The current members of the <teiPublisher> team are:
Amit Kumar is an Instructional Technology Developer at the Graduate School of Library Information Sciences (GGSLIS) at University of Illinios Urbana-Champaign. His areas of research are whiteboard applications and service location protocols, with particular interest in XML based protocols for distributed environments. He received a MS in Computer Science from University of Kentucky in 2002. He has worked on several Native XML database projects such as Early Americas Digital Archive. His past humanities computing work includes the Versioning Machine and Virtual Lightbox.
Susan Schreibman is General Editor and Project Manager of The MacGreevy Archive, which is published by the Institute of Advanced Technology in theHumanities (IATH) at the University of Virginia. She is currently serving a two-year term on the TEI Council. Dr Schreibman is Assistant Dean at University of Maryland Libraries and Head of Digital Collections and Research. She is also an Affiliate Faculty member in the Department of English. Previously she was an Assistant Professor of Professional and Technical Communication at New Jersey Institute of Technology. She is co-editor (with R.G. Siemens and John Unsworth) of A Blackwell Companion to Digital Humanities (Blackwell Press, 2004).
Stewart Arneil is the Head of Research and Development at the Humanities Computing and Media Centre at the University of Victoria in Canada. He holds a B.A., an M.A. in Philosophy of Computationalism, and a certificate in Instructional Design with a specialization in online materials. He is a founder and principal at Half-Baked Software Inc., which is responsible for the authoring programs Hot Potatoes and Quandary. His previous work includes coordinating production for a company specializing in natural language and SGML parsers, and designing GUIs for programs based on those technologies. Prior to that he did produced computer-based interpretive kiosks for a major art gallery.
Martin Holmes is a Programmer/Consultant at the Humanities Computing and Media Centre at the University of Victoria in BC, Canada. He is half of the Half-Baked Software team, which is responsible for the Hot Potatoes and Quandary Web authoring tools, and he is also the author of Markin and TexToys. He holds a BA (Hons) in English, an M.Phil, and the RSA DipTEFLA. He previously taught EFL for 15 years in several countries.
John A. Walsh is Associate Director for Projects and Services of the Indiana University Digital Library Program, the mission of which is to develop and support digital library collections and infrastructure. He is editor of The Swinburne Project and developer of Comic Book Markup Language (CBML), a TEI-based XML vocabulary for the scholarly encoding of comics, comic books, and graphic novels. His research interests include Swinburne, comics, Romantic and Victorian poetry, textual studies, and digital humanities.
Alejandro G. Bia has a BS and a MS degree in Computer Sciences from ORT University, a Diploma in Computing and Information Systems from Oxford University. Currently he is a full time lecturer at the Miguel Hernández University, where he teaches Software Engineering at the Department of Statistics and Applied Mathematics. From 1999 to 2004, he has been Head of Research and Development at the Miguel de Cervantes Digital Library of the University of Alicante. Previously, he has worked as Special-Projects Manager at NetGate (1996) and Documentation Editor of the GeneXus project at Advanced Research and Technology (ARTech) (1991-1994).
Michelle Dalmau is the Interface and Usability Specialist for the Indiana University Digital Library Program, where she conducts iterative user studies and design. Her research interests include the integration of complex metadata structures into the browse and search functionality of online collections as well as pedagogic use of digital image resources. The many projects Michelle has contributed to include Film Literature Index (http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/reference/fli/), Charles W. Cushman Photograph Collection (http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/collections/cushman/), and Letopis' Zhurnal'nykh Statei (http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/reference/letopis/). Her undergraduate background is in English and Art History, and she recently completed dual Masters degrees in library and information science at Indiana University.
Gretchen Gueguen is a Graduate Assistant at the Digital Collections and Research Division of the University of Maryland Libraries, assisting with The MacGreevy Archive (http://www.macgreevy.org) among other digitization projects. She is currently pursuing her Master's in Library Science.
Ray Siemens is Canada Research Chair in Humanities Computing and Associate Professor of English at the University of Victoria. Formerly he was Professor of English at Malaspina University-College and Visiting Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Computing in the Humanities at King's College London. Founding editor of the electronic scholarly journal Early Modern Literary Studies, he is also editor of several Renaissance texts and coeditor of several collections on humanities computing topics, including the Blackwell Companion to Digital Humanities.