slavery in domestic traffic newspaper advertisements with OpenAI's GPT3 LLM
Rajesh Kumar Gnanasekaran, Christopher E. Haley and Richard Marciano
10 Afterword: An emergence from winter or summer may be upon us Thomas Padilla
Index