Skip to main content
Displaying 1 - 20 of 48 results. Use the filters to limit the results.
Title
A circle chart in various shades of green showing a small, yellow circle labeled "Catullus tokens" contained within a much larger turquoise circle labeled "GPT-3 Latin Tokens"

Blog: How Much Latin Does ChatGPT “Know”?

Patrick Burns |
Two shelves of assorted colored books

Blog: Innovation, Inspiration, and Initiative: Community College Adjuncts in Ancient Studies

Patrick Burns, Erika Bucciantini, Stacy Davidson |
Text reads "Ego, Polyphemus, a Latin novella by Andrew Olimpi." A blue sky behind an upside-down image of a bald man with gray skin, wearing a black one-shoulder garment, with a single eye in the middle of his forehead.

Blog: Latin Novellas and the New Pedagogy

Thomas Hendrickson |
A page from Martin Kraus’ Aethiopica Epitome processed using LatinOCR within VietOCR. It handles the opening chapter summary well but is only 88% accurate with the italicized body text.

Blog: Review: LatinOCR and Rescribe

hmcelroy |

Review: The Duolingo Latin Course

Ashley Francese |

Review: Reconstructing Ptolemy and his Global Legacy

Alberto Bardi |

Review: A Digital Glossary of Arabic and Latin Terms

Aileen Das |

Blog: Women in Classics: Barbara Gold

Claire Catenaccio |

Blog: Women in Classics: An Interview with Dee Clayman

Claire Catenaccio |

Blog: Women in Classics: A Conversation with Judith Hallett

Claire Catenaccio |

Review: A Digital Tool that Helps Teachers Generate Latin and Greek Vocabulary Lists

apistone |

Blog: Women in Classics: A Conversation with SCS President-Elect Shelley Haley: Part I

Claire Catenaccio |

Blog: Women in Classics: A Conversation with Sarah B. Pomeroy

Claire Catenaccio |

Review: Recogito: Visualizing, Mapping, and Annotating Ancient Texts

Kilian Mallon |

Blog: How Can We Save Latin in our Public High Schools?

Robert Simmons |

Review: ORBIS: The Stanford Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World

Chiara Palladino |

Review: Mapping Ancient Literature through ToposText

Janet Jones |

Blog: Computational Classics? Programming Natural Language Understanding

William Short |
Mosaic Tesserae, Byzantine (6th–15th century), Glass, gold and silver leaf. New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Accession Number:2016.11.1–.50. Image Credit: Metropolitan Museum, public domain. Image source: https://metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/7

Review: Discovering Intertextual Parallels in Latin and Greek with Tesserae

Julian Yolles |
Perseus and Andromeda in landscape fresco Metropolitan Museum_public domain

Review: Perseus Digital Library Scaife Viewer

Stephen Sansom |