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Results from Call for small-scale Projects announced

The response rate for the CLARIAH-AT small-scale project call 2025 was very high, as was the quality of the applications received. Every project was reviewed in detail by members of the CLARIAH-AT consortium.

Due to the high quality of applications, the decision was not easy, but finally, the consortium selected twenty-two projects to be funded by CLARIAH-AT that run until the end of 2026.

The selected projects, with their leads and research institutions, are:

  • “Institutionsübergreifender Kulturdaten-Hackathon – KulturDatenLab 2025”,
    Philip Fischer, Natural History Museum Vienna
  • “SALTA: Open-Source-Tool und Database zur Segmentierung multimodaler Performances”,
    Adrián Artacho, University of Music and performing Arts Vienna
  • “Digital Humanities Data Sprint”,
    Thomas Hainscho, Daria Jadreškić, Katharina Kinder-Kurlanda, University of Klagenfurt
  • “OCR/HTR Workshop for Under-resourced and Under-represented Languages in Digital Humanities”,
    Alíz Horváth, Central European University
  • “UWK Summer School 2025”,
    Anja Grebe, University for continuing Education Krems
  • “Efficient Similarity: A Hackathon for Advanced Search in Cultural Heritage”,
    Florian Atzenhofer-Baumgartner, University of Graz
  • “Autor:innenbibliotheken als Wissensräume: Digitalisierung des Katalogs der Arnim-Bibliothek”,
    Anke Jaspers, Georg Vogeler, University of Graz
  • “ÖNB Labs Video-Tutorials”,
    Christoph Steindl, Austrian National Library
  • “Pilot Corpus for Tokenization and Lemmatization of Pannonian Rusyn – A First Step Towards Open Language Resources”,
    Marko Simonovic, University of Graz
  • “Ringvorlesung Musikwissenschaft & Digital Humanities”,
    Melanie Unseld, Werner Goebl, University of Music and performing Arts Vienna
  • “Automatisierte Erfassung und semantische Erschließung der Vereinsauflösungen im „Amtlichen Nachrichtenblatt“ 1938–1940”,
    Markus Stumpf, Martin Gasteiner, University of Vienna
  • “Workshop: Re-late – Re-Use – Re-Work. Potenziale für Varianten- und Intertextualitätsanalysen in den Digital Humanities”,
    Axel Pichler, Gabriel Viehhauser, University of Vienna
  • “Asynchrones Lernangebot für Themen aus dem Forschungsdatenmanagement”,
    Helmut Klug, University of Graz
  • “Die Sammlung Amadei: Digitalisierung – Open Data – Public Outreach”,
    Gernot Mayer, University of Vienna
  • “Gipsabgusssammlung des Fachbereichs Altertumswissenschaften in der Alten Residenz Salzburg – Erstellung einer digitalen Sammlung und eines virtuellen Rundgangs”,
    Lydia Berger, Alexander Sokolice, Melissa Vetters, University of Salzburg
  • “WB-DEA meets MHDBDB: Die Wenzelsbibel als Pilotmodell für interoperable Editionen”,
    Julia Hintersteiner, University of Salzburg
  • “Mapping Difficult Heritage. Digital Documentation of Colonial Traces in Austrian Urbanscapes”,
    Markus Wurzer, University of Graz
  • “Gender, Networks, and Artistic Success: A Computational Analysis of Jazz History”,
    Mark Wittek, Central European University
  • “Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall Korrespondenz: FAIRification und Erweiterungsworkflow”,
    Elisabeth Steiner, University of Graz
  • “Internationale Tagung „Digital History – Doing Cultural Heritage““,
    Karoline Döring, University of Salzburg
  • “Support EURALEX 2026 “Lexicography in the age of AI”“,
    Philipp Stöckle, Tanja Wissik, Austrian Academy of Sciences
  • “Publikation des “Tegernseer Wirtschaftsbüchlein” als hyperdiplomatische Transkription”,
    Helmut Klug, University of Graz

Congratulations to the selected project leads! We are looking forward to the outputs of the individual projects.