Main navigation
- Programs
- Subjects
- Universities
- Destinations
- Advice
Digital history utilizes modern technologies to examine historical materials, uncover patterns and trends, and present academic discoveries. Scholars in this field employ diverse analytical methods. Some perform text mining or large-scale data analysis to detect trends, while others investigate spatial development using geographic information systems (GIS). Network analysis through digital tools is another common approach. Beyond offering fresh perspectives on historical inquiries, digital platforms enable innovative ways to disseminate research. Numerous digital historians integrate charts, data visualizations, or computational statistics into their publications. Some leverage digital-native platforms for academic discourse, building interactive websites rooted in their studies. Others foster scholarly communities via blogs, forums, and online archives of historical resources. At Chicago, digital historians pursue varied specializations. Faith Hillis, for instance, applies historical GIS and network analysis to track human and commodity movements across different eras and regions. Dain Borges works with digitized census records, geographic databases for social history research, and text collections related to intellectual history.