“The rise of the machine”: The impact of digital tablet recording in the field at Çatalhöyük

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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“The rise of the machine”: The impact of digital tablet recording in the field at Çatalhöyük. / Taylor, James Stuart; Issavi, Justine; Berggren, Åsa; Lukas, Dominik; Mazzucato, Camilla; Tung, Burcu; Dell'Unto, NIcolo.

In: Internet Archaeology, Vol. 47, 2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Taylor, JS, Issavi, J, Berggren, Å, Lukas, D, Mazzucato, C, Tung, B & Dell'Unto, NI 2018, '“The rise of the machine”: The impact of digital tablet recording in the field at Çatalhöyük', Internet Archaeology, vol. 47.

APA

Taylor, J. S., Issavi, J., Berggren, Å., Lukas, D., Mazzucato, C., Tung, B., & Dell'Unto, NI. (2018). “The rise of the machine”: The impact of digital tablet recording in the field at Çatalhöyük. Internet Archaeology, 47.

Vancouver

Taylor JS, Issavi J, Berggren Å, Lukas D, Mazzucato C, Tung B et al. “The rise of the machine”: The impact of digital tablet recording in the field at Çatalhöyük. Internet Archaeology. 2018;47.

Author

Taylor, James Stuart ; Issavi, Justine ; Berggren, Åsa ; Lukas, Dominik ; Mazzucato, Camilla ; Tung, Burcu ; Dell'Unto, NIcolo. / “The rise of the machine”: The impact of digital tablet recording in the field at Çatalhöyük. In: Internet Archaeology. 2018 ; Vol. 47.

Bibtex

@article{9ff5af7dab2d429bb8f44cb44a01681f,
title = "“The rise of the machine”: The impact of digital tablet recording in the field at {\c C}atalh{\"o}y{\"u}k",
abstract = "This paper considers the role of digital recording methods and visualisation tools in the primary recording of archaeology at the Neolithic tell site of {\c C}atalh{\"o}y{\"u}k, Turkey. Operating within and building on {\c C}atalh{\"o}y{\"u}k Research Project's understanding of reflexive methods (Hodder 2000b, 2003; Berggren and Nilson 2014; Berggren et al. 2015) we incorporate elements of science and technology studies (Pickering 1995) in order to create a framework for documenting the complete process of devising, implementing, and assessing digitised and tablet-based workflows. These harness the project's existing SQL database and intra-site GIS, as well as the increasingly user-friendly suite of 3D recording technologies which are now available to archaeologists. The {\c C}atalh{\"o}y{\"u}k Research Project's longstanding engagement with digital methods in archaeology means that such a study is well placed to provide insights into wider disciplinary trends that might be described as a 'Digital Turn'. By offering a review of tablet recording and exploring the effects of its introduction upon the archaeologists' relationship with the archaeological remains, we investigate the applied integration of digital recording technologies and their role in facilitating a deeper reflexivity in the interpretation of the archaeology on the site.",
author = "Taylor, {James Stuart} and Justine Issavi and {\AA}sa Berggren and Dominik Lukas and Camilla Mazzucato and Burcu Tung and NIcolo Dell'Unto",
year = "2018",
language = "English",
volume = "47",
journal = "Internet Archaeology",
issn = "1363-5387",
publisher = "University of York",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - “The rise of the machine”: The impact of digital tablet recording in the field at Çatalhöyük

AU - Taylor, James Stuart

AU - Issavi, Justine

AU - Berggren, Åsa

AU - Lukas, Dominik

AU - Mazzucato, Camilla

AU - Tung, Burcu

AU - Dell'Unto, NIcolo

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - This paper considers the role of digital recording methods and visualisation tools in the primary recording of archaeology at the Neolithic tell site of Çatalhöyük, Turkey. Operating within and building on Çatalhöyük Research Project's understanding of reflexive methods (Hodder 2000b, 2003; Berggren and Nilson 2014; Berggren et al. 2015) we incorporate elements of science and technology studies (Pickering 1995) in order to create a framework for documenting the complete process of devising, implementing, and assessing digitised and tablet-based workflows. These harness the project's existing SQL database and intra-site GIS, as well as the increasingly user-friendly suite of 3D recording technologies which are now available to archaeologists. The Çatalhöyük Research Project's longstanding engagement with digital methods in archaeology means that such a study is well placed to provide insights into wider disciplinary trends that might be described as a 'Digital Turn'. By offering a review of tablet recording and exploring the effects of its introduction upon the archaeologists' relationship with the archaeological remains, we investigate the applied integration of digital recording technologies and their role in facilitating a deeper reflexivity in the interpretation of the archaeology on the site.

AB - This paper considers the role of digital recording methods and visualisation tools in the primary recording of archaeology at the Neolithic tell site of Çatalhöyük, Turkey. Operating within and building on Çatalhöyük Research Project's understanding of reflexive methods (Hodder 2000b, 2003; Berggren and Nilson 2014; Berggren et al. 2015) we incorporate elements of science and technology studies (Pickering 1995) in order to create a framework for documenting the complete process of devising, implementing, and assessing digitised and tablet-based workflows. These harness the project's existing SQL database and intra-site GIS, as well as the increasingly user-friendly suite of 3D recording technologies which are now available to archaeologists. The Çatalhöyük Research Project's longstanding engagement with digital methods in archaeology means that such a study is well placed to provide insights into wider disciplinary trends that might be described as a 'Digital Turn'. By offering a review of tablet recording and exploring the effects of its introduction upon the archaeologists' relationship with the archaeological remains, we investigate the applied integration of digital recording technologies and their role in facilitating a deeper reflexivity in the interpretation of the archaeology on the site.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 47

JO - Internet Archaeology

JF - Internet Archaeology

SN - 1363-5387

ER -

ID: 310561815