Title
Information And Communication Technology Challenges To Scientific Professional Identity
Abstract
Increasingly, information and communication technology (ICT) uses are transforming professional activities and interactions in ways that challenge traditional assumptions about professional identity. In this article, we consider the ways in which the professional identities of research scientists in oceanography and marine biology are shaped by the use of ICTs. We draw empirical data from an ongoing study of scientific research collaborations that examines uses of basic communication technologies, as well as scientific technologies with embedded ICT components. Our analysis suggests that development and use of ICT-enabled scientific technologies are identity enhancing for many scientists, facilitating their development of unique areas of scientific knowledge. ICT-related changes in data collection, collaborative coordination, and scientific interaction also challenge traditional definitions of expertise and professional identity. An examination of these challenges directs attention to the project identities that form around ICT-enabled scientific technologies and the ways that those project identities are enacted through ICTs.
Year
DOI
Venue
2005
10.1080/01972240590895883
INFORMATION SOCIETY
Keywords
Field
DocType
collaboration, identity, information and communication technologies
Data collection,ICTS,Sociology of scientific knowledge,Sociology,Knowledge management,Scientific communication,Information and Communications Technology,Scientific method
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
21
1
0197-2243
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
36
1.88
21
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Roberta Lamb148130.34
Elizabeth Davidson215815.12