Researcher Index

Click on the icon on the right for further details about the researcher's project.

Researchers
Dr Marsha Berry Media devices in the urban field: How do we use media and communications devices in specific sites and situations?
  Locative Mobile Media Project: Bluetooth Server
  Trains and Mobile Phones
Assoc Prof Kate Crawford Young, mobile, networked: Youth and Mobile Media
Prof Gerard Goggin Mobile Phone Culture
  Young, Mobile, Networked: Mobile Media and Youth Culture in Australia
Dr Melissa Gregg Online Intimacy: Public and private life in a network society
  Working from Home: New media technology, workplace culture and the changing nature of domesticity
Ms Larissa Hjorth GLAMM: Games, Location, Art & Mobile Media
  Online@asia/pacific: A comparative study of online networks in the Asia-Pacific
Mr Dean Keep Storytelling and Mobile Media: Narratives for the Mobile Phone
Mr David Lindsay Exploring Our Second Life: A preliminary investigation of legal, ethical and behavioural issues arising from participation in an online world
  Regulating the Mobile Content Revolution: A Preliminary Investigation of Content Control and Copyright Management in the Advanced Mobile Environment
Dr Susan Luckman Collaborative Australian Storytelling in the Digital Age: The Impact of User-generated Content on Professional Screen Production
  Spatial Cultural Studies
Dr Ingrid Richardson Moblogging and Belonging
  Highly Interactive and Location-based Mobile Media
  Urban Interfaces
  Curriculum Leadership Project
Dr Julia de Roeper Factors in comparative levels of uptake of longer form mobile screen content
  My space or yours?
Dr Jenny Weight Solar-powered Bluetooth Server
  Use of mobiles on public transport
  Mobile phones and driving
  Media etiquette
  Domestic media technologies
Dr Rowan Wilken Mobile phones and the renegotiation of place
Dr Melissa de Zwart Exploring Our Second Life: A preliminary investigation of legal, ethical and behavioural issues arising from participation in an online world
  Regulating the Mobile Content Revolution: A Preliminary Investigation of Content Control and Copyright Management in the Advanced Mobile Environment