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Featured researches published by C Ross.


Journal of Documentation | 2011

Enabled backchannel: conference Twitter use by digital humanists

C Ross; Melissa Terras; Claire Warwick; A Welsh

Purpose – To date, few studies have been undertaken to make explicit how microblogging technologies are used by and can benefit scholars. This paper aims to investigate the use of Twitter by an academic community in various conference settings, and to pose the following questions: Does the use of a Twitter‐enabled backchannel enhance the conference experience, collaboration and the co‐construction of knowledge? and How is microblogging used within academic conferences, and can one articulate the benefits it may bring to a discipline?Design/methodology/approach – This paper considers the use of Twitter as a digital backchannel by the Digital Humanities (DH) community, taking as its focus postings to Twitter during three different international 2009 conferences. The resulting archive of 4,574 “Tweets” was analysed using various quantitative and qualitative methods, including a qualitative categorisation of Twitter posts by open coded analysis, a quantitative examination of user conventions, and text analysi...


In: Farman, J, (ed.) Mobile Media Narratives. University of Minnesota Press (2011) | 2011

Enhancing museum narratives: Tales of things and UCL's grant museum

Claire Warwick; Andrew Hudson-Smith; C Ross; S McDonald

What happens when stories meet mobile media? In this cutting-edge collection, contributors explore digital storytelling in ways that look beyond the desktop to consider how stories can be told through mobile, locative, and pervasive technologies. This book offers dynamic insights about the new nature of narrative in the age of mobile media, studying digital stories that are site-specific, context-aware, and involve the reader in fascinating ways. Addressing important topics for scholars, students, and designers alike, this collection investigates the crucial questions for this emerging area of storytelling and electronic literature. Topics covered include the histories of site-specific narratives, issues in design and practice, space and mapping, mobile games, narrative interfaces, and the interplay between memory, history, and community.


Literary and Linguistic Computing | 2012

Managing and Growing a Cultural Heritage Web Presence. A strategic guide. Mike Ellis.

C Ross

A solution to get the problem off, have you found it? Really? What kind of solution do you resolve the problem? From what sources? Well, there are so many questions that we utter every day. No matter how you will get the solution, it will mean better. You can take the reference from some books. And the managing and growing a cultural heritage web presence a strategic guide is one book that we really recommend you to read, to get more solutions in solving this problem.


Presented at: Museums and the Web, San Diego, California, USA. (2012) | 2012

Enhancing Museum Narratives with the QRator Project: a Tasmanian devil, a Platypus and a Dead Man in a Box

Steven Gray; C Ross; Andrew Hudson-Smith; Claire Warwick; Melissa Terras


In: (Proceedings) Digital Humanities 2010. (pp. pp. 214-217). Office for Humanities Communication: London. (2010) | 2010

Pointless Babble or Enabled Backchannel: Conference Use of Twitter by Digital Humanists.

C Ross; Melissa Terras; Claire Warwick; A Welsh


Museum Management and Curatorship | 2013

Natural history museums as provocateurs for dialogue and debate

Mark Carnall; Jack Ashby; C Ross


Museums and the Web 2011: Proceedings pp. 13-25. (2011) | 2011

Scholarly Information Seeking Behaviour in the British Museum Online Collection

Melissa Terras; C Ross


In: Dale, P and Beard, J and Holland, M, (eds.) University Libraries and Digital Learning Environments. (pp. 151-168). Ashgate: London. (2011) | 2011

Building Useful Virtual Research Environments: the Need for User Led Design.

Melissa Terras; Claire Warwick; C Ross


Literary and Linguistic Computing | 2013

Introduction to the Special Section ‘InterFace 2011’

Alberto Campagnolo; Andreia Carvalho; Alejandro Giacometti; Richard Lewis; Matteo Romanello; C Ross; Raffaele Viglianti


In: (Proceedings) Museums and the Web 2013. (2013) (In press). | 2013

Digital Innovation and a Squander Bug: Reflections on Digital R&D for Audience Engagement and Institutional Impact

C Ross; C Royston; Melissa Terras

Collaboration


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Melissa Terras

University College London

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Claire Warwick

University College London

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A Welsh

University College London

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Steven Gray

University College London

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Alberto Campagnolo

University of the Arts London

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J Nyhan

University College London

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Jack Ashby

University College London

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