Loughborough University
Leicestershire, UK
LE11 3TU
+44 (0)1509 263171
Loughborough University

Loughborough University Research Publications


Publications for Gareth Cole

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Journal Articles

Cole, G, Barnes, M, Steiner, T (2023) Thoth Archiving Network, Septentrio Conference Series, (1), DOI: 10.7557/5.7140.

Harland, RG, Liguori, A, Cole, G (2018) Developing a digital archive for symbolic resources in urban environments - the Latina Project, International Journal of Digital Curation, 12(2), pp.136-145, ISSN: 1746-8256. DOI: 10.2218/ijdc.v12i2.511.

Cole, G (2016) Establishing a research data management service at Loughborough University, International Digital Curation Conference (IDCC16), 11(1), pp.68-75.

Cole, G (2015) Book Review - Martin Robson, A history of the Royal Navy: the Napoleonic Wars, Journal for Maritime Research, 17(2), pp.237-238, ISSN: 1469-1957. DOI: 10.1080/21533369.2015.1095004.

Cole, G (2015) Review of: Kristin Briney, Data Management for Researchers. Organize, maintain and share your data for research success, Ariadne, 75, ISSN: 0178-1073.

Cole, G and Evans, J (2014) University of Exeter research data management and open access training for Staff, Aliss Quarterly, 10(1), ISSN: 1747-9258.

Law, D and Cole, G (2013) Modernizing the Society in the Digital Age, The Mariner's Mirror, 99(1), pp.123-124, ISSN: 0025-3359. DOI: 10.1080/00253359.2013.767578.

Cole, G (2009) ROYAL NAVY GUNNERS IN THE FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY AND NAPLOEONIC WARS, The Mariner's Mirror, 95(3), pp.284-295, ISSN: 0025-3359. DOI: 10.1080/00253359.2009.10657104.



Conferences

Barnes, M, Higman, R, Cole, G, Gatti, R, Fry, J (2023) Long-term preservation and reusability of open access scholar-led press monographs. In 17th International Digital Curation Conference (IDCC22); International Journal of Digital Curation (IDJC), Online, pp.1-5, DOI: 10.2218/ijdc.v17i1.826.

Cole, G (2020) The role and establishments of British Ordnance Yards in the Mediterranean during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. In , National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, pp.17-26, ISBN: 9781838340278.

Firth, S, Cole, G, Kane, T, Fouchal, F, Hassan, T (2018) AN OPEN SCIENCE APPROACH FOR BUILDING PERFORMANCE STUDIES. In BPACS 2018, Chicago, US.

Firth, S, Cole, G, Kane, T, Fouchal, F, Hassan, T (2018) An Open Science Approach for Building Performance Data Schemas and Analysis Algorithms. In Building Simulation and Optimisation 2018, Cambridge, UK.

Firth, S, Cole, G, Kane, T, Fouchal, F, Hassan, T (2018) An open data science approach for building performance studies using refitXML and Jupyter Notebooks. In eSim 2018, Montreal, Canada.

Harland, RG, Liguori, A, Cole, G (2017) Developing a digital archive for symbolic resources in urban environments - the Latina Project. In 12th International Digital Curation Conference, Edinburgh.

Brewerton, GP and Cole, G (2015) Loughborough's RDM Story. In figshare fest, London. DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.1600895.

Brewerton, GP, Cole, G, Mackey, S, Hyndman, A (2015) Research Data Management Case Study: Loughborough University. In ARMA 2015 Conference, Brighton.

Cole, G (2011) Gunpowder manufacturers and the Office of Ordnance, 1793-1815. In Cosmopolitan Networks in Commerce and Society, German Historical Institute, London.



Books

Cole, G (2012) Arming the Royal Navy, 1793-1815 The Office of Ordnance and the State, Pickering & Chatto Limited, ISBN: 9781848931879. DOI: 10.4324/9781315655543.



Chapters

Cole, GJ (2012) Who has Command? Royal Artillerymen on board Royal Navy Warships in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. In Doe, H and Harding, R (ed) Leadership and Management in Naval History, 1650-1950: Essays in Honour of Michael Duffy, pp.61-76.

Cole, G (2012) Introduction to Arming the Royal Navy, 1793-1815: the Office of Ordnance and the State. In Arming the Royal Navy, 1793-1815: the Office of Ordnance and the State, Routledge, pp.1-10, ISBN: 9781848931879. DOI: 10.4324/9781315655543.



Reports

Barnes, M, Bell, E, Cole, G, Fry, J, Gatti, R, Stone, G (2022) WP7 scoping report on archiving and preserving OA monographs. DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.6725309.



