Mapping dh through heterogeneous communicative practices

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Mapping DH through Heterogeneous Communicative Practices Timothy Bowman; Bradford Demarest; Scott B. Weingart ; Grant Leyton Simpson; Vincent Lariviere; Mike Thelwall; Cassidy R. Sugimoto. http://did.ils.indiana.edu /dh/ DH2013, Thur July 18, 2013 @ 1:30 to 3pm

Transcript of Mapping dh through heterogeneous communicative practices

Page 1: Mapping dh through heterogeneous communicative practices

Mapping DH through Heterogeneous Communicative Practices

Timothy Bowman; Bradford Demarest; Scott B. Weingart; Grant LeytonSimpson; Vincent Lariviere; Mike Thelwall; Cassidy R. Sugimoto.

http://did.ils.indiana.edu/dh/

DH2013, Thur July 18, 2013 @ 1:30 to 3pm

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Digging Into Data: “Cascades, islands, or streams? Time, topic, and scholarly activities in humanities and social science research”

Our work will analyze the importance of various scholarly activities for creating,

sustaining, and propelling new knowledge;

Our work will have implications for policy makers, as they seek to identify

emergent areas of research.

Our work will provide an indicator of the importance of certain communication

channels for identifying emerging areas of knowledge.

Our work will be useful for scholars because researchers need to be good at

predicting trends in research and differentiating between topics and research

questions that are appropriate for grants, PhD students, and research projects.

Where possible, products will be made available online and we will seek to

incorporate the voice of the academic community at all points in our research.

http://did.ils.indiana.edu/dh/

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Our Goals

The goal of this project is to examine the informal and formal

communication channels used by the DH community to connect

members at the individual, group, and institutional levels.

As we’ve moved toward fulfilling this initial goal, we‘ve

considered the scholarly metrics from which DH members are

judged and the ways in which they earn academic capital.

When we think about scholarly metrics, and even alt-metrics, we

feel that the article is still prime. Based on our initial analyses of

the data and your responses to our survey, we are now

exploring the ramifications of the larger ecosystem of scholarly

production where knowledge doesn’t necessarily begin or end

with the article.

http://did.ils.indiana.edu/dh/

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Our Initial Dataset

For DH2013, our current data sources consist of:

• DHQ Journal : We obtained all of the articles as XML files and used XSLT to

harvest author information for each article

• LLC Journal : We obtained the LLC article information from ISI Web of

Science spanning from 2008 through present and used Sci2 Tool to parse

the data

• Humanist Listserv : We obtained the Humanist listserv data by downloading

Stéfan Sinclair’s pre-2008 XML data and by downloading a copy of the 2008-

present ArchTracker Archive from dhhumanist.org.

• TEI-L Listserv : We used the LISTSERV 16.0 commands to retrieve both the

messages and the subscriber list as emails.

• NEH Grants : We obtained the DH-related NEH grants from the IU Scholarly

Data Archives (SDA).

• Twitter : We’ve started with a list of Twitter handles from the

digitalhumanitiesnow.org compendium and we used NodeXL to parse the

data to see who the DH people follow and who follows them.

• DH Survey : We recently asked you to fill out a survey regarding your

information consumption and dissemination practices.

http://did.ils.indiana.edu/dh/

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We are continuing to gather data!

• We have identified 19 additional DH-related journals.

• We are continuing to expand our DH Twitter list.

• We are going to add additional DH funding sources.

• We are going to add additional DH-related listservs.

• We are gathering DH center information.

• We are gathering DH syllabi

• We hope to gather DH blog information.

We have created a normalized database with this

information and plan to make this information

available to everyone.

We are also creating a web application in which you

will be able to manage your own information within

this database.

http://did.ils.indiana.edu/dh/

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Where is DH?

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

New York University

Harvard University

Oxford

University of Maryland

University of Michigan

Brown University

King's College London

University of Nebraska, Lincoln

Indiana University

University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana

George Mason University

University of Virginia

Number of DH practitioners per institution

1,422 other or missing

http://did.ils.indiana.edu/dh/

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Where is TEI/Humanist?

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40

Alberta

Virginia

King's College London

U of Michigan

New York U

Stanford

U of Toronto

U of Victoria

Trinity College Dublin

University College London

Indiana

Top educational subscriptions to Humanist

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16

Virginia

BBAW

King's College London

U of Cologne

Yale

U of Georgia

Brown

Indiana

U of Tours

U of Michigan

U of Oslo

Top educational subscriptions to TEI

http://did.ils.indiana.edu/dh/

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What is DH research?

Keywords of #DH2013 submissions by volume

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Where is DH found and made?

Digital Humanities survey results

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How independent is DH?

Affiliated with a DH center or

group

Not affiliated with a DH center

or group

Digital Humanities survey results

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Who is central to DH?

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Who is cited in DH?