Schedule

We will be using Google Wave as a collaborative space for participants to discuss this year’s presentations.  To sign up for a free Google Wave account, please scroll to the bottom of the wave.google.com page and select to "request an invitation." It will take 24-48 hours for your account to be authorized. We encourage you to sign up no later than April 10, 2010, to ensure that your account is active in time to participate in the conference.


A complete list of all waves associated with the HASTAC 2010 conference is available here.  We would also like to invite participants to join us in the official HASTAC 2010 “Break Room” Wave to discuss the conference theme of Grand Challenges and Global Innovations with each other.  There is also a “feedback” wave, where you can leave your general comments about the conference.


HASTAC 2010 will also host events in Second Life. Second Life is a free 3D virtual world where users can socialize, connect and create using free voice and text chat. Visit www.secondlife.com to register for your free account and to begin building your avatar.


All events are prerecorded unless otherwise noted.

  1. Thursday, April 15

  2. Conference Welcome

  3. Nancy Abelmann

  4. a

  5. Micro Urban Champaign-Urbana

  6. Mike Ross

  7. a

  8. Beyond e-Science: Methodological Commons and Practical Applications for Advanced Computing in the Humanities

  9. Stuart Dunn

  10. a

  11. HASTAC Scholar Short: Processes and Participation

  12. Nick Lally

  13. a

  14. The Future of Thinking: Learning Institutions in a Digital Age

  15. Cathy Davidson and David Theo Goldberg

  16. a

  17. Four Social Mirrors

  18. Karrie Karahalios

  19. a

  20. TEEVE: Tele-immersive Environment for EVErybody

  21. Klara Nahrstedt

  22. a

  23. Now What? Rethinking the Digital Media Participation Gap

  24. S. Craig Watkins

  25. a

  26. Live Presentation:  Tactics for Faculty/Student Arts and Technology Research in the 21st Century from StudioBlue

  27. Damon L. Baker, Adrianne Wortzel, Mark Skwarek, and Michael Mandiberg

  28. a

  29. HASTAC Scholar Short: The Raised Fist: A Cyborgian Tale?

  30. Margaret Rhee

  31. a

  32. Crossing the Unexpected: Benefits and Challenges of Scholarly Collaboration in a Humanities Labs

  33. Smiljana Antonijevic and Anne Beaulieu

  34. a

  35. Should the Pedagogy Match the Technology: Interactivity and Critical Pedagogy

  36. Allison Carruth, Carol Stabile, Annie Zeidman-Karpinski, and David Baker

  37. a

  38. Avoiding a Cultural Bottleneck: Networked, Distributed, and Agile Collaborations

  39. Craig Dietrich, Nicole Starosielski, Vanessa Vobis, John Bell, and Jon Ippolito

  40. a

  41. Live Presentation:  Earth, Maps, and the Cloud: Google Technologies for Collaborative Mapping

  42. Mano Marks

  43. a

  44. The Break Room: Grand Challenges and Global Innovations

  45. HASTAC 2010 Participants

  46. a

  47. a

  48. Friday, April 16

  49. Social, Ethical, Transformative: SMARTlab as a Collaborative Think Tank for Social Change

  50. Lizbeth Goodman

  51. a

  52. Art and Technology Reconfigurations

  53. Asunción López-Varela Azcárate

  54. a

  55. Live Presentation: Digital Pedagogy and Literacies for the Near Future

  56. Virginia Kuhn and Holly Willis

  57. a

  58. Live Presentation: Tools for the Asking

  59. Anne Balsamo

  60. a

  61. Live Presentation: Interactive Experience and World Design: Ikea as ARG

  62. Steve Anderson

  63. a

  64. Live Presentation: Design Literacies for Human Health-Centered Behavior

  65. Marientina Gostis

  66. a

  67. A Technical Framework for Publishing Electronic Editions

  68. Doug Reside

  69. a

  70. Creativity and Innovation and the American University: the role of HASTAC

  71. John M. Eger

  72. a

  73. Prizes for Progress: How Crowdsourced Competitions Incentivize Innovation

  74. Erika B. Wagner

  75. a

  76. Live Presentation: Mobile Voices’ Storytelling Tools for Social Change: A Virtual Tour & Discussion

  77. Members of Mobile Voices

  78. a

  79. Flicker and Hum: Creative Collaborations in Digital Sound and Film Production and Performance: Tuning in to Gravity Radio

