The Summer School "Data in the Whirlwind of Disciplines"

"Data in the Whirlwind of Disciplines"
Author:
Genoomika instituut

The Summer School "Data in the Whirlwind of Disciplines" invites graduate students and researchers in the humanities and natural sciences to explore interdisciplinary approaches to data. Through seminars and workshops, participants will discover how various disciplines collect and format data, learn methods for combining datasets across fields, and gain practical skills essential for cross-disciplinary research.

Keynote speaker: Prof. Eetu Mäkelä, Digital Humanities, University of Helsinki - "Promises and pitfalls of interdisciplinary collaboration"

Time: June 14–15, 2025, TalTech Särghaua Study Centre, Pärnu County

Participant limit: 50

Info: Anneli Poska (e-mail [email protected])

Register here!

Additional Information about Särghaua Study Centre:
Särghaua Study Centre is located in Kurgja village, Pärnumaa, and offers modern facilities for learning and research, accommodation, catering, and diverse opportunities for educational and scientific activities. The centre includes seminar rooms, laboratories, a stone workshop, and geological collections. Pre-registration is required.

Good to know! Summer school participants will be transported to the event location and back to the departure points in Tartu (Chemicum parking lot) and Tallinn (TalTech main building parking lot) by buses.
Event is organised by Estonian Roots: Centre of Excellence for transdisciplinary studies on ethnogenesis and cultural diversity.

Project "Cooperation between universities to promote doctoral studies" (2021-2027.4.04.24-0003) is co-funded by the European Union.
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PaleoMIX logo

This Summer School has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 101079396, and from UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) under the UK government’s Horizon Europe funding guarantee (grant agreement No. 10063975).

Programm

Morning

9:00–10:00 Arrival (coffee, room assignments, etc.)

10:00–12:00 Opening remarks and a seminar with multidisciplinary presentations (5–15 min each, depending on the number of talks)

12:00–13:00 Lunch

Afternoon

13:00–16:00 Parallel multidisciplinary workshops (coffee break 14:30–15:00). Participants can choose between three workshops:

  • I. Mental Maps as a Multidisciplinary Research Subject
    Facilitator: Reet Hiiemäe (Estonian Literary Museum, Folkloristics)
  • II. Languages and Genes in the Study of Human (Pre)History: Opportunities and Challenges
    Facilitators: Miina Norvik (UT, Finnic Languages), Monika Karmin (UT, Population Genetics)
  • III. Past People and Environment: Scientific (Life) Stories Through Data Synthesis" (Agnes Unt, University of Tartu Archaeology; Eliise Poolma, Leeli Amon, and Anneli Poska, TalTech Paleoecology)

17:00–18:00 Inspirational Lecture: Prof. Eetu Mäkelä (University of Helsinki, Digital Humanities): "Promises and Pitfalls of Interdisciplinary Collaboration"

18:00–19:00 Dinner

19:00–... Social activities, sauna, etc.

(Reet Hiiemäe, Estonian Literary Museum, Folkloristics)

At the beginning of the workshop, I will introduce the HERA-CHANSE project "Mapping Environmental Health Crises – Public Understanding Through Myths and Science" as an example of multidisciplinary cooperation. In this project, geographers-cartographers, visual design specialists, and folklorists study the interplay of myths and science in society using cartographic representations.

The aim of the project is to demonstrate how both science and folklore/mythology use maps to interpret and overcome complex crises, and how the logic of mental maps found in folklore could be considered to improve contemporary crisis communication. We will examine what added value the emotional and sensory mapping typical of folklore can offer to scientific, fact-based information dissemination, what problems arise in multidisciplinary cooperation due to different academic traditions, or even the various ways of defining the term "map." We will discuss what kinds of mental maps can be found in art, literature, historical narratives, genetic research, linguistics, medicine, media, etc., and where the boundaries of multidisciplinary research lie. Additionally, participants will have the opportunity to contribute to relevant data creation by visualizing their own mental maps. We will also analyze what kind of research data is generated when creating or interpreting such individual mental maps and how to handle such data correctly in scientific work (e.g., data protection and ethical issues).

(Miina Norvik, UT Finnic Languages and Monika Karmin, UT Population Genetics)

The migrations, admixtures, and other processes of human groups affect the diversity patterns of both languages and genes. Although genes and languages are inherited independently, both are characterized by vertical transmission – passing from one generation to the next. However, in the case of languages, horizontal transfer also occurs, mainly as language contact between neighbouring human groups. Therefore, both linguistic and genetic data are used in the study of various processes in human (pre)history. Migrations are identified, comparisons are made as to whether people and cultural phenomena have moved together or separately, and possible language shifts and admixtures of populations are sought.


In this workshop, you will get a comparative overview of the analytical possibilities of linguistics and genetics for such studies, and we will highlight the challenges and limitations that must be considered. The workshop has two parts: first, we will look at datasets from the perspective of collection, aggregation, storage, and accessibility. We will discuss which datasets could and should be used in comparative studies and which methods are appropriate or not. We will share our recent experiences in compiling larger datasets (Grambank, UraTyp, and OCSEAN project). In the second part of the workshop, we will present examples of specific analyses, try applying them to our own data, and attempt to draw conclusions about the spread of genes and linguistic phenomena.

(Agnes Unt, UT Archaeology, Eliise Poolma, Leeli Amon and Anneli Poska, TalTech Paleoecology)

Through the collaboration of archaeology, which studies traces of human habitation, and paleoecology, which reconstructs past environmental conditions, it is possible to determine not only how people looked, what clothes they wore, and what items they used in their daily lives, but also what their environment was like (vegetation, climate, etc.) and how human activities influenced their surroundings.

Would you like to know why a single skeleton is invaluable to an archaeologist? Why do archaeologists examine the same find from a hundred different angles? The aim of the workshop on past people and environments is to give participants the opportunity to experience the role of a researcher studying past human habitation and, using a modern multidisciplinary toolkit, reconstruct various aspects related to people and their living environments. During the workshop, participants will get to examine human bones, determine past climatic conditions, learn to identify traces of human activity in vegetation, interpret archaeological finds, and much more.

Participation in the workshop is recommended as preparation for the archaeological and paleoecological field survey taking place on Sunday, June 15, led by Pikne Kama (University of Tartu Archaeology) and Siim Veski (TalTech Paleoecology).

Morning

8:00–9:00 Breakfast

9:00–12:00 Workshop "Generative AI and Academia" (Eetu Mäkelä, University of Helsinki) and visit to the Kurgja Farm Museum. Activities will be held in two groups so that everyone can participate in both.

Afternoon

12:00–13:00 Lunch

13:00–16:00 Field trip to Lüüste village (about 10 km from Särghaua): experience fieldwork with Pikne Kama (UT, Archaeology) and Siim Veski (TalTech, Geology). Hands-on opportunity to experience being a geologist: examine geological cross-sections and test stone cutting and polishing technique in Särghaua’s storage and stone laboratory.

16:00 Departure

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