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Dear STHC Roundtable Members,
Get involved and make new connections at this year’s Science, Technology, and Healthcare (STHC) Roundtable meeting at the SAA Annual Meeting at the Cleveland Convention Center.
As your calendar fills up with tours of Cleveland’s many wonderful museums, libraries, and archives, be sure to leave room on Friday afternoon to attend the STHC roundtable meeting! The STHC Roundtable will meet on Friday, August 21st, from 4:30 to 6:00 (check the final on-site program for the location).
We will begin the meeting with a program session and an update on the Medical Heritage Library. The session will conclude with the business meeting. Please view the agenda here.
Our chief concern is to ensure that the STHC Roundtable reflects the interests of its participants. We welcome all suggestions relating to the above topics or concerning any other issues members might like to see addressed at our meetings. Please do not hesitate to get in touch with either of us:
Dawne Howard Lucas
University of North Carolina, at Chapel Hill
Nora Murphy
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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This presentation will focus on innovative approaches to documenting and archiving existing and emerging scientific technologies through video oral histories available on the World Wide Web. In 2014, the multidisciplinary Genetic Engineering and Society Center (GES) established "The History Project." This initiative was conceived to engage and challenge scientists, historians, public policy experts and archivists to actively collaborate, archive and preserve the history of agricultural genetic engineering and biotechnology in a "real time" environment using digital video interviews. The interviews are conducted with leading pioneers, practitioners and those with alternative opinions concerning the impact of agricultural biotechnology on society. "The History Project" builds on a similar video project: the NCSU Libraries' "Computer Simulation Archive" which was established in 2003 with the support of pioneers in the field and associated professional institutes and conferences.
Glynn Edwards (Stanford University): Augmented Exploration of Library Videogame Holdings by Techniques from Computational Linguistics
Large collections often present a challenge for researchers and patrons wishing to locate disparate items that are related in ways not revealed through standard archival discovery methods, or that are too nuanced for any single archivist to consider. For physical software collections this is even more difficult, due to the need to execute software to understand its use and visual appearance. In a joint collaboration between Stanford University Library’s Department of Special Collections and UC Santa Cruz’s Center for Games and Playable Media, we present GameNet, a tool for exploring the implicit relationships between computer and video game software items in Stanford’s Cabrinety Collection on the History of Microcomputing.
Work on this project is being done by the following people at UC Santa Cruz:
Eric Kaltman, PhD Candidate in Computer Science
James Ryan, PhD Student in Computer Science
Timothy Hong, undergraduate student in Computer Science
Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Associate Professor of Computational Media
Dawne Lucas (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill): Using Medical Instruments in Material Culture
For the past two semesters, an English composition class has used medical instruments from UNC’s Health Sciences Library to complete a material culture blog post assignment. Each student selected one instrument from the Health Sciences Library’s collection, and then did research about the instrument to provide historical context. Outstanding papers were eligible to be posted on the library’s website. A close working relationship between the Special Collections Librarian and the English instructor has allowed this assignment to evolve in order to enhance the undergraduate student experience on the health affairs side of campus.