Knowledge Machines: Digital Transformations of the Sciences and Humanities

Pages134-134
Date13 February 2017
Published date13 February 2017
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1108/OIR-12-2015-0377
AuthorDavid Stuart
Subject MatterLibrary & information science,Information behaviour & retrieval,Collection building & management,Bibliometrics,Databases,Information & knowledge management,Information & communications technology,Internet,Records management & preservation,Document management
Book review
Knowledge Machines: Digital Transformations of the Sciences and
Humanities
Eric T. Meyer and Ralph Schroeder
MIT Press
Cambridge, MA
2015
$40.00 hard cover
ISBN 9780262028745
$28.00 electronic version
ISBN 9780262328173
Review DOI 10.1108/OIR-12-2015-0377
The internet and the web have not only brought huge changes in the way scholars consume
knowledge, but also in the way knowledge is produced; every stage of knowledge
production has been affected by the internet in some way, from the objects of study and
the carrying out of literature reviews, via the methods and tools adopted, through to the
analysis and publishing of results. The nature of this change is the focus of Meyer and
SchroedersKnowledge Machines.
Knowledge Machines explores the impact of new digital technologies on the practice and
direction of research in ten chapters. The first three chapters provide the foundations for the
work: following a general introduction to the topic, Chapter 2 provides a framework for
conceptualizing e-research, which they define as the use of digital tools and data for the
distributed and collaborative production of knowledge(Meyer and Schroeder, 2015, p. 4),
and Chapter 3 considers the rise of e-research in recent years. Chapters 4 and 5 use six case
studies to explore how various networks of computers and people are used in e-research and
how data and tools are increasingly widely shared. Chapters 6 and 7 consider e-research
from the perspective of the sciences, social science, and the humanities. Chapters 8 and 9
consider the impact of open science and the limits of e-research, and finally Chapter 10
draws some conclusions on the transformation of scholarship by e-research.
Meyer and Schroeder make a forceful argument for the need for interdisciplinary
investigations into the changes caused by e-research; e-research is diverse and richly
interconnected and understanding its impact is not the prerogative of any single discipline.
There is great variety in e-research both within and between the different fields, and this is
demonstrated in the diversity of the case studies included in the book, but there are also shared
commonalities. Tools developed for one purpose in one discipline are shared and adapted for
another, and challenges such as intellectual property rights and the need for the recognition of
new forms of contribution, whether data creation or tool development, cut across the disciplines.
Understanding the impact of the internet as an infrastructure for knowledge production is
essential not only for policy makers, but also researchers reflecting on their working practices
as users shape and are shaped by new technologies, and as these knowledge machines
increase in potential they will undoubtedly be of interest to the wider public too. Meyer and
SchroedersKnowledge Machines provides an excellent introduction to the changing nature of
e-research and its impact on knowledge production, at a time when new technologies are not
only changing the speed and scale of research but also the fundamental nature of research.
David Stuart
Online Information Review
Vol. 41 No. 1, 2017
p. 134
© Emerald PublishingLimited
1468-4527
134
OIR
41,1

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