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  • × author_ss:"Liew, C.L."
  • × language_ss:"e"
  1. Liew, C.L.: Cross-cultural design and usability of a digital library supporting access to Maori cultural heritage resources : an examination of knowledge organization issues (2004) 0.07
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    Abstract
    As cultural and heritage resources are being made into a shared worldwide collection of information resources, design and usability of digital libraries supporting access to such resources become critical concerns. This paper aims to look specifically at knowledge organization issues conceming supporting access to Maori heritage materials. The paper commences with an examination of the Maori culture, and the nature and forms of Maori heritage resources available in New Zealand (NZ) and their specific requirements for stmcturing, storage, organization and retrieval in a digital environment. lt then proceeds to identifying a set of critical research issues conceming knowledge representation and organization requirements that need to be addressed for the success of a digital library aimed at promoting worldwide access to and at facilitating understanding of Maori indigenous knowledge.
  2. Liew, C.L.; Yeates, J.; Lilley, S.C.: Digitized indigenous knowledge collections : impact on cultural knowledge transmission, social connections, and cultural identity (2021) 0.02
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    Abstract
    This research examines the impact of digitized and digital indigenous knowledge collections (D-IKC) on cultural knowledge transmission, social connections, and cultural identity through semi-structured interviews with 8 users of D-IKC in New Zealand. The participants acknowledged that D-IKC brought about many benefits, including the surfacing of otherwise hidden or inaccessible cultural heritage. Concerns around digital access, digital competency, and responsiveness to cultural values need to be thoughtfully addressed nevertheless. Use of D-IKC had impact not only at an individual level but also at a social-community level. We highlight several traditional cultural values related to D-IKC use that are not embodied in existing value-impact frameworks. This research also found that the intersection and interactions among individual needs, cultural expectations, and norms and affordances around the digital information environments concerned were nuanced and multifaceted. These facets must be incorporated into the stewardship of knowledge collections. We also observed "digital knowledge sharing in the wild"-knowledge transmission that transpired and in some cases led to creation of knowledge resources that materialized outside the bounds of the originating repositories and institutions. Further studies into such self-organized knowledge transmission/sharing phenomena can lead to valuable insights to inform and shape the curation and design of D-IKC.
  3. Liew, C.L.; Foo, S.; Chennupati, K.R.: ¬A proposed integrated environment for enhanced user interaction and value-adding of electronic documents : an empirical evaluation (2001) 0.01
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    Source
    Journal of the American Society for Information Science and technology. 52(2001) no.1, S.22-35