<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title type="full"><title type="main">Framing the experience</title><title type="sub">a study of the history of interfaces to digital humanities projects</title></title></titleStmt><author><persName><surname>Warwick</surname><forename>Claire</forename></persName><affiliation>Durham University, United Kingdom</affiliation><email>c.l.h.warwick@durham.ac.uk</email></author><editionStmt><edition><date>43832</date></edition></editionStmt><publicationStmt><publisher>Name, Institution</publisher><address><addrLine>Street</addrLine><addrLine>City</addrLine><addrLine>Country</addrLine><addrLine>Name</addrLine></address></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><p>Converted from an OASIS Open Document</p></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><appInfo><application ident="DHCONVALIDATOR" version="1.22"><label>DHConvalidator</label></application></appInfo></encodingDesc><profileDesc><textClass><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="category"><term>Paper</term></keywords><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="subcategory"><term>Long Presentation</term></keywords><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="keywords"><term>interface design</term><term>user studies</term><term>history of DH</term></keywords><keywords scheme="ConfTool" n="topics"><term>Comparative (2 or more geographical areas)</term><term>English</term><term>20th Century</term><term>Contemporary</term><term>digital archiving</term><term>Interface design, development, and analysis</term><term>Humanities computing</term><term>Library &amp; information science</term></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><p>Drucker (2013) argues that, although the goals of Human Computer Interface research are to render the interface invisible and facilitate access to digital content, interfaces themselves should be legitimate objects of study. Yet little attention has been paid to this aspect of digital humanities resource design. The following proposal therefore reports on a study of interfaces to long-lived DH resources to determine what information we may gain from them about the history of DH project development.</p></body></text></TEI>