Projects per year
Abstract
The amount of information available to archaeologists has grown dramatically during the last ten years. The rapid acquisition of observational data and creation of digital data has played a significant role in this "information explosion". In this paper, we propose new methods for knowledge creation in studies of movement, designed for the present data-rich research context. Using three case studies, we analyze how researchers have identified, conceptualized, and linked the material traces describing various movement processes in a given region. Then, we explain how we construct ontologies that enable us to explicitly relate material elements, identified in the observed landscape, to the knowledge or theory that explains their role and relationships within the movement process. Combining formal pathway systems and informal movement systems through these three case studies, we argue that these systems are not hierarchically integrated, but rather intertwined. We introduce a new heuristic tool, the "track graph", to record observed material features in a neutral form which can be employed to reconstruct the trajectories of journeys which follow different movement logics. Finally, we illustrate how the breakdown of implicit conceptual references into explicit, logical chains of reasoning, describing basic entities and their relationships, allows the use of these constituent elements to reconstruct, analyze, and compare movement practices from the bottom up.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 338 |
Pages (from-to) | 1-34 |
Number of pages | 34 |
Journal | Information (Switzerland) |
Volume | 11 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 24 Jun 2020 |
Funding
Funding: This research was funded by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (International Emerging Action (IEA) PICS07899—MOVESCAPE), VU University Amsterdam (CLUE+ Activity Fund 0055), ZRC SAZU Ljubljana, University of Franche-Comté, University of Tours, and University of Glasgow. Acknowledgments: The research for this paper was partly made possible through the Movescape project thanks to a PICS grant awarded to Laure Nuninger by CNRS, a CLUE+ grant to Philip Verhagen by Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and funds from ZRC-SAZU to Žiga Kokalj for organizing TRAIL2018 (Postojna, Slovenia). It was also supported by one month invited professor positions granted to Philip Verhagen and Rachel Opitz by the University of Franche-Comté. Travel funds were also made available by the University of Glasgow and by the University of Tours (thanks to the SoLidar project, co-organiser). Movescape workshops were organised in Besançon (MSHE C.N. Ledoux, CNRS), in Tours (MSH Val de Loire and CITERES, University of Tours), in Amsterdam (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), in Glasgow (University of Glasgow), and opened to a larger public in Atlanta (CAA2017) and in Postojna (TRAIL2018).
Funders | Funder number |
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CITERES | CAA2017, TRAIL2018 |
International Emerging Action | |
ZRC SAZU Ljubljana | |
ZRC-SAZU | |
University of Glasgow | |
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam | |
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique | |
Université François-Rabelais | |
International Energy Agency | PICS07899—MOVESCAPE |
Université de Franche-Comté |
Keywords
- GIS
- Meshwork
- Modeling
- Movement
- Network
- Ontology
- Pathways
- Spatial analysis
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Linking theories, past practices, and archaeological remains of movement through ontological reasoning'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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MOVESCAPE: Developing a research network for the study of movement in historical landscapes
Nuninger, L., Verhagen, P., Kokalj, Z. & Štular, B.
1/01/18 → 31/12/20
Project: Research
Research output
- 13 Citations
- 1 Article
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Developing FAIR Ontological Pathways: Linking Evidence of Movement in Lidar to Models of Human Behaviour
Nuninger, L., Opitz, R., Verhagen, P., Libourel, T., Laplaige, C., Leturcq, S., Le Voguer, N., Fruchart, C., Kokalj, Ž. & Rodier, X., 15 Apr 2020, In: Journal of Computer Applications in Archaeology. 3, 1, p. 63-75 13 p.Research output: Contribution to Journal › Article › Academic › peer-review
Open Access
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LAC2020+1
Laure Nuninger (Organiser), Rachel Opitz (Organiser), César Parcero-Oubiña (Organiser), Thibault Saintenoy (Organiser) & Philip Verhagen (Organiser)
11 Jun 2021Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Conference › Academic
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MoveScape project meeting
Philip Verhagen (Organiser), Laure Nuninger (Organiser), Rachel Opitz (Participant), Žiga Kokalj (Participant), Clément Laplaige (Participant), Nathanaël Levoguer (Participant), Damien Vurpillot (Participant), M.R. Groenhuijzen (Participant) & Catherine Fruchart (Participant)
3 Jun 2019 → 4 Jun 2019Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Expert meeting › Academic