Museum professionals suppose that interacting with authentic objects promotes curiosity and engagement, but this has not been tested. In this research, children and adults visiting the Oxford University Museum of Natural History were shown a taxidermied rabbit or rabbit skeleton. They were asked “Is it real?”, “Why?” and were given the opportunity to ask a question about it to measure their curiosity and engagement. As predicted, visitors who perceived the rabbits as authentic were more likely to ask a question than those who judged them as inauthentic. Perceived authenticity also promoted more why questions. In general, these findings became more robust with increasing age. However, approximately 25% of visitors did not perceive the rabbit...
Authentic science education has received increased attention in recent years, but it remains unclear...
This qualitative research was set within a literary heritage museum replete with replica artefacts. ...
In many ways, authenticity is everybody’s darling: the historian searches for authentic, historic te...
Museum professionals value authentic museum specimens because they are believed to promote inspirati...
Brief review of a recent research article on visitor perceptions of the importance of object authent...
Taxidermied animals provide an important source of information about the natural world, but failure ...
When the doors of a science center open, so do opportunities to step into oversized bubbles or unear...
Questions concerning the level of authenticity of an object are of primary importance in many fields...
Cultural places such as museums tend to rely on Information Technologies (IT) to support their exhib...
Authenticity is an interesting and, in some ways, even a problematic term. Yet there is a very speci...
Seligman, a 20th-century collector and historian, stated: ‘The first duty of the museums is to give ...
Do you know what a kiwi looks like - all the way down to the orientation of the nostrils? While smal...
The purpose of this thesis is to defend the maintenance of original object-based collections in muse...
The aim of this paper is to analyse quantitatively the visitors' perception of authenticity in two d...
This article examines how different types of authenticity and authentication work together to inspir...
Authentic science education has received increased attention in recent years, but it remains unclear...
This qualitative research was set within a literary heritage museum replete with replica artefacts. ...
In many ways, authenticity is everybody’s darling: the historian searches for authentic, historic te...
Museum professionals value authentic museum specimens because they are believed to promote inspirati...
Brief review of a recent research article on visitor perceptions of the importance of object authent...
Taxidermied animals provide an important source of information about the natural world, but failure ...
When the doors of a science center open, so do opportunities to step into oversized bubbles or unear...
Questions concerning the level of authenticity of an object are of primary importance in many fields...
Cultural places such as museums tend to rely on Information Technologies (IT) to support their exhib...
Authenticity is an interesting and, in some ways, even a problematic term. Yet there is a very speci...
Seligman, a 20th-century collector and historian, stated: ‘The first duty of the museums is to give ...
Do you know what a kiwi looks like - all the way down to the orientation of the nostrils? While smal...
The purpose of this thesis is to defend the maintenance of original object-based collections in muse...
The aim of this paper is to analyse quantitatively the visitors' perception of authenticity in two d...
This article examines how different types of authenticity and authentication work together to inspir...
Authentic science education has received increased attention in recent years, but it remains unclear...
This qualitative research was set within a literary heritage museum replete with replica artefacts. ...
In many ways, authenticity is everybody’s darling: the historian searches for authentic, historic te...