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*Scottish Network on Digital Cultural Resources Evaluation*



*CALL FOR PAPERS*

*International Symposium on Evaluating Digital Cultural Resources (EDCR
2016)*



*Glasgow, Kelvin Hall, 12-13 December 2016*



*Scope and Context*

Digital technologies are affecting all aspects of our lives, reshaping the
way we communicate, learn, and approach the world around us. In the case of
cultural institutions, digital applications are used in all key areas of
operation, from documenting, interpreting and exhibiting the collections to
communicating with diverse audience groups. The communication of
collections information in digital form, whether an online catalogue,
mobile application, museum interactive or social media exchange,
increasingly affects our cultural encounters and shapes our perception of
cultural organisations. Although cultural and higher education institutions
around the world are heavily investing on digitisation and working to make
their collections available online, we still know very little about who
uses digital collections, how they interact with the associated data, and
what the impacts of these digital resources are.

*Organisers*

The symposium is organized by the Scottish Network on Digital Cultural
Resources Evaluation <https://scotdigich.wordpress.com/about/>
(ScotDigiCH), which is funded by The Royal Society of Edinburgh. ScotDigiCH
is co-ordinated by the Humanities Advanced Technology and Information
Institute (HATII
<http://www.gla.ac.uk/schools/humanities/research/hatiiresearch/>), at the
University of Glasgow in collaboration with The Hunterian
<http://www.gla.ac.uk/hunterian/> at the University of Glasgow, Glasgow
Life Museums <http://www.glasgowlife.org.uk/museums/>, the Moving Image
Archive of the National Library of Scotland <http://movingimage.nls.uk/>
and the Department of Computer and Information Science
<http://www.strath.ac.uk/science/computerinformationsciences/> at the
University of Strathclyde.

*Aims and Questions*

The symposium seeks to address this gap by bringing together interested
parties from a range of disciplines (e.g. computing science, digital
humanities, museology, social sciences), practices and sectors to set an
agenda for research and discuss the latest developments on evaluating the
use of cultural digital resources. The symposium will address:







-       Who uses digital cultural resources, where and how

-       Diverse users’ needs and expectations (i.e. from schoolchildren and
families to students and researchers)

-       Impact and value of digital cultural resources

-       Ways of recording and assessing impact and value

-       Implications for policy and future strategies



The programme will include a public lecture on the afternoon of the 12th
December by Dr Mark O’Neill, Director for Policy and Research at Glasgow
Life.

The symposium will also include an open evening dedicated to exploring the
digital collections at the new state-of-the-art collections research
facilities at Kelvin Hall
<http://www.gla.ac.uk/hunterian/about/thehunterianatkelvinhall/>, one of
Glasgow’s iconic landmarks (pictured above).

*Important Dates*

  *   Submission deadline: Friday, *7 October 2016*

  *   Notification of acceptance: Monday, 31 October 2016

  *   Symposium dates: Monday and Tuesday, 12 and 13 December 2016, Kelvin
Hall, Glasgow



*Themes*

The symposium will appeal to academics and practitioners working in a range
of disciplines: cultural heritage workers, arts professionals and scholars
interested in issues relating to digital resources and their impact upon
preservation, education, engagement and outreach. We invite presentations
and discussions of both theoretical and practical approaches, efforts and
trends in this emergent field.

Proposals are invited for 20-minute papers that engage with the main themes
of the symposium (see also Aims and Questions above):

·         Models of access to digital collections

·         Crowdsourcing, co-creation, co-curation in digital cultural
heritage

·         Evaluating impact and use of digital cultural resources
(methodologies, approaches and issues)

·         Moving from impact to value when assessing digital resources

Proposals might cover the following topics:

·         Curation of digital collections

·         Working with communities in digital cultural heritage

·         Participatory models of work

·         Methods of evaluating digital resources

·         User studies

·         Metrics, webmetrics, infometrics and usage statistics

·         Crowdsourcing and citizen science in cultural heritage

·         Assessing impact and value

·         Social media usage research

Presentations will be 20 minutes in length, followed by time for questions
and discussion.

A selection of accepted papers will be published as a special issue of a
peer reviewed journal.



*How to Submit a Proposal*

Proposals should consist of an extended abstract (approximately *500 to 700*
*words* excluding references) that explains how the paper relates to the
key themes of the symposium. Furthermore, each abstract should outline the
aims, research questions, methods, main findings and underlying work of the
proposed paper.

Please use the document template available at the symposium web site
https://scotdigich.wordpress.com/events/symposium/call-for-papers/ and
follow the instructions for submitting your proposal by *Friday, October 7,
2016*.



*Registration*

Registration to the symposium will be free of charge but participants will
need to register through Eventbrite
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/international-symposium-on-evaluating-digital-cultural-resources-tickets-27405433389>.
Please register separately for the public lecture and open evening.



*Travel Bursaries for Early Career Researchers/Professionals and Students*

A limited number of travel bursaries are available to postgraduate students
and early-career researchers to facilitate their participation at the
workshop. For more information please contact [log in to unmask]



*Conference Website*

https://scotdigich.wordpress.com/events/symposium/



Please pass this on to anyone who might be interested in these topics.



We hope to see you in Glasgow soon!



With best regards,



From the EDCR2016 symposium organising committee

Dr Maria Economou

Joint Curator / Lecturer

HATII & The Hunterian, University of Glasgow

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-- 
Scottish Network on Digital Cultural Resources Evaluation
Humanities Advanced Technology Information Institute (HATII)
University of Glasgow

https://scotdigich.wordpress.com
http://www.gla/ac/uk/school/humanities/research/hatiiresearch/projects/
currentresearchprojects
@ScotDigiCH




-- 
Scottish Network on Digital Cultural Resources Evaluation
Humanities Advanced Technology Information Institute (HATII)
University of Glasgow

https://scotdigich.wordpress.com
http://www.gla/ac/uk/school/humanities/research/hatiiresearch/projects/currentresearchprojects
@ScotDigiCH