Sharing research resources of different kinds, in new ways, and on an increasing scale, is a central element of the unfolding e-Research vision. Web 2.0 is seen as providing the technical platform to enable these new forms of scholarly communications. We report findings from a study of the use of Web 2.0 services by UK researchers and their use in novel forms of scholarly communication. We document the contours of adoption, the barriers and enablers, and the dynamics of innovation in Web services and scholarly practices. We conclude by considering the steps that different stakeholders might take to encourage greater experimentation and uptake.</p
Over the past 15 years the Web has transformed the ways in which we search for information and use i...
The term Web 2.0 is currently in vogue, is subject to enormous volumes of hype, and has been heralde...
Web 2.0 represents a revolution in terms of the possibilities it offers for facilitating communicati...
This paper examines the recent development of an e-research agenda. e-Research is taken as the lates...
Since the early 1980s, the scholarly community has been witnessing a considerable increase in the us...
Nentwich, M., 2010, Web 2.0 and academia, in: Karner, S. und Getzinger, G. (Hg.): Proceedings of the...
Over the past 15 years, the web has transformed the way we seek and use information. In the last 5 ...
One of the features of the growth of Web 2.0 resources and services in recent years has been the rap...
This article reports the findings of a survey of the extent and types of use UK social sciences rese...
One of the features of the growth of Web 2.0 resources and services in recent years has been the rap...
Over the course of the last decade, Web 2.0 technologies became one of the most fashionable applicat...
Over the past 15 years the Web has transformed the ways in which we search for information and use i...
This paper examines how two contrasting academic publishers are responding to the opportunities and...
This study attempts to trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the days of publication o...
This study attempts to trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the days of publication o...
Over the past 15 years the Web has transformed the ways in which we search for information and use i...
The term Web 2.0 is currently in vogue, is subject to enormous volumes of hype, and has been heralde...
Web 2.0 represents a revolution in terms of the possibilities it offers for facilitating communicati...
This paper examines the recent development of an e-research agenda. e-Research is taken as the lates...
Since the early 1980s, the scholarly community has been witnessing a considerable increase in the us...
Nentwich, M., 2010, Web 2.0 and academia, in: Karner, S. und Getzinger, G. (Hg.): Proceedings of the...
Over the past 15 years, the web has transformed the way we seek and use information. In the last 5 ...
One of the features of the growth of Web 2.0 resources and services in recent years has been the rap...
This article reports the findings of a survey of the extent and types of use UK social sciences rese...
One of the features of the growth of Web 2.0 resources and services in recent years has been the rap...
Over the course of the last decade, Web 2.0 technologies became one of the most fashionable applicat...
Over the past 15 years the Web has transformed the ways in which we search for information and use i...
This paper examines how two contrasting academic publishers are responding to the opportunities and...
This study attempts to trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the days of publication o...
This study attempts to trace the evolution of scholarly communication from the days of publication o...
Over the past 15 years the Web has transformed the ways in which we search for information and use i...
The term Web 2.0 is currently in vogue, is subject to enormous volumes of hype, and has been heralde...
Web 2.0 represents a revolution in terms of the possibilities it offers for facilitating communicati...