Other

University, L, University, DM, Leicester, TUO, Williamson, L, Parsons, D, Hahnel, M, Gunn, S, Cole, G (Accepted for publication) Open Research Week 2024: Monday, 26 February, Introduction, Opening address / Prof Dan Parsons, Pro Vice-Chancellor for Research and Innovation, Loughborough UniversityDan Parsons obtained his PhD at the University of Sheffield in 2004 and has been an academic in Earth Sciences at the Universities of Leeds, Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Hull. He was the founding and inaugural Director of a University-wide Energy and Environment Institute (EEI) in 2017. The Institute grew under his leadership, bringing together a multidisciplinary team of more than 180 researchers to conduct impactful research on the global challenges presented by environmental change. Professor Parsons joined Loughborough University in September 2022 as the Pro Vic-Chancellor for Research and Innovation.Global academic publishing: where will experimentation lead? / Mark Hahnel, VP of Open Research at Digital Science, Founder of FigshareMark Hahnel is the VP Open Research at Digital Science. He is the founder of Figshare, which he created whilst completing his PhD in stem cell biology at Imperial College London. Figshare currently provides research data infrastructure for institutions, publishers and funders globally. He is passionate about open science and the potential it has to revolutionize the research community. Building a grassroots community: the role of a URKN local network lead / Dr Sarah Gunn, Lecturer in Clinical Psychology, local UKRN network lead, University of LeicesterSarah is a clinical psychologist and lecturer in clinical psychology at the University of Leicester. She has been the local network lead for a little under two years, and she’s enjoying working with UKRN and with the UoL team to promote open research as a grassroots lead. Her research interests are clinically-orientated, which brings up specific challenges around supporting people to do open, robust research in clinical populations and settings. .

University, L, University, DM, Leicester, TUO, Cole, G, Egan, G, Byrom, T, Skelly, L (Accepted for publication) Open Research Week 2024: Friday, 1 March, Research Cultures, Untitled / Prof. Gabriel Egan, Director of the Centre for Textual Studies, De Montfort UniversityGabriel Egan is Professor of Shakespeare Studies at De Montfort University, Director of its Centre for Textual Studies, Director of English Research, and Director of the university-wide research theme of 'Living in a Digital Society'. He is a General Editor of the 'New Oxford Shakespeare' (2016-25), Oxford University Press's landmark complete works edition, which has used computational analysis to show that Shakespeare contributed to two plays not previously published in a complete-works edition, and that parts of the three 'Henry VI' plays that we long thought were by Shakespeare alone were written by other men, including Christopher Marlowe. He teaches the arts of computer programming for literary-historical applications and letter-press printing. What's in a culture and how do professional services support its development and enhancement / Dr Tina Byrom, Head of Enhanced Academic Practice, Loughborough UniversityDr Tina Byrom is an educational professional with considerable experience across both compulsory and post compulsory education settings. Her PhD focused on interventions that support students who go into higher education from disadvantaged backgrounds, with a focus on the role of the Sutton Trust. She has authored numerous publications in the area of social justice in addition to working on Cabinet funded research that explored interventions used to support homeless young people back into education. Currently working in professional development, she leads a team who deliver developmental opportunities for staff to enhance their academic practices in teaching and research. .

University, L, University, DM, Leicester, TUO, Skelly, L, Svirydzenka, N, Daley, A, De Sabbata, S, Cole, G (Accepted for publication) Open Research Week 2024: Thursday, 29 February, Connecting and engaging with communities, Open Methodologies: for research with marginalised communities / Dr Nadia Svirydzenka, Associate Professor/Reader in Culture, Identity, and Mental Health, Deputy Director Mary Seacole Research Centre, De Montfort UniversityDr Nadia Svirydzenka is an Associate Professor and Reader in Culture, Identity, and Mental Health at De Montfort University and Deputy Director of Mary Seacole Research Centre. She is a social and cultural psychologist, and her research interests lie in understanding mental health of marginalised populations though culturally framed identities, attitudes, stigma, and behaviours. She is passionate about transdisciplinary research and in her projects she blends the use of creative methodology (theatre, photo elicitation, digital storytelling) with traditional mixed methods (qualitative interviews and quantitative survey methods) to elicit new stories and lived experiences, and catalyse fresh thinking about possible solutions. In her projects, she works closely with directly affected communities, funded by UKRI, including CHAMPIONS, an ESRC and Shelter Scotland funded work exploring the impact of temporary accommodation and homelessness on health and development of children in the UK. She is currently leading an AHRC funded work on Gender Based Violence and Resilience in internal migrant women and the hijra in slum communities in Pune.RIC=KI / Prof. Amanda Daley, Professor of Behavioural Medicine, Director of the Centre for Lifestyle Medicine and Behaviour (CLiMB), Loughborough UniversityAmanda Daley is a Professor of Behavioural Medicine and an NIHR Research Professor in Public Health. She is the Director of the Centre for Lifestyle Medicine and Behaviour (CLiMB) and leads RIC-KI, the Research Ideas Catalogue – Knowledge & Impact. Her work is focused on investigating the effects of lifestyle interventions on health outcomes with a particular interest in testing lifestyle interventions that can be delivered by health care professionals within routine NHS consultations.Untitled / Dr Stef de Sabbata, Associate Professor of Geographical Information Science, University of LeicesterStef De Sabbata (they/them) is an Associate Professor of Geographical Information Science at the School of Geography, Geology and the Environment and a Fellow of the Institute for Digital Culture of the University of Leicester. They are the Chair of the Geographical Information Science Research Group of the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers), part of the steering committee of GIScience Research UK (GISRUK) and the Chair of the GISRUK Conference 2018, and a member of the Commission on Location Based Services of the International Cartographic Association. They hold a PhD from the Department of Geography of the University of Zurich (2013), where their research focused on geographical knowledge discovery for location-based services. They were a Researcher at the Oxford Internet Institute and a Junior Research Fellow at the Wolfson College of the University of Oxford, where they applied geographical data science approaches to the fields of internet studies and digital geographies. Their current research focuses on geographical artificial intelligence, including the development of spatially-explicit approaches to urban analytics and the use of foundation models in digital geographies and cultural analytics..



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