Leonardo Electronic Almanac: 2006 - Volume
14
Peer Reviewers Index
last updated:
8 January 2007
Click here to download pdf version.
Established in 1993, Leonardo Electronic Almanac
(ISSN No: 1071 4391) is an international peer reviewed
electronic journal: before acceptance, every article
is reviewed and commented on, usually by three anonymous
reviewers. Based on these reviews, we make a decision
on whether to publish the text. In LEA, we currently
publish roughly 5 - 10% of the texts submitted for
publication consideration.
LEA covers a wide variety of fields, many of
them interdisciplinary and often in emerging areas
of artistic experimentation, research and scholarship.
Our peer-reviewers help us focus on new topics
of artistic interest, as other areas may move
out of the center of artistic experimentation
and become part of established disciplines. In
very new areas of inquiry, it is often difficult
for us to identify three reviewers competent to
review the work; in these cases, we may ask authors
themselves to suggest new reviewers for our peer-review
panel. The LEA network grows and evolves in a
very real sense through this process of collaborative
filtering. We wish to to warmly thank the 2004
reviewers who spent time writing very thoughtful
reviews on a volunteer basis. These reviews both
help us in making publication decisions and help
authors improve their texts.
Thank You Volume 14 (2006) Leonardo Electronic
Almanac Manuscript
Peer Reviewers
Samirah Al-Kasim American University in Cairo
Maria Fernandez Cornell University, U.S.A /Nicaragua
Sue Gollifer University of Brighton, U.K.
Mark Amerika University of Colorado, U.S.A.
Jody Zellen Independent Artist, U.S.A
Prof Beryl Graham University of Sunderland, UK
Chris Byrne Co-Director, Art Research Communication, Edinburgh, U.K.
Anne Galloway Department of Sociology & Anthropology, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada
Derek Freeman U.K.
Heidi Tikka UIAH Media Lab, Finland
Jen Southern Artist and Lecturer, The Portable TV, Huddersfield, U.K.
Julian Priest Advisor, Wireless London Project, U.K.
Julianne Pierce Executive Director, Australian Network for
Art and Technology (ANAT), Australia
Katherine Moriwaki Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
Magda Wesolkowska Anthropologist, University of Montreal, Canada
Michael Longford Department of Design Art, Concordia University, Canada
Michael Naimark Visiting Associate Professor, University of Southern California, USA
Minna Tarkka Director m-cult, centre for new media culture, Helsinki, Finland
Miya Yoshida Malmo Art Academy, Sweden
Naomi Spellman University of California, San Diego, U.S.A.
Natasa Petresin Curator and Project Manager, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Pat Badani Assistant Professor, Illinois State University
Rob van Kranenburg Virtual Platform, Holland
Teri Rueb Department of Digital + Media, Rhode Island School of Design, U.S.A.
Tom Holley Media Centre Network, Huddersfield, U.K.
Charles Alexander Poet/Book Artist/Editor of Chax Press, Tucson, Arizona, U.S.A.
Mark Amerika University of Colorado, Colorado, U.S.A.
Sandy Baldwin West Virginia University, U.S.A.
Maria Damon University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, U.S.A.
Loss Pequeño Glazier Department of Media Study,
State University of New York, Buffalo, U.S.A.
Rita Raley University of California, Santa Barbara, U.S.A.
Alan Sondheim Brooklyn, New York, U.S.A.
Dr Shaun Bailey Concordia University, Canada
Dr John Barber Washington State University, U.S.A.
Dr Marcus Bastos Catholic University of São Paulo, Brazil
Dr Catherine Byron Nottingham Trent University, U.K.
Martha Gabriel Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil
Jeremy Hight Los Angeles Mission College, U.S.A.
Prof Andrew Hugill De Montfort University, U.K.
Prof Alan Liu University of California Santa Barbara, U.S.A.
Simon Mills De Montfort University, U.K.
Dr Sidney Perkowitz Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A.
Gavin Stewart University of Luton, U.K.
Dr Jenny Weight Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Australia
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