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Tímea Bajzát

I graduated from ELTE with degree in Hungarian BA and Finnish Studies. Since 2019, I have been a student on Hungarian Language and Literature MA with Functional Cognitive Linguistics specialization. My thesis deals with identification on infinitive constructions activating premodal domains from semantic and constructional approach. At the Department of Digital Humanities I currently participate

Mária Timári

I graduated in Literature and Linguistics at ELTE University in 2019. Since than I work in the Centre for Digital Humanities. My current research focuses on how to use Stylo and Websty programs to identify the author of a given unknown text with the utmost certainty. This requires a corpus of the right size, so

Veronika Szabó

Currently, I do my last year of teacher training at ELTE. For four years I worked as a trainee at the Methodological Center. In the academic year of 2018/19 I participated in a specialization of computer science, where I learned different languages (Haskell, Javascript, PHP, Phyton, Unix shell, SQL), and I was also concerned with

Eszter Szlávich

In 2018, I graduated from ELTE with a degree in Descriptive and Cognitive Linguistics. Since September 2018, I have been a student of the Hungarian Linguistics Doctoral Program. I am writing my dissertation on a specific syntactic phenomenon, the dual predicate. At the DH Centre I deal with morphological analysis programs.

Ádám Smrcz

I graduated in Latin and Hungarian philology at ELTE University in 2012. Later on, I studied Baroque literature and early modern philosophy at the respective doctoral schools. I began working in the field of digital humanities in 2018 at ELTE DH within the framework of the project, called The Knowlebase of Hungarian Philosophy.

Ádám Sebestyén

I graduated in Renaissance Studies at ELTE in 2016. I am the member of the ‘Humanism in East Central Europe’ Research Group. Furthermore I participate in a project, which aims to create an online database, based on wikidata, from the sources of the forthcoming lexicon.

Zsófia Sárközi-Lindner

After completing my studies at the PPKE Digital Humanities Department in 2017, I started to deal with the works of János Arany and the markup coding of the texts of critical editions within the framework of a joint retroconversion project of the Institute of Literature and Digiphil. In addition to repository development at the DH

Aslihan Karabulut

I am currently studying for a Master’s degree at the Department of Semitic and Arabic Studies of ELTE where I am mainly dealing with Arabic linguistics. I got my Ba diploma in 2016, after which I have since spent two years abroad on a scholarship. I have been a member of the Centre for Digital

Péter Horváth

I earned my PhD in 2019 at the Hungarian Linguistics Doctoral Programme of ELTE. From 2018, I am a researcher at the Centre for Digital Humanities where I am working on the building of a poetry corpus. My main research topics are the linguistic analysis of narrative texts on history, and automatic poetry analysis.

Tamás Kiss

PhD historian, software and web developer: his field of research is the early modern Ottoman Empire and Mediterranean. He wrote his doctoral dissertation on the Cyprus War of 1570-1571 and its Venetian and Ottoman political and cultural contexts at Central European University (2016). His contributions to the field of Digital Humanities include developing the first