Social classification and folksonomy in art museums : early data from the steve.museum tagger prototype

Trant, Jennifer (2006). Social classification and folksonomy in art museums : early data from the steve.museum tagger prototype [Article]. Texte d'une communication donnée lors du 17e atelier du SIG/CR Classification Research Workshop, un événement présenté dans le cadre de la rencontre annuelle de l'American Society for Information Science and Technology (Asis&t'06 - Information Realities: Shaping the Digital Future for All, Austin, Texas, 3-8 nov. 2006). 30 p. (Non publié) Veille thématique de ADAC

Fichiers joints à ce document :

DOC (MS Word)
36 Kb

Adresse URL: http://www.slais.ubc.ca/users/sigcr/sigcr-06trant.pdf

Résumé

"The collections of art museums have been assembled over hundreds of years and described, organized and classified according to traditions of art historical research and discourse. Art museums, in their role as curators and interpreters of the cultural record, have developed standards for the description of works of art (such as the Categories for the Description of Works of Art, CDWA) that emphasize the physical nature of art as artefact, the authorial role of the creator, the temporal and cultural context of creation and ownership, and the scholarly significance of the work over time. Collections managers have recorded conservation, exhibition, loan and publication history, along with significant volumes of internal documentation of acquisition and storage, that support the custody and care of artefacts of significant cultural value. But the systems of documentation and classification that support the professional discourse of art history and the management of museum collections have failed to represent the interests, perspectives or passions of those who visit [use?] museum collections, both on-site and online. As museums move to reflect the breadth of their audiences and the diversity of their perspectives, so must museum documentation change to reflect concerns other than the traditionally art historical and museological. Social tagging offers a direct way for museums to learn what museum-goers see in works of art, what they judge as significant and where they find or make meaning. Within the steve collaboration(http://www.steve.museum), a group of art museums is collectively exploring the role of social tagging and studying the resulting folksonomy (Bearman & Trant, 2005; Chun, Cherry, Hiwiller, Trant, & Wyman, 2006; Trant & Wyman, 2006). Analysis of terms collected in the prototype steve tagger suggests that social tagging of art museum objects can in fact augment museum documentation with unique access points not found in traditional cataloguing. Terms collected through social tagging tools are being compared to museum documentation, to establish the actual contributions made by naïve users to the accessibility of art museum collections and to see if social classification provides a way to bridge the semantic gap between art historians and art museums’ publics."

Type de document :Signalement d'un document à la veille thématique de ADAC (Document issu d'une conférence)
Domaines :Sciences de l'information et de la communication
Muséologie, médiation culturelle et patrimoine
Informations complémentaires :Affiliations de l'auteure : Archives and Museum Informatics / Faculty of Information Studies, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada. Thèse de doctorat en cours. Sujet : Exploring the role of social tagging and folksonomy as means to encourage engagement with art museums. [MP2007/04/05]
Mots-clés :art museums, social tagging, folksonomy, collaborative research project, steve.museum, visitor experience, user experience, musées d'art, étiquetage social, folksonomie, projet de recherche collaboratif, expérience du visiteur, expérience de l'usager
Code ID :19
Déposé par :Martine Perreault
Affiliation :Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal
Déposé le :11 avril 2007

Administrateur de l'archive uniquement : éditer cette archive