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  1. Lay Observers, Telegraph Lines, and Kansas Weather: The Field Network as a Mode of Knowledge Production.Jeremy Vetter - 2011 - Science in Context 24 (2):259-280.
    ArgumentThis paper examines the field network – linking together lay observers in geographically distributed locations with a central figure who aggregated their locally produced observations into more general, regional knowledge – as a historically emergent mode of knowledge production. After discussing the significance of weather knowledge as a vital domain in which field networks have operated, it describes and analyzes how a more robust and systematized weather observing field network became established and maintained on the ground in the early twentieth (...)
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  • Introduction: Lay Participation in the History of Scientific Observation.Jeremy Vetter - 2011 - Science in Context 24 (2):127-141.
    Why and how have lay people participated in scientific observation? And on what terms have they collaborated with experts and professionals? We have become accustomed to the involvement of lay observers in the practice of many branches of science, including both the natural and human sciences, usually as subordinates to experts. The current surge of interest in this phenomenon, as well as in the closely related topic of how expertise has been constructed, suggests that historians of science can offer a (...)
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  • Electrical technoscience and physics in transition, 1880–1920.Stathis Arapostathis & Graeme Gooday - 2013 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 44 (2):202-211.
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  • Sex in the laboratory: the Family Planning Association and contraceptive science in Britain, 1929–1959.Natasha Szuhan - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Science 51 (3):487-510.
    Scientific and medical contraceptive standards are commonly believed to have begun with the advent of the oral contraceptive pill in the late 1950s. This article explains that in Britain contraceptive standards were imagined and implemented at least two decades earlier by the Family Planning Association, which sought to legitimize contraceptive methods, practice and provision through the foundation of the field of contraceptive science. This article charts the origins of the field, investigating the three methods the association devised and employed to (...)
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  • Combative patenting: Military entrepreneurship in First World War telecommunications.Graeme Gooday - 2013 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 44 (2):247-258.
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