The Gothenburg Research Infrastructure in Digital Humanities (GRIDH) promotes research, education and cooperation related to digital phenomena and/or the use of digital methods. GRIDH's research interests span over three areas:
GRIDH initiates new research projects and cooperates with researchers at the University of Gothenburg, Chalmers University of Technology and other universities around the world. Current projects include the creation of a 3D tool for the analysis of rock art and a digital platform that uses machine learning for image recognition. Another project digitally maps and analyse the history of independent performance in Gothenburg 1965–2000.
GRIDH participates in the distributed K-centre Diachronic Language Resources (CLARIN-DiaRes), that is focused around diachronic text collections, and as a special case of these, historical texts, as well as tools and resources for processing and analysing these.
Mats Fridlund, mats.fridlund@lir.gu.se