Together with Thijs Waardenburg I submitted an abstract for the upcoming MuseumNext conference in Barcelona. A lot of interesting social media data on Dutch museums will be presented. The coming two weeks I will work on completing the Flickr data analysis and move on to Foursquare and Facebook. I cannot stress enough the importance of data. Especially when it comes to social media. Theory is fine but is being able to validate it with actual data. So fingers crossed that we can present our wonderful results and also a bit for my first trip to Barcelona.
What’s the Net Result?
Measuring and Analyzing Museums Social Media Activities
Social media such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Flickr, have enabled easy, inexpensive interaction between millions of individuals and communities. This has not gone unnoticed by archives, museums and other cultural heritage institutes, and is visible in a broad array of social media initiatives in- and outside of these institutes. For example, the fraction of museums in the Netherlands with a registered Twitter account has risen from 1.1% in 2008 to 34.6% in 2011.
The question is what all this social media activity brings. After almost a decade, there is still a great deal of trial-and-error. In the Museum Compass research project (www.museumkompas.nl) we have developed a social media monitor which contains data on all current and historic online activities on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Foursquare and Flickr of all registered Dutch – and some international museums. It allows us to map out the ‘online’ footprint of a museum, and is currently used by several cultural heritage institutions to position themselves online and reflect on their own social media use.
We will present the quantitative results from a range of Dutch and international museums, explore the possible qualitative and quantitative measures for such a monitor and discuss the usefulness of having enormous amounts of data. We will close with the lessons learned.
Download the full paper : Hekman, E. Van Vliet, H. 2011. Bringing the Past To the Present. Paper presented at the Consortium on Applied Research and Professional Education (CARPE) conference 2011.
1. Introduction
The growing impact of information technology and digitisation, ever since the beginning of the 1990s, has given cultural heritage institutions a fresh impulse to deal with the problem of accessibility of their collections (Van Vliet, 2009). Their efforts, however, are still mostly aimed at cultural preservation, and, for the time being, have done little to bring us closer to the dream of a Virtual Collection in the Netherlands. For instance, more than 30 million art objects were still not digitised in 2008 in the Netherlands (Veeger, 2008). Meanwhile, it has become urgent to further open the door. The Internet’s dominant role in recent years has caused a change in the relationship between media producers, suppliers and consumers in the traditional media landscape. The cultural sector must therefore decide what to do with today’s digital media in response to the general public’s changing role, and for the purpose of improving accessibility. The use of multiple media resources and particularly resources like the Internet and mobile telephony seems to be inevitable. The only question that remains is: how? This paper addresses this question by focussing on social tagging and storytelling, and reports the results of an empirical study on tagging behaviour using the social tagging platform www.ikweetwatditis.nl (see also Van Vliet et al., 2010).
1.1 Increase in accessibility
Searchability is crucial for the accessibility of our digital cultural heritage. The ability to find digital art objects begins with an effective description. Therein lies the problem. If a description can be found at all, it usually includes only a minimal amount of technical data focusing on object management issues such as documentation of the acquisition process, storage, and art-historical features. Often the same object descriptions are used when art collections are presented on the net. Consequently, any problems in describing the physical art collections are reflected digitally. E.g., as a result of strict annotation standards, the formal description of a painting with the image of a cow might not even include the word ‘cow’. As a result, the painting cannot be found using ‘cow’ as a search term. The art object may become less appealing for the visitor’s since it is taken out of context, and only a database record is shown (Trant, 2006a/b). In conclusion: art collections are available, but not accessible; descriptions have been made, but are incomprehensible.
1.2 Social tagging
The usage of social tagging could offer a possible solution for engaging the public and making object descriptions more public-friendly. Tagging entails assigning labels and/or keywords to a specific item, such as a painting. It is social tagging when multiple people are engaged in this activity, and tags are mutually visible. Various studies suggest tagging has a positive effect, on both the added value for art collections and visitor involvement with those collections (Marlow et al., 2006; Trant, 2006a/b; Trant & Wyman, 2006: Trant, Bearman & Chun, 2007). The frequently mentioned benefits associated with social tagging include:
2. Research questions
The question relating the useful deployment of social tagging can be formulated as: what choices museums have to make for the deployment of social tagging?
Two such choices have been identified for the purpose of this project. In similar research, researchers usually work with a dichotomy of professionals versus laymen. In doing so, there is little consideration of the different degrees of knowledge among visitors. In addition to the museum curator and the layman, there are ‘well-informed’ interested people including amateur scientists and retired professionals to be found among the visitors (see Wubs & Huysmans, 2006a). It is extremely relevant for museums to cater for and continue to involve this group in their collections. It may be more useful to deploy social tagging for a specific group of experts as opposed to a broad audience.
