Archaeology has a long tradition of volunteer involvement but also faces considerable challenges in protecting and understanding a geographically widespread, rapidly dwindling and ever threatened cultural resource. This paper considers a newly launched, multi-application crowdsourcing project called MicroPasts that enables both community-led and massive online contributions to high quality research in archaeology, history and heritage. We reflect on preliminary results from this initiative with a focus on the technical challenges, quality control issues and contributors motivations
This report reflects on existing citizen research activity in the UK heritage sector by summarising ...
This paper presents a vision and a pathway for the future of archaeological practice, in which sever...
Crowdsourcing – the act of outsourcing tasks to an undefined, large community through an open call f...
Archaeology has a long tradition of volunteer involvement but also faces considerable challenges in ...
This paper offers a brief introduction to MicroPasts, a web-enabled crowd-sourcing and crowd-funding...
The MicroPasts project is a novel experiment in the use of crowd-based methodologies to enable parti...
This thesis draws together a collection of peer-review papers and nonspecialist articles published o...
The MicroPasts project is a novel experiment in the use of crowd-based methodologies to enable parti...
Archaeologists are increasingly working with crowd-sourced digital data. Using evidence from other d...
Citizen science, as a process of volunteer participation through crowdsourcing, facilitates the crea...
This article reviews existing case studies in the ‘crowd-funding’ of community archaeology, as well ...
The Engaging Crowds project explores citizen research[1] in cultural heritage: people using digital,...
Digital history, among other things, offers the possibility for people to collaborate and work toget...
Crowdsourcing, or “obtaining information or services by soliciting input from a large number of peop...
This thesis examines the impact of the democratic promises of Internet communication technologies, s...
This report reflects on existing citizen research activity in the UK heritage sector by summarising ...
This paper presents a vision and a pathway for the future of archaeological practice, in which sever...
Crowdsourcing – the act of outsourcing tasks to an undefined, large community through an open call f...
Archaeology has a long tradition of volunteer involvement but also faces considerable challenges in ...
This paper offers a brief introduction to MicroPasts, a web-enabled crowd-sourcing and crowd-funding...
The MicroPasts project is a novel experiment in the use of crowd-based methodologies to enable parti...
This thesis draws together a collection of peer-review papers and nonspecialist articles published o...
The MicroPasts project is a novel experiment in the use of crowd-based methodologies to enable parti...
Archaeologists are increasingly working with crowd-sourced digital data. Using evidence from other d...
Citizen science, as a process of volunteer participation through crowdsourcing, facilitates the crea...
This article reviews existing case studies in the ‘crowd-funding’ of community archaeology, as well ...
The Engaging Crowds project explores citizen research[1] in cultural heritage: people using digital,...
Digital history, among other things, offers the possibility for people to collaborate and work toget...
Crowdsourcing, or “obtaining information or services by soliciting input from a large number of peop...
This thesis examines the impact of the democratic promises of Internet communication technologies, s...
This report reflects on existing citizen research activity in the UK heritage sector by summarising ...
This paper presents a vision and a pathway for the future of archaeological practice, in which sever...
Crowdsourcing – the act of outsourcing tasks to an undefined, large community through an open call f...