Digital hybridity and relics in cultural heritage: using corpus linguistics to inform design in emerging technologies from AI to VR
Emma McClaughlin, Glenn McGarry, Alan Chamberlain, Geert De Wilde, Oliver Butler

TL;DR
This paper explores how hybrid digital technologies, including AI and VR, impact the representation and engagement with cultural relics, highlighting ethical, linguistic, and perceptual challenges and opportunities.
Contribution
It applies corpus linguistics to analyze historical and modern texts, informing design considerations for emerging digital technologies involving relics.
Findings
Relics are viewed as moral, spiritual, and political objects in early texts.
Contemporary texts frame relics mainly as heritage symbols.
Hybrid technologies can improve accessibility but raise authenticity concerns.
Abstract
Hybrid technologies enable the blending of physical and digital elements, creating new ways to experience and interact with the world. Such technologies can transform engagement with relics, both secular and sacred but they present challenges for capturing faith, belief, and representation responsibly. Given the complexities of digital representation and the ethical challenges inherent in digitising culturally significant objects, a transdisciplinary understanding of these issues is needed. To inform this discussion from a linguistic perspective, we examined the representation of relics in historical and contemporary texts. Using a corpus linguistic approach to extract modifiers of the word relic in corpora of Early Modern English books and contemporary web sourced texts from 2021, we examined the multifaceted ways in which relics have been perceived and evaluated over time. Early texts…
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