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				<title level="a" type="main">Homo Narrans: From Information to Narratives</title>
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							<persName><roleName>Professor</roleName><forename type="first">Jochen</forename><forename type="middle">L</forename><surname>Leidner</surname></persName>
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							<persName><roleName>PhD FRGS</roleName><forename type="first">M</forename><forename type="middle">A</forename><surname>Mphil</surname></persName>
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								<orgName type="institution">Coburg University of Applied Sciences</orgName>
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									<country key="DE">Germany</country>
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								<orgName type="department">Research Professor for Explainable and Responsible Arti cial Intelligence in Insurance</orgName>
								<orgName type="institution">Coburg University of Applied Sciences and Arts</orgName>
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									<country key="DE">Germany</country>
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								<orgName type="institution">University of Erlangen-Nuremberg)</orgName>
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								<orgName type="department">Master&apos;s in Computer Speech, Text and Internet Technology</orgName>
								<orgName type="institution">University of Cambridge</orgName>
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								<orgName type="institution">University of Edinburgh</orgName>
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						<title level="a" type="main">Homo Narrans: From Information to Narratives</title>
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<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><p>Humans are curious creatures, equipped with a sense of (and desire for) nding meaning in their environment. They are predisposed to identify patterns, real and spurious, in the world they live in, and above anything else, they understand the world in terms of narratives. In this talk, we will explore a set of questions about narratives: what is a narrative made up of? What signals from textual prose tell us what the narrative is? What about signals from structured data that imply a particular narrative? What is the essence of a story? How can narrative information be extracted and presented? Open source intelligence analysts and investigative reporters alike are hunting for the story, the narrative, behind the petabyte intercepts or terabyte leaks. The more data we gather or have available, the stronger will be our thirst to distill meaningful stories from it.</p></div>
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<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><p>chair of the Microsoft-BCS/BCS IRSG Karen Sparck Jones award. Professor Leidner is an author or co-author of several dozen peer-reviewed publications (including one best paper award), has authored or co-edited two books and holds several patents in the areas of information retrieval, natural language processing, and mobile computing. He has been twice winner of the Thomson Reuters inventor of the year award for the best patent application, and is the past received of a Royal Society of Edinburgh Enterprise Fellowship in Electronic Markets.</p></div>		</body>
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