- COVID-19
- Intranets
- News
- Contact Us
-
Quick Links
- Careers
- Emergencies
- Guides & Forms
- Resources
- Digital portals
- Community
- Media
- FR
-
Studies
We teach the next generation of researchers to develop scientific, social, and technological innovations.
-
Research
We find solutions through interdisciplinary research and industry or public and community partnerships.
-
INRS
We play an active role in Québec's economic, social, and cultural development.
Boasting a remarkable capacity for analyzing new information and communication technologies and their impact on cultural production, practice, and policy, the Laboratory on New Digital Environments and Cultural Intermediation (NENIC Lab) takes a resolutely multidisciplinary and comparative approach to research.
Jonathan Roberge, professor and scientific director of the NENIC Lab
The NENIC Lab provides analysis, diagnostics, and innovative solutions to partners and policy makers dealing with shifts in digital culture.
Researchers at the NENIC Lab use an array of high-performance mobile IT equipment that enables them to:
- Create and add to a qualitative database using a variety of collection techniques (e.g., camcorders for recording audio/video data)
- Boost capacity for cross-referencing multiple data and offer a rigorous, multisite, and multilevel comparative approach. Computers are equipped with NVivo9 software and connected through the NVivo server
- Store and back up high volumes of data
- Work on-the-go due to the comparative nature of their research and frequent trips between Montreal and Quebec City
The NENIC Lab is available to INRS Urbanisation Culture Société Research Centre faculty, students, and research staff for their projects.
Lab resources can also be used for external collaborations or research and development contracts.
The NENIC Lab produces new knowledge in synch with our ever-changing digital environments to help us better understand the profound changes underway.
Research conducted at the lab is used to develop public policy, such as the development of the Conseils des arts et des lettres du Québec (CALQ) digital policy. It also helps all sectors of the culture industry (film, publishing, music, etc.) adapt to the substantial challenges of new technology.
The NENIC lab was created with funding from the John. R. Evans Leaders Fund of the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI).
Contacts
Jonathan Roberge
Professor and Scientific Director
Phone: 418-687-6401
Email: jonathan.roberge@ucs.dev.inrs.ca
Laboratory on New Digital Environments and Cultural Intermediation (NENIC)
Institut national de la recherche scientifique
Urbanisation Culture Société Research Centre
490 de la Couronne
Québec City, Quebec G1K 9A9
Canada
View on the map