The Digital Research Centre (DRC) is dedicated to providing digital scholarship support, promoting collaboration and creation, and making research, art, and cultural works more accessible and useful for research. 


Who can use the DRC? 

The DRC is open to all members of our USask community, but our priority is to support USask researchers at all levels.

Where is the DRC?

Visit the DRC in room 230, Murray Library.   

drc@usask.ca

Hours

Today
Dec 19
10am - 12pm. 1pm - 4pm
Tomorrow
Dec 20
Closed
Sunday
Dec 21
Closed

Computational text analysis

The DRC supports research projects that require Computational Text Analysis (CTA), work that leverages tools to analyze text(s) to allow scholars to uncover patterns, trends, and insights that are difficult to discern through traditional methods. The DRC has experience with text analysis, text mining, topic modelling, data cleanup and more.

To inquire about CTA with the DRC please contact us about your project.

Digital asset management

Our digital asset management services (DAMS) support researchers to organize, preserve, and share collections that span a wide range of media types—including text, images, audio, video, datasets, and interactive formats.

Find out more about DAMS services

Digital projects

Support to create digital projects including hosting digital exhibits, digital asset management for most media types, and digital preservation for long-term access to your project.  

Learn more about digital projects

Digitization

Tools and support for digitizing a wide variety of media including books, manuscripts, photographs, artwork, microforms, maps, posters, slides, audio-visual resources and 3D objects.

Contact us to plan your digitization project

DRC space and technology

The DRC space provides faculty and grad students with software, hardware, collaborative tools, and workspace to support digital scholarship. Space and technology can be booked online.

Contact us to book space in the DRC

Grant support

Writing a grant application that includes digitization, digital media, or computing? The DRC can help.

Learn how the DRC can support your funded research project

3D printing and scanning

3D printing has been used extensively during the past decade for research ranging from reproducing ancient artefacts to prototyping structural and technological designs.

The DRC’s filament 3d printer is available for USask faculty and graduate students to use for research projects. We also have a 3d scanner and software to create 3d printed objects to support your research.

For more information or to use this equipment for your research project contact us.

DRC team

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