AdairBill, FileneBenjamin, and KoloskiLaura, eds. 2011. Letting Go? Sharing Historical Authority in a User-Generated World.Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press.
DunnStuart, and HedgesMark. 2012. “Crowd-Sourcing Scoping Study: Engaging the Crowd with Humanities Research.”http://www.humanitiescrowds.org.
4.
EllwoodElizabeth R., DunckelBetty A., FlemonsPaul, GuralnickRobert, NelsonGil, NewmanGreg, and NewmanSarah. 2015. “Accelerating the Digitization of Biodiversity Research Specimens through Online Public Participation.”BioScience:biv005.
5.
GehlRobert2014. Reverse Engineering Social Media: Software, Culture, and Political Economy in New Media Capitalism.Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
6.
KellyLynda2010. “How Web 2.0 Is Changing the Nature of Museum Work.”Curator: The Museum Journal53: 405–410.
7.
ManciniFederica, and CarrerasCesar. 2010. “Techno-Society at the Service of Memory Institutions: Web 2.0 in Museums.”Catalan Journal of Communication and Cultural Studies2: 59–76.
8.
RidgeMia, ed. 2014. Crowdsourcing our Cultural Heritage.London: Ashgate.
9.
RussoAngelina, WatkinsJerry, KellyLynda, and ChanSebastian. 2008. “Participatory Communication with Social Media.”Curator: The Museum Journal51, no. 1: 21–31.