
Duncan Dickinson: Creating an eResearch Desktop for the Humanities
AuthorsDuncan Dickinson and Peter Sefton (University of Southern Queensland) AbstractThe Australian Digital Futures Institute (ADFI) at the University of Southern Queensland (USQ) has been working with USQ’s Public Memory Research Centre (PMRC) to discover how public memory research can be assisted through desktop eResearch software that assists the researcher in connecting the components within their “Knowledge Network” of files, online resources, metadata, research notes and publications. This partnership seeks to provide solutions for a range of questions encountered within the digital humanities and the broader eResearch effort: (a) How to manage large amounts of information, including the very fundamental “Is it backed-up” (b) How to coordinate tools used on the data; (c) How to leverage concepts such as Linked Data without obstructing the researcher with technical intricacies; and (d) How to move these research artifacts to the data commons. The key to all of this is to treat everything as a web-resource from the moment it is created by developing a system that gives researchers a web-view of their own desktop or lab environment. About the speaker
Duncan’s current projects focus on developing The Fascinator (http://fascinator.usq.edu.au) into an eResearch platform, especially for social science and education research.
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Duncan is the eResearch Project Manager for the Australian Digital Futures Institute at the University of Southern Queensland. He has been a software developer and project manager in a range of organisations. Duncan also has several years’ experience as a high-school teacher with Education Queensland. His interest areas are problem-solving and metacognition.