→ rdfs:label → "100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string,
"100 / 4011"^^xsd:string
→ dcterms:description → "Common Learning Space: Building 100 Room 4011 Harvard Lecture Theatre B"^^xsd:string
→ skos:notation → "100-4011"^^http://id.southampton.ac.uk/ns/room-code-scheme
→ rdfs:label → "Floor 4, Building 100"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Bench PC in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:comment → "A specific thing in a specific room (eg the data projector in room 2A-2065)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Data and Video Projection"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Data and Video Projection in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "RSC- ACCESS - AUDIENCE (B) Upper Floor Room Egress Standard Lift & Evac Management Plan"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "RSC- ACCESS - AUDIENCE (B) Upper Floor Room Egress Standard Lift & Evac Management Plan in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "RSC- ACCESS - INSTRUCTOR (B) Upper Floor Room Egress Standard Lift & Evac Management Plan"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "RSC- ACCESS - INSTRUCTOR (B) Upper Floor Room Egress Standard Lift & Evac Management Plan in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "DVD player in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Induction loop for hearing aid users"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Induction loop for hearing aid users in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Network connection for laptops"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Network connection for laptops in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Lectern in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Fixed seats - tiered in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Whiteboard in 100 / 4011 (Harvard L/TB)"^^xsd:string
→ rdfs:label → "Keynote event: The Ethical Use of Sensitive Data"^^xsd:string
→ dcterms:description → "<h4><span dir="ltr" xml:lang="en-gb">The Library’s Research Data Team is excited to announce our main event for Love Data Week 2025, exploring the theme “Whose Data Is It, Anyway?”</span> </h4><p>During this event, we will have two extended talks focusing on researchers who have hands on experience with handling sensitive data as well as lightning talks from researchers who are working in this area. </p><p><strong>Keynote: Charlie Knight</strong></p><p>Our first talk features <a href="https://www.southampton.ac.uk/people/5ynjsv/mr-charlie-knight"><strong>Charlie Knight</strong></a>, a PhD candidate at the Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/non-Jewish Relations at the University of Southampton. Charlie, a former Wolfson Foundation Scholar and upcoming Fellow at the Leo Baeck Institute, will discuss his research using the papers of Theodor Hirschberg (archive MS314) and how he integrated the process of handling this sensitive data into his research in an ethical way. </p><p><strong>Lightning Talk: Design Archaeology: on the Smartwatch, Aybala Cakmakcioglu</strong></p><p><a href="https://www.southampton.ac.uk/people/5z8fn7/miss-aybala-cakmakcioglu">Aybala Cakmakcioglu</a> is a Teaching Fellow in the Global Advertising and Branding programme at Winchester School of Art. With a background in industrial design and brand communication, Aybala’s research spans digital culture, everyday life, and the philosophy of technology. Her PhD thesis, titled ‘Design Archaeology: on the Smartwatch’ aims to form a holistic understanding of the smartwatch as a contemporary product since it has the potential to reveal the tangled dynamics between people and technology. The research explores present phenomena by benefitting from the past with a design archaeological approach. By exploring recurring patterns and historical parallels, her work offers valuable insights into digital culture by exploring concepts such as quantified self and information discipline.</p><p style="margin-left:0px;"><span class="sp-mseditorfix"><strong>Lightning</strong></span><strong> Talk: CARE Principles for Indigenous Data Governance, Laurisa Sastoque Pabon</strong></p><p style="margin-left:0px;"><a href="https://www.southampton.ac.uk/people/65nwf6/miss-laurisa-sastoque-pabon">Laurisa Sastoque Pabon</a> is Digital Preservation Training Officer in the Digital Humanities Team at the University of Southampton. She will talk about the CARE principles for handling data which were originally proposed for <span class="sp-mseditorfix">indigenous</span> data but can be useful when dealing with data <span class="sp-mseditorfix">collection</span> from any marginalised group. Prior to joining the university, Laurisa received an MPhil in Digital Humanities at the University of Cambridge where her dissertation work was comprised of a digital mapping project on the subject of the Colombian diaspora in the United States and the United Kingdom and the drug trade. Laurisa is originally from Bogotá, Colombia, and has also lived in Evanston, Illinois, where she completed her undergraduate degree in History, Creative Writing, and Data Science (Minor) from Northwestern University. In her spare time, Laurisa enjoys travelling, hanging out at coffee shops, and fantasizing about the dog she will (one day) adopt.</p><p><strong>Keynote: Ben Jarman</strong></p><p>The second half of the event will be led by <a href="https://www.southampton.ac.uk/people/667tyx/doctor-ben-jarman">Ben Jarman</a>, a Research Fellow in the School of Law at the University of Southampton. Ben’s work explores the experiences of long-term prisoners and the moral implications of extreme punishments in the UK. Ben will discuss some ethical considerations arising with qualitative data derived from prison interviews, and consider what implications arise for the Open Data agenda more generally.</p><p><a href="https://forms.office.com/e/AaTZuXECxs">Register for this event</a> on the ethical practices in handling sensitive data across disciplines. </p><p> </p>"^^http://purl.org/xtypes/Fragment-XHTML
→ rdfs:label → "Annual Computer Science Regius Lecture"^^xsd:string
→ dcterms:description → "<p>Annual Computer Science Regius Chair Lecture on 6 October 2025 at the University of Southampton with Verity Harding, Founder of the AI consultancy Formation Advisory Ltd and Director of the AI & Geopolitics Project at the University of Cambridge. <br /></p><p>One of TIME100’s Most Influential People in AI, Verity Harding has worked at the cutting edge of AI across both industry and academia. Her debut book ‘AI Needs You: how we can change AI’s future and save our own’, was featured in the Financial Times, the Guardian, the Economist and named as one of McKinsey’s Best Books of 2024. <br /></p><p><br /></p>"^^http://purl.org/xtypes/Fragment-XHTML