The increasing volume of digital material available to the humanities creates clear potential for crowdsourcing. However, tasks in the digital humanities typically do not satisfy the standard requirement for decomposition into microtasks each of which must require little expertise on behalf of the worker and little context of the broader task. Instead, humanities tasks require scholarly knowledge to perform and even where sub-tasks can be extracted, these often involve broader context of the document or corpus from which they are extracted. That is the tasks are macrotasks, resisting simple decomposition. Building on a case study from musicology, the In Concert project, we will explore both the barriers to crowdsourcing in the creation of...
This article considers the mediating role of digital photography for eliciting embodied and dialogic...
© 2019, © 2019 ASLE-UKI. This article is an exploration of the possibilities of interdisciplinary, i...
In The Great Endarkenment, Elijah Millgram argues that the hyper-specialization of expert domains ha...
The increasing volume of digital material available to the humanities creates clear potential for cr...
Artificial intelligence (AI) that is based upon semantic search has become one of the dominant means...
The university and seminary’s work and workplaces evolve within emerging digital ecologies, such as ...
In discussing the work of Wassily Kandinsky of some hundred years ago, Will Grohmann, an art histori...
Text and data mining offers an opportunity to improve the way we access and analyse the outputs of a...
Access to scholarship is becoming ever more dependent on one's (or one's institution's) financial me...
Funding for research communication is a growing feature of grant applications and whilst digital sch...
Martin Wight’s fragmentary comments entitled ‘The Disunity of Mankind’ are by no means a major work,...
Emerging approaches in social sciences and new media studies involve inquiry into social issues via ...
© 2017, © 2017 Society for Research into Higher Education. Findings from interviews with mid-career ...
With a growing emphasis on undergraduate engagement in academia, library publishers are discovering ...
This essay describes and reflects on the integration of computational research skills into core (tha...
This article considers the mediating role of digital photography for eliciting embodied and dialogic...
© 2019, © 2019 ASLE-UKI. This article is an exploration of the possibilities of interdisciplinary, i...
In The Great Endarkenment, Elijah Millgram argues that the hyper-specialization of expert domains ha...
The increasing volume of digital material available to the humanities creates clear potential for cr...
Artificial intelligence (AI) that is based upon semantic search has become one of the dominant means...
The university and seminary’s work and workplaces evolve within emerging digital ecologies, such as ...
In discussing the work of Wassily Kandinsky of some hundred years ago, Will Grohmann, an art histori...
Text and data mining offers an opportunity to improve the way we access and analyse the outputs of a...
Access to scholarship is becoming ever more dependent on one's (or one's institution's) financial me...
Funding for research communication is a growing feature of grant applications and whilst digital sch...
Martin Wight’s fragmentary comments entitled ‘The Disunity of Mankind’ are by no means a major work,...
Emerging approaches in social sciences and new media studies involve inquiry into social issues via ...
© 2017, © 2017 Society for Research into Higher Education. Findings from interviews with mid-career ...
With a growing emphasis on undergraduate engagement in academia, library publishers are discovering ...
This essay describes and reflects on the integration of computational research skills into core (tha...
This article considers the mediating role of digital photography for eliciting embodied and dialogic...
© 2019, © 2019 ASLE-UKI. This article is an exploration of the possibilities of interdisciplinary, i...
In The Great Endarkenment, Elijah Millgram argues that the hyper-specialization of expert domains ha...