A New Approach to Reporting Archaeological Surveys: Connecting Rough Cilicia, Visible Past and Open Context through loose coupling and 3d codes
The project presents the strategy adopted by the Rough Cilicia Archaeological Survey team for publishing its primary data and reports via three potentially transformative strategies for digital humanities: Loose coupling of digital data curation and publishing platforms. In loosely coupled systems,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of data mining and digital humanities 2014-06, Vol.2014 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
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Zusammenfassung: | The project presents the strategy adopted by the Rough Cilicia Archaeological
Survey team for publishing its primary data and reports via three potentially
transformative strategies for digital humanities: Loose coupling of digital
data curation and publishing platforms. In loosely coupled systems, components
share only a limited set of simple assumptions, which enables systems to evolve
dynamically. Collaborative creation of map based narrative content. Connecting
print scholarship (book, reports, article) to online resources via
two-dimensional barcodes (2D codes) that can be printed on paper and can call
up hyperlinks when scanned with a Smartphone. The three strategies are made
possible by loosely coupling two autonomous services: Visible Past, dedicated
to web collaboration and digital-print publishing and Open Context, which is a
geo-historical data archiving and publishing service. The Rough Cilicia
Archaeological Survey, Visible Past, and Open Context work together to
illustrate a new genre of scholarship, which combine qualitative narratives and
quantitative representations of space and social phenomena. The project
provides tools for collaborative creation of rich scholarly narratives that are
spatially located and for connecting print publications to the digital realm.
The project is a case study for utilizing the three new strategies for creating
and publishing spatial humanities scholarship more broadly for ancient
historians. |
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ISSN: | 2416-5999 2416-5999 |
DOI: | 10.46298/jdmdh.9 |