+ Meet the READ project partners - Sofia Ares Oliveira

What’s your name?
Sofia Ares Oliveira.
Where do you work?
Digital Humanities Laboratory at Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL).
Tell us a bit about your background…
I studied Electrical Engineering at EPFL and specialised in Information Technology, where I explored several signal processing topics, from acoustics to biomedical signals to images. I started working at the DHLab on cadaster map images and since then I have been working on the several thousands of historical documents from Venice that have been digitized and are waiting to be processed.
What is your role in the READ project?
At EPFL we are responsible for the Large Scale Demonstrator, the Venice Time Machine, which aims at building a multidimensional model of Venice and its evolution covering a period of more than 1000 years. I am mainly in charge of integrating and implementing computer vision and image processing tools for handwritten text documents and cadaster maps.
What is top of your to-do list at the moment?
Finalising the release of cython’s binding of the line segmentation tools on Transkribus, so that other READ partners can use it with python.
What do you like best about working on READ?
Working with people coming from different fields and countries, and the ‘product-oriented’ vision of the project, with direct feedback from users.
If you could do another job for just one day, what would it be?
Astronaut, a nice combination of scientist, engineer and explorer!
What can you see out of the window of your office?
Thanks Sofia!
Related Articles

+ The Austrian government meets READ DocScan and ScanTent!
The Computer Vision Lab at Technical University Vienna are working to ensure that digitization on demand is on its way to an archive near you! This team of computer scientists are developing two new...

+ Report from the International Medieval Congress 2017
The International Medieval Congress is one of the biggest events for Medievalists from all over the world. For this year’s Congress more than 2,400 scholars and enthusiasts took the University of...

+ Keyword searching in Handwritten Text - new breakthrough with French medieval records
One of the READ project partners is helping to make keyword searching of handwritten documents a real possibility! The Pattern Recognition and Human Language Technology (PRHLT) research centre at the...