More on AI and local history research

Following on from the post about AI-generated videos, here are some thoughts on the use of AI in widening the sources available for historical research.

As always, comments are very welcome.

At one time access to essential information for anyone interested in researching their family history or the history of their neighbourhood was difficult, time consuming and often simply impossible.

The key texts needed were often locked away in distant university libraries and archives.

Now, thanks to the digitisation of thousands and thousands of books and archived documents by the likes of the Internet Archive and Google, these texts are being made available online. And, thanks to AI-generated optical character recognition, those texts are all searchable.

No historian is now going to rely solely on printed texts for their research, and yet use of those digitised online resources increasingly requires an acceptance of AI technologies.

A recent article on the Institute of Historical Research website highlights the way AI is helping to democratise historical research, opening it up to everyone:

‘Achievements that were once only possible for those of us with a university degree(s), a library card, and a lot of time on our hands are now readily available for anyone with an internet connection. Nevertheless, its over-reliance on automation and accusations of bias raise serious ethical and methodological challenges which we historians cannot ignore.’

The article points to examples of the use AI in such projects as the virtual reconstruction of buildings at Pompeii. The author rightly notes the ethical issues raised by the use of AI.


Sources

The Institute of Historical Research article: https://blog.history.ac.uk/…/historai-doing-history-in…/

And the best guide I’ve found to sources for anyone wanting to learn more about AI and the historian is provided by the Royal Historical Society:: https://blog.royalhistsoc.org/…/generative-ai-history…


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

One thought on “More on AI and local history research

  1. John McCarthy said, “As soon as it works, no one calls it AI anymore.” This means we need to be careful when we compare old and new technologies. Todays large language models are a completely different beast to the optical character recognition algorithms we’ve developed in the years and decades prior. These new models ingest huge amounts of data, and require huge amounts of energy, land, and money for the infrastructure they need to run. Further, their development directly supports a surveillance technology corporate state complex which represents a tremendous concentration of global material power, dating back to the developments of statistics for eugenics and computing machinery for Nazi census counting.

Leave a Reply