‘Building Scholarly Resources for Wider Public Engagement‘ was a full day workshop that took place at the Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, Oxford University, Oxford, on Friday 13 June 2014.
It was organised by DHCrowdscribe, the online hub for the output of the AHRC-funded Collaborative Skills Project ‘Promoting Interdisciplinary Engagement in the Digital Humanities’.
Speakers were:
- Matt Vitins and Anna Crowe ( Legal and Ethical Issues in the Digital Humanities)
- Dr Stuart Dunn (Crowdsourcing)
- Dr Robert Simpson (Zooniverse)
- Dr Ernesto Priego and Dr James Baker (Sharing Data from a Researcher’s Perspective)
- Michael Popham, Dr Ylva Berglund Prytz (Digitising the Humanities and Engaging with the Public)
- Judith Siefring (Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership)
- David Tomkins (Bodleian Digital Library)
- Dr Robert Mcnamee (Electronic Enlightenment Project)
- Dr Stewart Brookes (‘Getting Medieval, Getting Palaeography: The DigiPal Database of Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts)
- Dr Michael Athanson (ArcGIS and Mapping the Humanities)
- Professor David de Roure (Scholarly Social Machines), and
- Professor Howard Hotson.
The hashtag for the event was #DHCOxf.
I have uploaded an XLS file to figshare which contains Tweets tagged with #DHCOxf (case not sensitive).
The archive contains 692 Tweets dated 13 June 2014 (the day the event took place). There were definitely more Tweets tagged #DHCOxf, but this was the closest I got to compiling a more or less complete set dated 13 June 2014.
I collected the Tweets contained in the archive using Martin Hawksey’s TAGS 5.1. The file contains two sheets:
Sheet 0. The ‘Cite Me’ sheet, including procedence of the file, citation information, information about its contents, the methods employed and some context.
Sheet 1. The Archive containing 692 Tweets dated 13 June 2014.
http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.1057904
If you use or refer to this data in any way please cite and link back using the citation information above.
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