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First Monday, Volume 20
Volume 20, Number 1, 2015
- Paul A. Watters:
Censorship is f̶u̶t̶i̶l̶e̶ possible but difficult: A study in algorithmic ethnography. - Andrea Wiggins, Kevin Crowston:
Surveying the citizen science landscape. - Tim Highfield, Tama Leaver:
A methodology for mapping Instagram hashtags. - Brittany White, Heather Castleden, Anatoliy A. Gruzd:
Talking to Twitter users: Motivations behind Twitter use on the Alberta oil sands and the Northern Gateway Pipeline. - Georgia Gaden, Delia Dumitrica:
The 'real deal': Strategic authenticity, politics and social media. - Marian Adolf, Dennis Deicke:
New modes of integration: Individuality and sociality in digital networks. - Rojers P. Joseph, Shishir K. Jha:
Digitization, Internet publishing and the revival of scholarly monographs: An empirical study in India.
Volume 20, Number 2, 2015
- Morten Fjeld, Pawel W. Wozniak, Josh Cowls, Bonnie A. Nardi:
Ad hoc encounters with big data: Engaging citizens in conversations around tabletops. - Alison J. Head, Michele Van Hoeck, Deborah S. Garson:
Lifelong learning in the digital age: A content analysis of recent research on participation. - Jaime Banks:
Object, Me, Symbiote, Other: A social typology of player-avatar relationships. - James Campbell:
Potential contributor perspectives on desirable characteristics of an online data environment for spatially-referenced data. - Irfan Chaudhry:
#Hashtagging hate: Using Twitter to track racism online. - Steven Lloyd Wilson:
How to control the Internet: Comparative political implications of the Internet's engineering. - Franklin Nii Amankwah Yartey:
ACT UP: A network's resistance through constitutive rhetoric.
Volume 20, Number 3, 2015
- Tatiana Pontes, Elizeu Santos-Neto, Jussara M. Almeida, Matei Ripeanu:
Where are the 'key' words? Optimizing multimedia textual attributes to improve viewership. - Cassidy R. Sugimoto, Carolyn Hank, Timothy D. Bowman, Jeffrey Pomerantz:
Friend or faculty: Social networking sites, dual relationships, and context collapse in higher education. - Emily van der Nagel, Jordan Frith:
Anonymity, pseudonymity, and the agency of online identity: Examining the social practices of r/Gonewild. - Jinyoung Kim, June Ahn, Jessica Vitak:
Korean mothers' KakaoStory use and its relationship to psychological well-being. - Isidoropaolo Casteltrione:
The Internet, social networking Web sites and political participation research: Assumptions and contradictory evidence. - Gry Hasselbalch Lapenta, Rikke Frank Jørgensen:
Youth, privacy and online media: Framing the right to privacy in public policy-making. - Nico Meissner:
50 years on: Galtung and Ruge's news value factors revisited in online audience building for independent films.
Volume 20, Number 4, 2015
- Viktor Arvidsson, Anna Foka:
Digital gender: Perspective, phenomena, practice. - Nishant Shah:
Sluts 'r' us: Intersections of gender, protocol and agency in the digital age. - Jenny Sundén:
On trans-, glitch, and gender as machinery of failure. - Lewis Mark Webb:
Shame transfigured: Slut-shaming from Rome to cyberspace. - Roopika Risam:
Toxic femininity 4.0. - Patrizia Marti, Jeroen Peeters, Ambra Trotto, Michele Tittarelli, Nicholas True, Nigel Papworth, Caroline Hummels:
Embodying culture: Interactive installation on women's rights. - Alex McAuley:
Seeing through the fog: Digital problems and solutions for studying ancient women.
Volume 20, Number 5, 2015
- Francine Barone, David Zeitlyn, Viktor Mayer-Schönberger:
Learning from failure: The case of the disappearing Web site. - Kim Sheehan:
A change in the climate: Online social capital and the spiral of silence. - Shin Haeng Lee:
Can regimes really discourage social networking? Urbanization, mobile phone use, and the dictator's plight. - Cat Jones:
Slacktivism and the social benefits of social video: Sharing a video to 'help' a cause. - Niels Brügger:
A brief history of Facebook as a media text: The development of an empty structure. - Karin Hansson:
Controlling singularity: The role of online communication for young visual artists' identity management. - Paul Caplan:
The app-object economy: We're all remix artists now.
Volume 20, Number 6, 2015
- Andreas Kratky, Virginia Kuhn, Jon Olav Eikenes:
Coping with the big data dump: Towards a framework for enhanced information representation. - Noriko Hara, Jylisa Doney:
Social construction of knowledge in Wikipedia. - Barbara Kieslinger:
Academic peer pressure in social media: Experiences from the heavy, the targeted and the restricted user. - Veikko Eranti, Markku Lonkila:
The social significance of the Facebook Like button. - Michael M. Widdersheim:
E-books: Histories, trajectories, futures. - Rakesh Babu, Paige Fuller:
Towards more helpful bus tracker apps for blind transit riders. - Francisco Segado-Boj, María Ángeles Chaparro Domínguez, Cristina Castillo Rodríguez:
Use of Twitter among Spanish communication-area faculty: Research, teaching and visibility.
Volume 20, Number 7, 2015
- Andrea Ballatore:
Google chemtrails: A methodology to analyze topic representation in search engine results. - Jathan Sadowski, Frank Pasquale:
The spectrum of control: A social theory of the smart city. - Matthew Pittman, Alec C. Tefertiller:
With or without you: Connected viewing and co-viewing Twitter activity for traditional appointment and asynchronous broadcast television models. - Angela M. Cirucci:
Redefining privacy and anonymity through social networking affordances. - Jon Hoem, Ture Schwebs:
Digital commonplacing. - Michael Zimmer:
The Twitter Archive at the Library of Congress: Challenges for information practice and information policy. - Renee Hobbs, Silke Grafe:
YouTube pranking across cultures.
