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Patricia Lampron

Bio: Patricia Lampron is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Digital content & Special collections. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 6 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper examines the ways in which scholars engage with the special collections contained within Emblematica Online through analysis of interviews and proposes that the diverse and complex uses of digital special collections require libraries and archives to consider expanding the capabilities of their digital content and platforms.
Abstract: Researchers increasingly engage with the digital archives built by libraries, archives, and museums, but many institutions still seek to learn more about researchers' needs and practices with these digital collections. This paper presents a user assessment study for Emblematica Online , a research digital library that provides digitized versions of emblem books from leading rare book collections. This paper examines the ways in which scholars engage with the special collections contained within Emblematica Online through analysis of interviews. The authors propose that the diverse and complex uses of digital special collections require libraries and archives to consider expanding the capabilities of their digital content and platforms.

7 citations


Cited by
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01 May 2018
TL;DR: A content analysis of the consistency of information available on university archives and special collections websites of the institutions in the University of North Carolina system and interviews with archivists at these universities found a prioritized information model was developed.
Abstract: This study describes a content analysis of the consistency of information available on university archives and special collections websites of the institutions in the University of North Carolina system. Additionally, interviews were conducted with archivists at these universities to understand obstacles they face when posting content online. From the results a prioritized information model for university archives and special collections websites was developed.

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a cross-disciplinary user study focusing on how 89 researchers use digital search technologies in their daily work practices to discover and explore (crossmedia, digital) audio-visual archival sources, especially when studying mediated and historical events.
Abstract: This article offers a first exploratory critique of digital tools' socio-technical affordances in terms of support for narrative creation by media researchers. More specifically, we reflect on narrative creation processes of research, writing and story composition by Media Studies and Humanities scholars, as well as media professionals, working with crossmedia and audio-visual sources, and the pivotal ways in which digital tools inform these processes of search and storytelling. Our study proposes to add to the existing body of user-centred Digital Humanities research by presenting the insights of a cross-disciplinary user study. This involves, broadly speaking, researchers studying audio-visual materials in a co-creative design process, set to fine-tune and further develop a digital tool (technically based on linked open data) that supports audio-visual research through exploratory search. This article focuses on how 89 researchers – in both academic and professional research settings – use digital search technologies in their daily work practices to discover and explore (crossmedia, digital) audio-visual archival sources, especially when studying mediated and historical events. We focus on three user types, (1) Media Studies researchers; (2) Humanities researchers that use digitized audio-visual materials as a source for research, and (3) media professionals who need to retrieve materials for audio-visual text productions, including journalists, television/image researchers, documentalists, documentary filmmakers, digital storytellers, and media innovation experts. Our study primarily provides insights into the search, retrieval and narrative creation practices of these user groups. A user study such as this which combines different qualitative methods (focus groups with co-creative design sessions, research diaries, questionnaires), first, affords fine-grained insights. Second, it demonstrates the relevance of closely considering practices and mechanisms conditioning narrative creation, including self-reflexive approaches. Third and finally, it informs conclusions about the role of digital tools in meaning-creation processes when working with audio-visual sources, and where interaction is pivotal.

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Jon Coburn1
TL;DR: It is determined that historians and library professionals demonstrate abundant and nuanced awareness of issues relating to ‘digital selectivity’, and it is argued that standardized metadata practices must come first.
Abstract: Existing research offers fearful conclusions on the use of online archival collections, finding that historians ignore and overlook the limitations of digital sources. However, an attitudinal case ...

3 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A literature review of articles published between 2009 and 2019 concluded that there was little information on sharing analytics data and further assessment of contributor needs and attitudes about analytics is warranted.
Abstract: With an abundance of digital library projects of all types and sizes, a common practice is for larger institutions to host digital collections for smaller ones. Many institutions use analytics data...

2 citations