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Many of the new
information and communication technologies, among these the World Wide Web,
were originally conceived and developed in the academic field. E-mail, web
portals, digital presentations, newsletters, discussion lists, digital
libraries and repositories, more recently weblogs and collaborative formats of
text production (‘Wikis’), are routinely used by scientists today.
‘New media’ affect all areas and phases of the process of knowledge
management – from the generation and primary distribution to the
processing, publication and storage of scientific knowledge. The collaborative research network Interactive Science combines perspectives from linguistics, media studies, information science, sociology, the history of science and drama studies in a multidisciplinary view on the relevant phenomena. It focuses on the interactive potential of information and communication technologies with respect to two aspects under investigation: the collaborative and the performative dimension of scholarly communication. Within the last few years, science studies emphasized the communication of scientific results to third parties (politics, economy etc.) or in teaching environments (e-learning). In the present research network, it is the communication among peers by means of new media that forms the centre of interest. As interactive media provide effective and still underestimated potentials for the generation and distribution of knowledge in intra-science communication as well as in communication between scientists and the science-oriented public, ‘Cyberscience’ (Nentwich 2003) establishes a key topic in the humanities. The working hypothesis of the research network is as follows: Interactive Science is able to convert technical potentials into social reorganisations in which the collaborative and performative aspects of scientific activity emerge more considerably by reinforcing each other. This hypothesis will be critically examined by means of three interconnected empirical studies on multi-media presentations, digitally mediated lectures and scientific controversies in Internet communities and a directly related project of more general scope, focussing on recent evolutional trends of 'Cyberscience', also investigating aspects of the history of science. The ITA contributes to sub-project I:
The Centre for Media and Interactivity (ZMI) of the Justus Liebig University Gießen is coordinating the project; further partners are teams around Prof. Kuhlen (University of Konstanz), Prof. Leggewie (University of Essen) und Prof. Bucher (University of Trier). Web site of the research network: www.wissenschaftskommunikation.info (in German only) |
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Microblogging Glossary (in German) ITA publications related to this project CONTACT: |