"The keynote address for the Spring 2012 Midwest Archives Conference meeting. This talk continues and expands on my working definition of "participatory archives," providing examples and talking about the relationship between participation and engagement. "
Étiquette : archives
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Interestingly, paintings can be 'retired' from the Tagger once enough data has been gathered
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the inherent reward of participating in the activity was a bigger motivator than competitiveness,
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definitions of crowdsourcing in cultural heritage: 'a form of engagement that contributes towards a shared, significant goal or research question by asking the public to undertake tasks that cannot be done automatically' or 'productive public engagement with the mission and work of memory institutions'.
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it has to produce results of value to the research community in less time than could have been done by other means
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built a focused 'talk' tool which can programmatically filter out the most interesting unanswered comments and email them to their 30 or 40 expert users
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full text transcriptions (difficult to automatically reconcile) vs 'rich metadata'
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in some projects, interactions with a central authority are valued, in others, community interactions are really important.
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The potential and dangers of 'gamification' and 'badgeification' and their potentially negative impact on motivation were raised
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have you met participants in real life?' - answer, yes, and it was an opportunity to learn from them
Ce sont deux organisations au service du libre accès au savoir qui vont donc travailler ensemble en 2013. Pour pouvoir publier sur Internet par le biais de Wikimedia (par exemple sur Wikipédia, Wikisource ou Wikiversity) certaines sources des fonds des AFS tombées dans le domaine public, un Wikipedian in Residence travaillera au Archives fédérales au cours des prochains mois.
"Galleries, libraries, archives and museums have an important role in supporting the advance of humanity’s knowledge. They have traditionally been the gatekeepers of the our cultural heritage and in their collections they hold the record of mankind."
Archives et web sémantique : on y vient...
LiAM: Linked Archival Metadata
The Linked Archival Metadata (LiAM) Project is funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Services’ National Leadership Grants Program as a Planning Grant. Tufts Work on LiAM began October 1, 2012, and is scheduled to be complete by September 30, 2013. LiAM is focused on planning for the application of linked data approaches to archival description. Our goal is to better understand the benefits that linked data could bring to the management, discovery, and use of archival collections while also investigating the efforts required to implement these approaches. Central to this effort is identifying graduated approaches that will enable archives to build on existing description as well as mapping out a more ambitious vision for linked data in archives.
... jusqu'à l'archivage à long terme par le CINES et les Archives nationales
Tags: arv infonuagique OAIS