Archaeology 2.0 : new approaches to communication and collaboration

Körperschaft: Society for American Archaeology. Meeting
Weitere Verfasser: Kansa, Eric Christopher , [HerausgeberIn]
Kansa, Sarah Whitcher , [HerausgeberIn]
Watrall, Ethan , [HerausgeberIn]
Ort/Verlag/Jahr: Los Angeles : Cotsen Institute of Archaeology Press, 2011.
Umfang/Format: 1 online resource.
Schriftenreihe: Cotsen digital archaeology series v. 1
Schlagworte:
Parallelausgabe: Archaeology 2.0 (Print version)
Online Zugang: open access
Inhaltsangabe:
  • Introduction: new directions for the digital past / Eric C. Kansa
  • A Web of archaeological data: infrastructure, services, and interoperability.
  • The archaeology data service and the archaeotools project: faceted classification and natural language processing / Julian Richards, Stuart Jeffrey, Stewart Waller, Fabio Ciravegna, Sam Chapman, and Ziqi Zhang
  • Toward a do-it-yourself cyber infrastructure : open data, incentives, and reducing costs and complexities of data sharing / Eric C. Kansa and Sarah Whitcher Kansa
  • The technical and theoretical context of archaeology on the Web.
  • Poor relatives or favorite uncles? cyber infrastructure and Web 2.0 : a critical comparison for archaeological research / Stuart Dunn
  • Archaeological knowledge production and dissemination in the digital age / Robin Boast and Peter Biehl
  • Archaeological data management and collaboration.
  • Creating a virtual research environment for archaeology / Michael Rains
  • IAKS: a Web 2.0 archaeological knowledge management system / Ethan Watrall
  • User-generated content in zooarchaeology : exploring the "middle space" of scholarly communication / Sarah Whitcher Kansa and Francis Deblauwe
  • Sustainability, quality,and access.
  • UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, archaeological data, and Web 2.0 / Willeke Wendrich
  • Open access for archaeological literature : a manager's perspective / Jingfeng Xia
  • What are our critical data-preservation needs? / Harrison Eiteljorg
  • Conclusion: Web 2.0 and beyond, or on the Web, nobody knows you're an archaeologist / W. Fredrick Limp.