User:Jpe4

From Digital Humanities Wiki

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Digital interests)
Line 19: Line 19:
== Digital interests ==
== Digital interests ==
-
I'm interested in the cognitive issues affecting the formulation of non-textual information retrieval requests. I'm also interested in the role of librarians and digital libraries at the intersection of curated digital libraries, non-curated (personal) collections, and bibliographic media ... particularly how shifts in the way the academe uses computers for teaching and research is blurring the boundaries between brick-and-mortar libraries, digital library collections, institutional repositories, archives, users' personal electronic media, and the internet (e.g.., google, flickr, facebook, blogosphere).
+
I'm interested in the cognitive issues affecting the formulation of non-textual information retrieval requests. I'm also interested in the role of librarians and digital libraries at the intersection of curated digital libraries, non-curated (personal) collections, and bibliographic media particularly, how shifts in the way the academe uses computers for teaching and research is blurring the boundaries between brick-and-mortar libraries, digital library collections, institutional repositories, archives, users' personal electronic media, and the internet (e.g.., google, flickr, facebook, blogosphere).

Revision as of 19:02, 1 December 2008

Joe Easterly
Coordinator, Media Resource Center
YOUR NAME

Joe
Research interests: digital and metadata librarianship
Institutional affiliation: University at Buffalo
Departmental affiliation: Visual Studies
Office location: 508 Clemens Hall
E-mail: jpe4@buffalo.edu
URI: Media Resource Center
Membership status: Charter member
Digital projects: Digitization of MRC Holdings

Joe Easterly

Background

B.A. (2005), M.L.S. (2007), SUNY at Buffalo. Major fields of training / interest include Music Theory / History, Linguistics, Library Science, and Computing.

Digital interests

I'm interested in the cognitive issues affecting the formulation of non-textual information retrieval requests. I'm also interested in the role of librarians and digital libraries at the intersection of curated digital libraries, non-curated (personal) collections, and bibliographic media — particularly, how shifts in the way the academe uses computers for teaching and research is blurring the boundaries between brick-and-mortar libraries, digital library collections, institutional repositories, archives, users' personal electronic media, and the internet (e.g.., google, flickr, facebook, blogosphere).

Donate to DHIB