A second choice is whether or not to go beyond the limited power of expression of tags. No matter how powerful tags may be, they are still essentially keywords with a limited amount of information. It may therefore also be interesting to consider other forms of expression, such as digital storytelling. Stories offer a personal perspective and contribute to a personal interpretation of art objects (see further Van Vliet, 2009). We defined three possible effects of social tagging:
The analysis of the three possible effects gave rise to a multitude of research questions and hypotheses (see Van Vliet et al., 2010). Two of these questions will be addressed in this paper.
Download the full paper : Hekman, E. Van Vliet, H. 2011. Bringing the Past To the Present. Paper presented at the Consortium on Applied Research and Professional Education (CARPE) conference 2011.
Tell me, and I will forget. Show me, and I may remember. Involve me, and I will understandConfucius (551 BC - 479 BC)
I’m in the final 24 hours of gathering data from Flickr the Commons. From the 191,683 photos (in October it was 188,772) 106,352 are queried through the flickr.photos.getInfo method. The script will ask retrieve data from 300 photos every five minutes. The Flickr API only allows 3600 calls per hours so better not cross that border.
Now onwards to some quick statistics from the 106,352 photos:
| Occurrences | Tag |
| 89768 | Aviation |
| 88964 | SDASM |
| 82037 | aeronautics |
| 22489 | San Diego Air and Space Museum |
| 9713 | flight |
| 5823 | San Diego |
| 5185 | Ryan |
| 5047 | Convair |
| 4754 | Consolidated |
| 4709 | Aeropace Factories |
As part of my PhD research I’m currently building scripts that monitor social media sites such as Flickr, Facebook and Twitter. Monitoring those sites will give me insight in the usage by museums and see which capitals (social, cultural, economical or strategic) they address.
The first step for me is to analyze the content of Flickr the Commons.
The key goals of The Commons on Flickr are to firstly show you hidden treasures in the world’s public photography archives, and secondly to show how your input and knowledge can help make these collections even richer.
You’re invited to help describe the photographs you discover in The Commons on Flickr, either by adding tags or leaving comments. (http://www.flickr.com/commons/)
In total 56 institutes are participating and uploaded 188,772 photos to the commons. The distribution however is not symmetrical. The Imperial War Museum shared 10 photos whilst the San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives shares a total fo 107,130 photos. Nevertheless the amount of photos and the amount of ‘possible’ interaction with the community is huge.
Today I will share the amount of photos per institute and next week I will update by showing the amount of tags and (hopefully) comments per institute.
| Institute | Photo amount |
| San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives | 107130 |
| The Library of Congress | 14211 |
| The U.S. National Archives | 8067 |
| Biblioteca de Arte-Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian | 7289 |
| The National Archives UK | 5285 |
| Brooklyn Museum | 4934 |
| Cornell University Library | 3980 |
| OSU Special Collections & Archives | 2539 |
| New York Public Library | 2537 |
| Bibliothèque de Toulouse | 2415 |
| National Library of Scotland | 2302 |
| Smithsonian Institution | 2273 |
| Powerhouse Museum Collection | 1923 |
| The Field Museum Library | 1688 |
| Keene and Cheshire County (NH) Historical Photos | 1595 |
| Nationaal Archief | 1464 |
| LSE Library | 1390 |
| State Library of New South Wales collection | 1325 |
| State Library and Archives of Florida | 1323 |
| State Library of Queensland, Australia | 1223 |
| George Eastman House | 1058 |
| Swedish National Heritage Board | 880 |
| National Maritime Museum | 799 |
| LlGC ~ NLW | 762 |
| Bergen Public Library | 710 |
| The Library of Virginia | 681 |
| Center for Jewish History, NYC | 681 |
| SMU Central University Libraries | 668 |
| National Library NZ on The Commons | 666 |
| Woodrow Wilson Presidential Library Archives | 626 |
| Museum of Photographic Arts Collections | 586 |
| National Library of Ireland on The Commons | 504 |
| Musée McCord Museum | 475 |
| Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums | 403 |
| Fylkesarkivet i Sogn og Fjordane | 383 |
| Riksarkivet (National Archives of Norway) | 349 |
| NASA on The Commons | 347 |
| National Library of Australia Commons | 308 |
| Galt Museum & Archives on The Commons | 280 |
| Texas State Archives | 278 |
| Australian National Maritime Museum on The Commons | 269 |
| UA Archives | Upper Arlington History | 246 |
| Museum of Hartlepool | 244 |
| nha.library | 241 |
| DC Public Library Commons | 201 |
| Jewish Historical Society of the Upper Midwest | 201 |
| UW Digital Collections | 201 |
| National Media Museum | 188 |
| Australian War Memorial collection | 131 |
| National Galleries of Scotland Commons | 109 |
| The Royal Library, Denmark | 105 |
| Stockholm Transport Museum Commons | 102 |
| JWA Commons | 82 |
| Getty Research Institute | 73 |
| Ljósmyndasafn Reykjavíkur / Reykjavík Museum of | 32 |
| Imperial War Museum Collections | 10 |
| total | 188772 |