“With New Grant, “On The Books” Uses AI To Make Historical Records More Accessible” – UNC University Libraries

With new grant, “On the Books” uses AI to make historical records more accessible

A $765,000 grant from the Mellon Foundation funds three case studies that will develop best practices for using AI in archival work.

September 25, 2025

The University Libraries’ On the Books initiative is expanding its scope and exploring how artificial intelligence can make it easier to find and use materials from the archives.

A $765,000 grant from the Mellon Foundation will support three case studies using AI to improve access to materials related to groups historically underrepresented in institutional collections. Previous grants from the Foundation allowed the University Libraries to investigate text mining and machine learning as a way to identify discriminatory language in historical statutes.

“The Mellon Foundation’s generous support continues to help us apply new technologies to archival documents, and to advance our understanding of them as a result,” said Vice Provost for University Libraries and University Librarian María R. Estorino. “Using AI ethically and responsibly to make collections machine readable opens up research possibilities that go far beyond what an individual scholar or archivist could ever accomplish alone.”

Read on to learn more about the next phase of On the Books: AI-Assisted Collections.

Archives like Wilson Special Collections Library are a rich resource for learning about our past. But many archival materials are hard for users to locate and contextualize because they lack the transcriptions, descriptions or metadata that would make them easily searchable.

Each case study in On the Books: AI-Assisted Collections brings together library experts and users to address this challenge. The Library team is working with two historians, as well as community stakeholders and other scholars, to find responsible and ethical approaches to using AI in the archives.

  • Historian Antwain Hunter researches firearm use by Black Americans in the antebellum South. He will work with a team to find relevant materials and transcribe them using AI, making them easier to use and access.
  • Historian Monica Martinez is an expert in civil and human rights. She will help with the development of textual datasets created from Texas statutes, which will then be used to identify Jim Crow and Juan Crow laws.
  • Community partners and scholars will help the team develop processes for using AI to create descriptions and metadata for historical photos of Black Americans’ everyday lives. That data will make it easier to find and understand those photos — especially for users with visual impairments.

“All of these projects build on the same idea that has driven On the Books from the beginning,” said Head of Digital Research Services Amanda Henley, who is leading the project. “We want to identify thoughtful ways of using technology to expand access to information about communities that have historically been overlooked in archival records.”

“This kind of work is only meaningful when it can be put to use,” says co-PI Matthew Jansen. “That’s why working with scholars is so important. We hope the real-world lessons from this project will eventually make it easier for other archives and researchers to use similar generative AI techniques with their own collections.”

Continue/Read Original Article: https://library.unc.edu/news/with-new-grant-on-the-books-uses-ai-to-make-historical-records-more-accessible/ Referral Source: https://www.infodocket.com/2025/09/25/news-from-unc-university-libraries-with-new-grant-on-the-books-uses-ai-to-make-historical-records-more-accessible/

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Library IT vs. the AI bots – June 9, 2025

Left to right: David Romani, Tim Shearer and Jason Casden worked with the Library’s IT team and campus colleagues to thwart bots attacking the online library catalog.

An unprecedented attack tests the ingenuity of the University Libraries’ IT department and reveals a dark side of artificial intelligence.

by Judy Panitch

The first sign of something amiss was a cry for help.

 “I’m getting reports from staff of a catalog error: ‘This website is under heavy load (queue full).’ I saw it myself once. Seems to be intermittent.”

Translation: On Dec. 2, 2024, the University Libraries’ online catalog was receiving so much traffic that it was periodically shutting out students, faculty and staff, including the head of User Experience. Could the Library’s IT experts take action?

Heavy use of the catalog during finals week is typical as students look up books and articles for term papers and projects. This was different. 

“It was just a boatload of traffic, more than we had any reasonable expectation of getting,” recalls David Romani, a system administrator and the Library’s security liaison. Normal heavy use might involve 100 simultaneous searches. Now, internal logs showed 500 or more searches at a time, overloading the system and triggering glitches.

In many computer attacks, related internet (IP) addresses or a single internet service provider (ISP) might behave suspiciously. Administrators stop the attack by blocking those computers. The Library permanently bans more than 4 million IP addresses—most of them overseas—because of prior bad behavior. The University blocks millions more at the campus level.

What Romani found surprised him. The searches were coming from addresses spread broadly across the United States using reputable ISPs such as AT&T, Spectrum and Verizon. Each interaction looked exactly like something that happens thousands of times a day at a research library like Carolina’s.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Library IT vs. the AI bots

#2025 #AIBots #Books #History #InformationTechnology #Libraries #Library #LibraryIT #Reading #Science #Technology #TheUniversityOfNorthCarolinaAtChapelHill #UNC #UNCLibraries #UnitedStates