4 research outputs found
Reading on paper and screens: advantages, disadvantages, and digital divide
34-43The paper studies reading in the digital age and grounds characteristic reading features on paper and the screen. We
studied various scientific points on the uniqueness of reading activities in various formats, effectiveness, and perception of
readers about printed and electronic texts. The study concludes that screen-reading practices keep evolving. Digital reading
dynamically changes the communication environment, speeding up and simplifying access to information. The new reading
format has many opportunities and advantages, and it transforms the reading skills and habits of society. Although it revives
social reading, it intensifies the digital divide, leading to a secondary mental cognitive digital divide, and modifies the
personal reading experience of contemporaries
Multiethnic Societies of Central Asia and Siberia Represented in Indigenous Oral and Written Literature
Central Asia and Siberia are characterized by multiethnic societies formed by a patchwork of often small ethnic groups. At the same time large parts of them have been dominated by state languages, especially Russian and Chinese. On a local level the languages of the autochthonous people often play a role parallel to the central national language. The contributions of this conference proceeding follow up on topics such as: What was or is collected and how can it be used under changed conditions in the research landscape, how does it help local ethnic communities to understand and preserve their own culture and language? Do the spatially dispersed but often networked collections support research on the ground? What contribution do these collections make to the local languages and cultures against the backdrop of dwindling attention to endangered groups? These and other questions are discussed against the background of the important role libraries and private collections play for multiethnic societies in often remote regions that are difficult to reach
Multiethnic Societies of Central Asia and Siberia Represented in Indigenous Oral and Written Literature
Central Asia and Siberia are characterized by multiethnic societies formed by a patchwork of often small ethnic groups. At the same time large parts of them have been dominated by state languages, especially Russian and Chinese. On a local level the languages of the autochthonous people often play a role parallel to the central national language. The contributions of this conference proceeding follow up on topics such as: What was or is collected and how can it be used under changed conditions in the research landscape, how does it help local ethnic communities to understand and preserve their own culture and language? Do the spatially dispersed but often networked collections support research on the ground? What contribution do these collections make to the local languages and cultures against the backdrop of dwindling attention to endangered groups? These and other questions are discussed against the background of the important role libraries and private collections play for multiethnic societies in often remote regions that are difficult to reach
Reading on paper and screens: advantages, disadvantages, and digital divide
The paper studies reading in the digital age and grounds characteristic reading features on paper and the screen. We studied various scientific points on the uniqueness of reading activities in various formats, effectiveness, and perception of readers about printed and electronic texts. The study concludes that screen-reading practices keep evolving. Digital reading dynamically changes the communication environment, speeding up and simplifying access to information. The new reading format has many opportunities and advantages, and it transforms the reading skills and habits of society. Although it revives social reading, it intensifies the digital divide, leading to a secondary mental cognitive digital divide, and modifies the personal reading experience of contemporaries