Volume 20, Number 8, 2015
- Daniel Pargman, Barath Raghavan:
Introduction to LIMITS '15: First workshop on computing within limits. - M. Six Silberman:
Information systems for the age of consequences. - Bran Knowles, Elina Eriksson:
Deviant and guilt-ridden: Computing within psychological limits. - Jay Chen:
Computing within limits and ICTD. - Christian Remy, Elaine M. Huang:
Limits and sustainable interaction design: Obsolescence in a future of collapse and resource scarcity. - Barath Raghavan:
Abstraction, indirection, and Sevareid's Law: Towards benign computing. - Xinning Gui, Bonnie A. Nardi:
Foster the "mores", counter the "limits". - Birgit Penzenstadler, Ankita Raturi, Debra J. Richardson, M. Six Silberman, Bill Tomlinson:
Collapse (and other futures) software engineering. - Teresa Cerratto-Pargman, Somya Joshi:
Understanding limits from a social ecological perspective. - Bonnie A. Nardi:
Inequality and limits. - Kentaro Toyama:
Preliminary thoughts on a taxonomy of value for sustainable computing. - John Brock, Donald J. Patterson:
Cacophony: Building a resilient Internet of things. - Donald J. Patterson:
Haitian resiliency: A case study in intermittent infrastructure. - Bill Tomlinson:
Toward a computational immigration assistant. - Daniel Pargman:
On the limits of limits.
Volume 20, Number 9, 2015
- Katie Ellis, Mike Kent:
Disability and the Internet in 2015: Where to now? - Paul T. Jaeger:
Disability, human rights, and social justice: The ongoing struggle for online accessibility and equality. - Justin Brown, Scott Hollier:
The challenges of Web accessibility: The technical and social aspects of a truly universal Web. - David Kreps, Mhorag Goff:
Code in action: Closing the black box of WCAG 2.0, A Latourian reading of Web accessibility. - G. Anthony Giannoumis:
Auditing Web accessibility: The role of interest organizations in promoting compliance through certification. - Weiqin Chen, Norun Christine Sanderson, Siri Kessel, Aleksandra Królak:
Heuristic evaluations of the accessibility of learning management systems (LMSs) as authoring tools for teachers. - Denise Wood:
Problematizing the inclusion agenda in higher education: Towards a more inclusive technology enhanced learning model. - Elizabeth Ellcessor:
Blurred lines: Accessibility, disability, and definitional limitations. - Katie Ellis, Mike Kent:
Accessible television: The new frontier in disability media studies brings together industry innovation, government legislation and online activism. - Gerard Goggin:
Disability and mobile Internet.
Volume 20, Number 10, 2015
- Joseph Reagle:
Following the Joneses: FOMO and conspicuous sociality. - Satomi Sugiyama:
Kawaii meiru and Maroyaka neko: Mobile emoji for relationship maintenance and aesthetic expressions among Japanese teens. - Sun-ha Hong:
Presence, or the sense of being-there and being-with in the new media society. - Matthew Pittman, Kim Sheehan:
Sprinting a media marathon: Uses and gratifications of binge-watching television through Netflix. - Frédérik Lesage, Louis Rinfret:
Shifting media imaginaries of the Web. - Fidele Vlavo:
Framing digital activism: The spectre of cyberterrorism. - David Chapman, Katrina Miller-Stevens, John C. Morris, Brendan O'Hallarn:
A new model to explore non-profit social media use for advocacy and civic engagement. - John C. Garrison:
Getting a "quick fix": First-year college students' use of Wikipedia.
Volume 20, Number 11, 2015
- Eric P. S. Baumer, Morgan G. Ames, Jenna Burrell, Jed R. Brubaker, Paul Dourish:
Why study technology non-use? - David A. Banks:
Lines of power: Availability to networks as a social phenomenon. - Ricardo Gomez, Kirsten Foot, Meg Young, Rose Paquet Kinsley, Stacey L. Morrison:
Pulling the plug visually: Images of resistance to ICTs and connectivity. - Neha Kumar:
The gender-technology divide or perceptions of non-use? - Ethan R. Plaut:
Technologies of avoidance: The swear jar and the cell phone. - Karen E. C. Levy:
The user as network. - Rivka Ribak, Michele Rosenthal:
Smartphone resistance as media ambivalence. - Lindsay Ems:
Exploring ethnographic techniques for ICT non-use research: An Amish case study. - Nancy A. Van House:
Entangled with technology: Engagement with Facebook among the young old. - Claes Thorén, Andreas Kitzmann:
Replicants, imposters and the real deal: Issues of non-use and technology resistance in vintage and software instruments.
Volume 20, Number 12, 2015
- William H. Allendorfer, Susan C. Herring:
ISIS vs. the U.S. government: A war of online video propaganda. - Andres Guadamuz, Christopher T. Marsden:
Blockchains and Bitcoin: Regulatory responses to cryptocurrencies. - Anja Bechmann, Peter Bjerregaard Vahlstrup:
Studying Facebook and Instagram data: The Digital Footprints software. - Anders Olof Larsson:
Green light for interaction: Party use of social media during the 2014 Swedish election year. - Chirag Shah, Roberto I. González-Ibáñez, Pam Read:
Investigating impacts of spatial configurations on collaborative writing. - John Prpic, James Melton, Araz Taeihagh, Terry Anderson:
MOOCs and crowdsourcing: Massive courses and massive resources. - J. Evans Ochola, Dorothy M. Persson, Lisa A. Schumacher, Mitchell D. Lingo:
Wikipedia: the difference between information acquisition and learning knowledge.
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