Humanitates digitales se cum creatione programmaturae implicat, praebens "circumiecta et instrumenta ad producendam et curandam scientiam, et cum scientia interagens quae 'digitalis nascitur' et in variis contextibus digitalibus superest."[7][8] Hoc in contextu, campus aliquando humanitates computationales appellatur. Multa talia proposita sese "normis apertis etfontibus apertis una obligaverunt."[9]
Humanitates digitales a campocomputationishumanitatum descendit, cui "formalibus monumenti humani repraesentationibus"[10] computationem datur.[11] Campus ante1950 ortus est, in praecursorialiRoberti Busa opere conditus.[12][13] Aliae partes humanitatum digitalium a Proposito IRIS dehypertextu inUniversitate Brunensi annos inter1980 et1990 descenderunt.Initium Textuum Programmatorum, a desiderio schematis programmaturae normalis pro textibus electronicis in humanitatibus instituendi natum, est egregia primae computationis humanitatum res gesta; propositum, anno1987 coeptum, primum editionem plenamTEI Guidelines Maio1994] protulit.[13]
↑Anglice: "environments and tools for producing, curating, and interacting with knowledge that is 'born digital' and lives in various digital contexts."
↑John Bradley, "No job for techies: Technical contributions to research in digital humanities," inCollaborative Research in the Digital Humanities, ed. Marilyn Deegan et Willard McCarty Farnham et Burlington: Ashgate, 2012,ISBN 9781409410683), 11–26.
↑Anglice: "formal representations of the human record."
12Susan Hockney,"The History of Humanities Computing," in "Companion to Digital Humanities," ed. Susan Schreibman, Ray Siemens, et John Unsworth (Oxoniae: Blackwell,ISBN 1405103213), Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture, 2004.
Hockey, Susan.2001.Electronic Text in the Humanities: Principles and Practice. Oxoniae: Oxford University Press.
Honing, Henkjan.2008. The role of ICT in music research: A bridge too far?International Journal of Humanities and Arts Computing 1 (1): 67–75.
Inman James, Cheryl Reed, et Peter Sands, eds.2003.Electronic Collaboration in the Humanities: Issues and Options. Mahwah Novae Caesareae: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Kenna, Stephanie, et Seamus Ross, eds.1995.Networking in the Humanities: Proceedings of the Second Conference on Scholarship and Technology in the Humanities held at Elvetham Hall, Hampshire, UK 13–16 April 1994. Londinii: Bowker-Saur.