Alison Babeu has served as the Digital Librarian and research coordinator for the Perseus Digital Library since 2004.  Her current research projects include the ongoing development of and support for the Perseus Catalog and helping manage the metadata for OGL.

Patrick J. Burns is Assistant Research Scholar and Digital Projects Associate at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World library, where he has worked since earning his PhD in 2016 from Fordham University. Patrick is the Latin tools developer for the Classical Language Toolkit (cltk.org), an open-source project dedicated to natural language processing research for historical languages and actively tweets about Digital Classics under the Twitter handle @diyclassics.

Lisa Cerrato is the Managing Editor for the Perseus Digital Library.  Since joining the project in 1994, she has performed  a variety of duties including (but not limited to) content and data curation; text editing; user support; quality assurance and site testing; student support; and research coordination.

Dan Cline, Brandeis B.A. in Classical Studies (SCL) 2015, was Publications Intern at the Center for Hellenic Studies from 2015-2017.

Gregory Crane is Alexander von Humboldt Professor of Digital Humanities at the University of Leipzig and also the Winnick Family Chair of Technology and Entrepreneurship at Tufts University where he is a professor in the Department of Classics, with an adjunct appointment in Computer Science. He is also  the Editor-in-Chief of the Perseus Digital Library.

Angelia Hanhardt graduated from Georgetown University in May 2017, and began working full-time as the Editorial Assistant at the Center for Hellenic Studies in June 2017. Her duties are primarily split between helping the CHS Publications Team manage online publications and working with the vast community of people who contribute to the First Thousand Years of Greek.

Rhea Lesage is the Librarian for Hellenic Studies and Coordinator for the Classics at the Harry Elkins Widener Library where she carries primary responsibility for building, promoting and providing access to Harvard’s Greek collections. She is also the Harvard Center for Hellenic Studies Associate for Collaborative Initiatives in Washington D.C. where she is working on the Open Greek and Latin Project and developing a partnership with National Library of Greece. Rhea is the current Chair of the Forum for Classics, Libraries and Scholarly Communications and invites you to come to this year’s meeting at SCS on Friday, January 5, 2018, 9.00 am – 11.00 am in the Tremont Room, the Marriott Boston Copley Place.

Katelin Mikos is a fourth year student at the University of Virginia majoring in Classics. Katelin is in her second year of the UVA Open Greek and Latin Project (OGLP) Internship.

Lenny Mueller is Professor Emeritus of Classical Studies, Brandeis University, and Director for IT and Publications, Center for Hellenic Studies, Washington DC.

Chiara Palladino is a PhD candidate in Classical Philology and Researcher in Digital Humanities. She works on the special collection of the Geographi Graeci Minores for the First Thousand Years of Greek Project, and manages structured initiatives for deeply annotated texts in digital ecosystems.

David M. Ratzan is the head of the ISAW Library. He has a doctorate in Classical Studies from Columbia University and his research and teaching interests include ancient social history, papyrology, and numismatics. At ISAW David has worked to increase the library’s support for an array of digital initiatives at ISAW and NYU, from projects in linked bibliographic metadata and digital collections and assets, to teaching and curricular development in the digital humanities. The ISAW Library has also been active in digital humanities outreach, sponsoring and organizing conferences, workshops, and recently the AncientMakerSpaces workshop at the SCS/AIA.

Bruce Robertson is Head of the Department of Classics at Mount Allison University in New Brunswick, Canada. For the past 8 years he has worked on the optical character recognition of polytonic Greek, most recently with the First Thousand Years of Greek project.

Lucie Wall Stylianopoulos is the Art, Archaeology, and Classics Librarian at the University of Virginia and a Byzantinist. Lucie is the co-creator of the ArchaeoCore metadata schema and works on digital projects in Greece on Isthmia and Byzantine Athens.

James Tauber is a professional software developer and amateur philologist whose research interests include Greek morphology and data-driven language learning. He is heading up the development of the next generation reading environment for the Perseus Digital Library.