Externalizing Transformations of Historical Documents: Opportunities for Provenance-Driven Visualization
Tomas Vancisin, Mary Orr, Uta Hinrichs

TL;DR
This paper explores how visualization of historical documents can incorporate provenance information to reveal the layers of transformation, interpretation, and curation that shape the documents' content and structure.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of provenance-driven visualization to make transparent the multiple transformation layers of historical documents, enhancing understanding of their context and history.
Findings
Analyzed common transformation processes of historical documents
Proposed a framework for provenance-driven visualization
Discussed challenges in representing layered historical data
Abstract
Transcription, annotation, digitization and/or visualization are common transformations that historical documents such as national records, birth/death registers, university records, letters or books undergo. Reasons for those transformations span from the (physical) protection of the original materials to disclosure of 'hidden' information or patterns within the documents. Even though such transformations bring new insights and perspectives on the documents, they also modify the documents' content, structure, and/or artifactual form and thus, occlude prior knowledge and interpretation. When it comes to visualization as a means to transform historical documents from written to abstract visual form, there is typically little acknowledgment or even understanding of the previous transformation steps these documents have gone through. The 'tremendous rhetorical force' of visualization, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsResearch Data Management Practices · Data Visualization and Analytics · Digital Humanities and Scholarship
