Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Trevor Owens is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Trevor Owens.


on The Horizon | 2011

Social videogame creation: lessons from RPG Maker

Trevor Owens

Purpose – Online community sites devoted to RPG Maker, an inexpensive software for creating role‐playing video games, have emerged as spaces where young people are developing valuable competencies with digital media. This study seeks to examine the largest of these communities.Design/methodology/approach – The study uses a mix of qualitative methods including a survey, interviews and analysis of the structure of the site. The study uses discourse analysis and is grounded in work on situated learning.Findings – The study suggests that the site and community are scaffolding young people into deeper understanding of digital production and the development of practical skills, like programming, as individuals take on identities associated with different roles in game design.Research limitations/implications – This study reinforces the value of research focused on young peoples social media creation and also suggests that there is still much to be learned about technologically simple but socially rich platform...


acm ieee joint conference on digital libraries | 2018

Can Research Librarians make Contributions to Decision-making as Intelligence Analysts?: The Prospects and Challenges

Wei Chen; Jiangping Chen; Christopher Erdmann; Trevor Owens; Tao Jin; Mark Edward Phillips

This panel discusses the prospects and challenges of providing intelligence analysis services in U.S. research libraries to support decision-making at various levels.


acm ieee joint conference on digital libraries | 2018

We Have Interesting Problems: Some Applied Grand Challenges from Digital Libraries, Archives and Museums

Trevor Owens

Libraries, Archives and Museums now have massive digital holdings. There is tremendous potential for library and information science, computer science and computer engineering researchers to partner with cultural heritage institutions and make our digital cultural record more useful and usable. In particular, there is a significant need to bridge basic research in areas such as computer vision, crowdsourcing, natural language processing, multilingual OCR, and machine learning to make this work directly usable in the practices of cultural heritage institutions. In this talk, I discuss a series of exemplar projects, largely funded through the Institute of Museum and Library Services National Digital Platform initiative, that illustrate some key principles for building applied research partnerships with cultural heritage institutions. Building on Ben Schnidermans The New ABCs of Research: Achieving Breakthrough Collaborations, I focus specifically on why the public purpose and missions of cultural heritage institutions are particularly valuable in establishing new kinds of collaborations that can simultaneously advance basic research and the ability for people of the world to engage with their cultural record.


The Information Society | 2011

A Review of “Online Interviewing”

Trevor Owens

Online Interviewing fills a critical gap in research methods literature. Researchers are increasingly conducting qualitative research through online communications. Although there is an ongoing dialog focused on adapting ethnographic methods to online environments (Hine 2000; Kozinets 2009), there remains little work that focuses more broadly on adapting methods for conducting interviews online. Much of the work that has engaged with broader discussions of online qualitative research methods has been confined to methodology journals. Online Interviewing codifies those ongoing discussions into a single volume. The book is grounded in the authors’ practical needs and considerations in their own adaptations of interviewbased research methods for online environments. Largely due to the geographic distance between Nalita James and her research participants, she conducted her 1998 doctoral research on academics’ workplace learning and communities of practice through e-mail interviews. The book addresses the practical concerns that arose through developing and designing that project. In the initial chapters, James and her coauthor, Hugh Busher, articulate an argument about the epistemological issues involved in conducting qualitative research online. Researchers will find the first chapter to provide an excellent overview of some of the existing work on conducting qualitative research online. In accord with much qualitative methodological work, the authors focus on largely constructivist stances, including phenomenology hermeneutics and symbolic interactionism. In relying on Crotty (1998) for this orientation, James and Busher do not discuss equally valid epistemic foundations for qualitative research, like critical realism (Bhaskar, Archer, Collier, Lawson, & Norrie 1998; Sayer 2000; Fairclough 2003) and pragmatism (Sayer 2000; Putnam 1995). Although the book stands as a critical introduction to methodological discussions about interviewing online, the epistemology section would have been stronger if it directly engaged with the potential for these epistemological stances as well. The first chapter concludes with an excellent table comparing and contrasting online and face-to-face interviews in relation to eight factors for consideration in research design. This includes cost, access, temporal dimension, nature and speed of response, time venue and participation, quality of data, and identity and confidentiality. This chart alone warrants the price of the volume. It distills an important set of considerations for thinking through the practical value and validity of conducting a study through face-to-face or online interviews. The book is at its strongest when it is working through practical considerations for conducting research. Each chapter ends with a series of practical tips for online researchers and a series of suggestions for further reading. For example, the chapter on engaging with participants online considers the value of synchronous and asynchronous methods of conducting interviews online. James and Busher do an excellent job of situating the practical differences between these modes of communication in existing literature and offer a cogent argument for the strengths of each for different goals. In this case, the asynchronous e-mail interviews can generate longer form, rich reflective discourse, while synchronous modes of communication offer performative, dynamic interactions that can be examined more explicitly through methods for examining oral face-to-face interviews. Depending on the practical needs and goals of a given research project, each


association for information science and technology | 2012

From records to data with viewshare: An argument, an interface, a design

Jefferson Bailey; Trevor Owens


D-lib Magazine | 2012

Viewshare and the Kress Collection: Creating, Sharing, and Rapidly Prototyping Visual Interfaces to Cultural Heritage Collection Data

Lauren Algee; Jefferson Bailey; Trevor Owens


Cultural Studies of Science Education | 2012

Teaching intelligent design or sparking interest in science? What players do with Will Wright’s Spore

Trevor Owens


D-lib Magazine | 2017

Trends in Digital Preservation Capacity and Practice: Results from the 2nd Bi-annual National Digital Stewardship Alliance Storage Survey

Michelle Gallinger; Jefferson Bailey; Karen Cariani; Trevor Owens; Micah Altman


Archive | 2018

Digital Infrastructures thatEmbody Library Principles:The IMLS National Digital Platform as aFramework for Digital Library Tools and Services

Trevor Owens; Ashley E. Sands; Emily Reynolds; James Neal; Stephen Mayeaux; Maura Marx


D-lib Magazine | 2017

Libraries Advancing the National Digital Platform

Trevor Owens; Ashley E. Sands; Emily Reynolds; James Neal; Stephen Mayeaux

Collaboration


Dive into the Trevor Owens's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Micah Altman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christopher Erdmann

North Carolina State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jiangping Chen

University of North Texas

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tao Jin

Louisiana State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wei Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge