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Dive into the research topics where Juliet Sprake is active.

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Featured researches published by Juliet Sprake.


ubiquitous computing | 2014

Crowds, citizens and sensors: process and practice for mobilising learning

Juliet Sprake; Peter Rogers

Participatory sensing is an emerging field in which citizens are empowered by technologies to monitor their own environments. Harvesting and analysing data gathered in response to personal or local enquiries can be seen as an antidote to information provided by official sources. Democratising sensing means that ordinary people can learn about and understand the world around them better and can be a part of the decision-making in improving environments for all. In this paper, we review and describe participatory sensing and discuss this in relation to making a series of prototype tools and applications for mobile users—Located Lexicon, Where’s Fenton? and Tall Buildings. In the first of these projects, Located Lexicon, we wanted to find out whether a lexicon of terms derived from user-generated content could enable the formation of Twitter like groups that allow users to engage in finding out more about their location. In the second project, Where’s Fenton? we made a publicly available app that involves users in counting the abundance and logging the location of deer in a park. This project focused specifically on anonymity of the user in collecting data for a specific enquiry. In the last project, Tall Buildings, we experimented with using dimensions of altitude, distance and speed to encourage users to physically explore a city from its rooftops. In all of these projects, we experiment with the pedestrian as a human sensor and the methods and roles they may engage in to make new discoveries. The underlying premise for our work is that it is not possible to calibrate people to be identical, so experimenting with crowd-sourced data opens up thinking about the way we observe and learn about the physical environment.


International Journal of Mobile and Blended Learning | 2009

Designing Participant-Generated Context into Guided Tours

Juliet Sprake

This article presents an interdisciplinary framework for designing participant-generated context into guided tours. The framework has been developed in parallel to practice-led research in the design of mobile learning tours with young people based in London. The article draws on art, architecture and urbanism to outline productive concepts, ‘seeding’ and ‘threading’, which support mobilized learning in tours of the built environment. In this, context is explored as an active and dynamic idea in developing attributes of the mobilized learner in the design of tours around buildings and the built environment.


Archive | 2012

Learning-Through-Touring

Juliet Sprake


Archive | 2012

Learning-through-Touring: Mobilising Learners and Touring Technologies to Creatively Explore the Built Environment

Juliet Sprake


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2011

In vivo laboratory practicals in research-led teaching: An example using glucose tolerance tests in lean and obese mice

Aileen King; James E. Bowe; Juliet Sprake; Ian M. Kinchin


International Journal of Art and Design Education | 2007

Transitional Spaces: Mapping Physical Change

Juliet Sprake; Helen Thomas


Archive | 2005

Accidental Tours and Illegal Tour Guides: Taking the Textbook out of the Tour

Juliet Sprake


The Journal of Design and Technology Education | 2002

Designers in Action: An evaluation of the impact of the Design Museum workshop series

Richard Kimbell; Kay Stables; Juliet Sprake


Archive | 2012

Located Lexicon: a project that explores how user generated content describes place

Juliet Sprake; Peter Rogers


Archive | 2016

Learning-though-Touring: A Methodology for Mobilising Learners

Juliet Sprake

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