Introduction - Pauline Rafferty and Allen Foster
Part 1: Analysis and retrieval of digital cultural objects
1. Managing, searching and finding digital cultural objects:
putting it in context - Pauline Rafferty
2. Data modelling for analysis, discovery and retrieval - Sarah
Higgins
3. The digital traces of user-generated content: how social media
data may become the historical sources of the future - Katrin
Weller
Part 2: Digitization projects in libraries, archives and museums: case-studies
4. Visual digital humanities: using image data to derive
approximate metadata - H. M. Dee, L. M. Hughes, G. L. Roderick and
A. D. Brown
5. Managing and preserving digital collections at the british
library - Maureen Pennock and Michael Day
6. Digital preservation of audio content - Will Prentice
Part 3: Social networking and digital cultural objects
7. Photos: Flickr, Facebook and other social networking sites -
Corinne Jorgensen
8. Searching and creating affinities in a web music collections -
Nicola Orio
9. Film retrieval on the web: sharing, naming, access and discovery
- Katherine La Barre and Rosa Ines de Novais Cordeiro
Allen Foster has a BA in Social History, a Master's in Information Management and a PhD in Information Science. As Reader in Information Science, he has held various roles, including Head of Department for Information Studies, at Aberystwyth University. His research interest areas span the research process of Master's and PhD students, the development of models for information behaviour and serendipity, and user experience of information systems, creativity and information retrieval. He has guest edited for several journal special issues, is a regional editor for The Electronic Library and is a member of journal editorial boards, international panels and conference committees.
Dr Pauline Rafferty MA(Hons) MSc MCLIP is a Senior Lecturer and Director of Teaching and Learning at the Department of Information Studies, Aberystwyth University. She previously taught at the Department of Information Science, City University London, and in the School of Information Studies and Department of Media and Communication at the University of Central England, Birmingham.
This timely and welcome book will be invaluable for information
management professionals seeking an overview of the theoretical and
practical opportunities and challenges around providing access to
digital cultural objects. Its scope is considerable and varied,
ranging from the very technical to the practical, and from general
surveys of the current state of the art to the findings of specific
research projects. As such, it is a volume which some readers may
prefer to dip into according to their interests. With its focus on
new and emerging techniques and thinking, it should appeal both to
researchers and practitioners with an interest in the current state
of the art.
*Archives and Records*
This book serves a good introduction to current areas of research
in the sphere of digital cultural heritage. Both students and
professionals alike will benefit from these works on important
issues that face this domain.
*Library Resources & Technical Services*
Overall, this is an interesting and timely publication
*Alexandria*
Chapter authors based in Europe and the Americas present an
international perspective on the issues, and represent a diverse
spectrum of metadata and technology librarians, digital humanists,
and other academic educators and researchers. As a librarian who
occasionally doubles as adjunct teaching faculty and works with
research support, I would suggest that Managing Digital Cultural
Objects presents material that is beneficial both for practitioners
and educators in the cultural heritage communities.
*Technical Services Quarterly*
'This volume brings together a range of experts within the field of
digital preservation in order to address the topic of analysis,
discovery and retrieval of cultural objects. It beautifully draws
upon the theoretical and academic aspects of digital culture and
works to balance this focus with contributions from practitioners
working within the digital preservation sector...All in all, a
useful volume for anyone working with digital cultural objects and
for anyone looking for that inspiration for research within their
studies.'
*News in Conservation*
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