Crowdsourcing our cultural heritage

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Ridge, Mia (Editor, HerausgeberIn)
Document Type: Book
Language:English
Published: Farnham ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate , [2014]
Series:Digital research in the arts and humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:Inhaltsverzeichnis
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Rezension
Rezension
Related Items:Online-Ausg.: Crowdsourcing our cultural heritage
Rezensiert in: [Rezension von: Mia Ridge (ed.), Crowdsourcing our Cultural Heritage]
Author Notes:edited by Mia Ridge, Open University, UK
Table of Contents:
  • Crowdsourcing our cultural heritage : introduction
  • Mia Ridge, Open University, UKPart I. Case studies
  • Crowdsourcing in Brooklyn
  • Shelley Bernstein, Brooklyn Museum, USA
  • Old weather : approaching collections from a different angle
  • Lucinda Blaser, Royal Museums Greenwich, UK
  • "Many hands make light work. Many hands together make merry work" : transcribe Bentham and crowdsourcing manuscript collections
  • Tim Causer, Bentham Project; Melissa Terras, Department of Information Studies, and Centre for Digital Humanities; University College London, UK
  • Build, analyze, and generalize : community transcription of the papers of the War Department and the development of Scripto
  • Sharon M. Leon, Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University, USA
  • What's on the menu? Crowdsourcing at the New York Public Library
  • Michael Lascarides (National Library of New Zealand) and Ben Vershbow (New York Public Library)
  • What's Welsh for "crowdsourcing"? : citizen science and community engagement at the National Library of Wales
  • Lyn Lewis Dafis, Lorna M. Hughes (National Library of Wales) and Rhian James (University of Wales), UK
  • Waisda? : making videos findable through crowdsourced annotations
  • Johan Oomen (Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), Riste Gligorov and Michiel Hildebrand (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), The Netherlands
  • Your paintings tagger : crowdsourcing descriptive metadata for a national virtual collection
  • Kathryn Eccles (Oxford Internet Institute) and Andrew Greg (University of Glasgow), UK
  • Part II. Challenges and opportunities of cultural heritage crowdsourcing ; Crowding out the archivist? Locating crowdsourcing within the broader landscape of participatory archives
  • Alexandra Eveleigh (University College London), UK
  • How the crowd can surprise us : humanities crowdsourcing and the creation of knowledge
  • Stuart Dunn and Mark Hedges, Centre for e-Research, Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London, UK
  • The role of open authority in a collaborative web
  • Lori Byrd Phillips, The Children's Museum of Indianapolis, USA
  • Making crowdsourcing compatible with the missions and values of cultural heritage organizations
  • Trevor Owens, Library of Congress, USA.