In:Science Communication on the Internet: Old genres meet new genres
Edited by María José Luzón and Carmen Pérez-Llantada
[Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 308] 2019
► pp. 219–238
Chapter 11Public- and expert-facing communication
A case study of polycontextuality and context collapse in Internet-mediated citizen science
Published online: 4 December 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.308.11rei
https://doi.org/10.1075/pbns.308.11rei
Abstract
This chapter describes a qualitative case study of digitally-mediated production and communication of research in the biological sciences. The study focuses on the citizen science “Heartbeats Project,” conceived by a U.S.-based evolutionary biology lab to explore the data behind the well-known rule that, on average, mammals’ hearts beat one billion times per lifetime. Our analysis describes three ways that polycontextuality and context collapse figured in the team’s production of digital, spoken, and print-based genres arising from their work. These dynamics complicate traditional understandings of the relationships between scientific and public genres, as well as existing conceptions of composition, genre, authors, and audiences in the production and circulation of scientific findings and the (re)production of science.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction and theoretical framework
- 2.Research context
- 3.Design and methods of the study
- 4.Analysis of the case
- 4.1Public communication as scientific invention
- 4.2Composing for recomposition
- 4.3Composing for and with the public to change science
- 5.Conclusion
Note References
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Cited by (8)
Cited by eight other publications
Belcher, Diane D.
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2021. Understanding academics online. In Ethnographies of Academic Writing Research [Research Methods in Applied Linguistics, 1], ► pp. 61 ff.
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