|
|
 |
Home > People > Ph.D. Students > Profile
People: Ph.D. Student Profile
Archer L. Batcheller
archerb@umich.edu
Online:
Background: BSE in Electrical Engineering, Princeton University, 2005
Advisor(s):
Research Tags:
- cyberinfrastructure
- citizen science
- software engineering
Bio/Research Statement: I am interested in cyberinfrastructure as used by science communities, and particularly how it helps and hinders the engagement of lay people in science activities. I am also interested in software engineering practices among teams building cyberinfrastructure.
Current Research: The Monitoring, Modeling, and Memory project compares the development and use of cyberinfrastructure among several different communities of professional scientists. The Distributing Citizen Science projects looks at how "citizen scientists" use computing tools to do scientific work.
Recent Publications:
- 2008: Steven J. Jackson, Archer L. Batcheller, Paul N. Edwards, Geoffrey C. Bowker, Steve Cisler, and Susan Leigh Star. ?Extending African Knowledge Infrastructures: Sharing, Creating, Maintaining.? Report for the World Bank. March 2008.
- 2007: Batcheller, A.L., Hilligoss, B., Nam, K., Rader, E., Rey-Babarro, M., Zhou, X. "Testing the Technology: Having Fun with Video Conferencing." Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing. ACM Press. 2007.
- 2007: Clarkson, G., Batcheller, A., Jacobsen, T. "Information Asymmetry and Information Sharing."
Government Information Quarterly. Elsevier Inc. 2007.
Profile last updated Aug 12, 2009.
Home > People > Ph.D. Students > Profile
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |

Cal Lee (MSI '99, Ph.D. '05) is now an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina. At SI he distinguished himself with his research in the archives and records management field. In 2002, Lee was the first winner of the Paul Evan Peters Fellowship for graduate study in the information sciences or librarianship. The award is sponsored by the Coalition for Networked Information and "recognizes not only outstanding scholarship and intellectual rigor, but also civic responsibility, democratic values, and imagination, honoring the memory of CNI founding executive director Paul Evan Peters."
|
 |
|
|