  80. Mikel Rouse and Jeff Carpenter

  81. a

  82. Redefining the Object of Cinema: Or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Media Obsolescence

  83. Bill Morrison

  84. a

  85. Lowering the Barriers to Communication

  86. Pamela Fox

  87. a

  88. Answering Authorship Related Questions from Images

  89. Peter Bajcsy

  90. a

  91. Demystifying Cloud Computing Panel

  92. Steve Campbell and Tom Tabor

  93. a

  94. Imaging to Editing: Advances in the Digitization of Ancient Texts; EDUCE - Imaging Herculaneum

  95. Ryan Baumann

  96. a

  97. The Break Room: Grand Challenges and Global Innovations

  98. HASTAC 2010 Participants

  99. a

  100. a

  101. Saturday, April 17

  102. GroupScope: Instrumenting Research on Interaction Networks in Complex Social Contexts

  103. M. Scott Poole

  104. a

  105. Global Publics and the Internet

  106. Thérèse Tierney

  107. a

  108. Community, Collaboration, and Innovation

  109. Radha Nandkumar, Peter Levesque, Bob Ketner, and Maureen Clemmons

  110. a

  111. Need to Convert a File? Ask a File Format Polyglot

  112. Kenton McHenry

  113. a

  114. Re-Composing Digital Literature: Can You Find Electronic Writing on the Disciplinary Map?

  115. Mauro Carassai

  116. a

  117. Second Life: Collaborative Curriculum Work

  118. National University Community Research Institute, AmeriCorps/CIERRA High School, CIBRED College at the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute, the Tech Virtual Museum of Innovation, and the Industry Initiative for Science and Math

  119. a

  120. Second Life: Dance and Performance in the Metaverse

  121. Ana Boa-Ventura, Jennifer Monson, Yacov Sharir, and Isabel Valverde

  122. a

  123. Second Life: Student Produced Documentary Videos on the Web

  124. Jeremy Sarachan

  125. a

  126. HASTAC Scholar Short: The Future of Computers in the Classroom

  127. Sam Oehlert

  128. a

  129. HASTAC Scholar Short: Dialogic Identities: Authoring Self Across New Media Spaces

  130. Amber Buck

  131. a

  132. Guiding the Ethnography of the University Initiative: A Meditation on the Global Implications of Our Local Conversations Across Time

  133. Jason C. Romero

  134. a

  135. Technologies of Memory in the New South Africa: The Soweto ’76 Archive

  136. Angel David Nieves

  137. a

  138. Medici Content Repository System

  139. National Center for Supercomputing Applications’ Cyberenvironments and Technologies Group

  140. a

  141. Using Facebook and Web 2.0 Tools to Transform Research Methods

  142. Vivian Price

  143. a

  144. SEASR Applications: Highlighting Groups and Projects using SEASR

  145. Loretta Auvil

  146. a

  147. Making Sense of Learning Digitally: Youth Engagement and New Media in North America

  148. Ching-Chiu Lin, Betram "Chip" Bruce, Juan Carlos Castro, Kit Grauer, Anita Sinner,  Leanne Levy, and Sandra Weber

  149. a

  150. Future Social Science On and With Digital Media

  151. Christian Sandvig, Bodó Balázs, Alison Powell, David Phillips, Richard A. Rogers

  152. a

  153. Guy Garnett, the Cultural Computing Research Group, and the Music and Art Digital Studio at LSU

  154. a

  155. Closing Remarks

  156. Kevin Franklin


version 6.1; last updated April 15, 2010 @ 4:13 pm

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