How is digital culture affecting how people define culture?

Background

New digital development has changed a lot of aspects of delivery for AHT sectors and research to help better understand these impacts is still needed.

Next steps

Get in touch with csa@dcms.gov.uk

Source

This question was published as part of the set of ARIs in this document:

DCMS areas of research interest GOV UK

Related UKRI funded projects


  • Digital Economy Communities and Culture Network+

    Rapid advances in digital technologies have converged with research in business, social science and humanities to dissolve the boundaries between disciplines, institutions and practices. The Digital Economy Communities a...

    Funded by: EPSRC

    Lead research organisation: University of Leeds

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project directly addresses the impact of digital technologies on culture and community, and how these changes are shaping our understanding of these concepts.

  • Modeling Cultural Value within New Media Cultures of Networked Participation

    This collaborative and interdisciplinary research project between Tate, the Royal College of Art and London South Bank University is based upon the recognition that contemporary professional practice, policy-formation an...

    Funded by: AHRC

    Lead research organisation: Royal College of Art

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project focuses on the impact of digital technologies and network cultures on cultural value, but does not fully address how people define culture.

  • Studies in Computing to enable research and teaching on Electronic Literature and Digital Culture

    The aim of this project is to introduce the perspective of Computing into the study of Modern Languages and cultures and vice versa, in order to enhance both fields' understanding of the intertwining of technology, langu...

    Funded by: EPSRC

    Lead research organisation: Lancaster University

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project explores the intersection of technology, language, and culture, but does not directly address how digital culture is affecting the definition of culture.

  • The Role of Technology in Evaluating Cultural Value

    Methods of evaluating cultural impact still need substantial development to support robust, long-term empirical research on cultural value. Meanwhile, technological innovations have raised new possibilities for evaluatin...

    Funded by: AHRC

    Lead research organisation: University of Warwick

  • Platforming Families - tracing digital transformations in everyday life across generations (PlatFAMs)

    Digital platforms have penetrated deeply everyday life, affecting people's informal interactions, ways of living and understanding the world, and the institutional structures that underpin these. Despite growing research...

    Funded by: ESRC

    Lead research organisation: London School of Economics and Political Science

Similar ARIs from other organisations