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First Monday, Volume 21
Volume 21, Number 1, 2016
- Jaroslav Svelch, Václav Stetka:
The coup that flopped: Facebook as a platform for emotional protest. - Spencer Jordan:
Hacking the streets: 'Smart' writing in the smart city. - Hemant Purohit, Tanvi Banerjee, Andrew J. Hampton, Valerie L. Shalin, Nayanesh Bhandutia, Amit P. Sheth:
Gender-based violence in 140 characters or fewer: A #BigData case study of Twitter. - Emily Hong:
Digital inequality and racialized place in the 21st century: A case study of San Francisco's Chinatown. - Bethany Hipple Walters, Samantha A. Adams, Roland Bal:
Dynamic of online and off-line watching in self-management programs. - Aravind Sesagiri Raamkumar, Natalie Pang, Schubert Foo:
When countries become the talking point in microblogs: Study on country hashtags in Twitter. - Randall M. Livingstone:
Population automation: An interview with Wikipedia bot pioneer Ram-Man.
Volume 21, Number 2, 2016
- Walid Magdy, Kareem Darwish, Ingmar Weber:
#FailedRevolutions: Using Twitter to study the antecedents of ISIS support. - Yiran Wang, Gloria Mark:
News trustworthiness and verification in China: The tension of dual media channels. - Jörgen Skågeby:
Media futures: Premediation and the politics of performative prototypes. - Jake Wallis, Lisa M. Given:
#digitalactivism: New media and political protest. - Peter James Allen, Lynne D. Roberts:
The impact of academic sponsorship on Web survey dropout and item non-response. - Michael Saker, Leighton Evans:
Locative mobile media and time: Foursquare and technological memory. - Catherine Francis Brooks, P. Bryan Heidorn, Gretchen R. Stahlman, Steven S. Chong:
Working beyond the confines of academic discipline to resolve a real-world problem: A community of scientists discussing long-tail data in the cloud. - Jiyoung Cha:
Television use in the 21st century: An exploration of television and social television use in a multiplatform environment.
Volume 21, Number 3, 2016
- Piotr Urniaz:
Expanding the nationalist echo-chamber into the mainstream: Swedish anti-immigration activity on Twitter, 2010-2013. - Niels van Poecke, Janna Michael:
Bringing the banjo back to life: The field of Dutch independent folk music as participatory culture. - Anja Nylund Hagen:
The metaphors we stream by: Making sense of music streaming. - Francis Dalisay, Matthew J. Kushin, Masahiro Yamamoto, Yung-I Liu, Wayne Buente:
Attachment to Facebook and the civic lives of minority college students in the United States. - Theodore Book, Chris Bronk:
I see you, you see me: Mobile advertisements and privacy. - Elisabeth Montemurro, David Kamerer:
#DearCongress: A public letter. - Jennifer Golbeck:
Negativity and anti-social attention seeking among narcissists on Twitter: A linguistic analysis.
Volume 21, Number 4, 2016
- Joachim Vlieghe, Kelly L. Page, Kris Rutten:
"Twitter, the most brilliant tough love editor you'll ever have." Reading and writing socially during the Twitter Fiction Festival. - Eve Forrest, Alistair S. Duff:
The ecology of the ePundit: Surveying the new opinion-making landscape. - Jan-Hinrik Schmidt:
Twitter friend repertoires: Introducing a methodology to assess patterns of information management on Twitter. - Michelle M. Kazmer, Nicole D. Alemanne, Anne Mendenhall, Paul F. Marty, Sherry A. Southerland, Victor D. Sampson, Ian Douglas, Amanda Clark, Jennifer Schellinger:
"A good day to see a bobcat": Elementary students' online journal entries during a structured observation visit to a wildlife center. - Andrew Tsou, Timothy D. Bowman, Thomas Sugimoto, Vincent Larivière, Cassidy R. Sugimoto:
Self-presentation in scholarly profiles: Characteristics of images and perceptions of professionalism and attractiveness on academic social networking sites. - Maria Lindh, Jan Nolin, Karen Nowé Hedvall:
Pupils in the clouds: Implementation of Google Apps for Education. - Samuel C. Woolley:
Automating power: Social bot interference in global politics.
Volume 21, Number 5, 2016
- Teresa Cerratto-Pargman, Daniel Pargman, Bonnie A. Nardi:
The Internet at the eco-village: Performing sustainability in the twenty-first century. - Asta Zelenkauskaite, Erik P. Bucy:
A scholarly divide: Social media, Big Data, and unattainable scholarship. - Jeffrey Pomerantz, Robin Peek:
Fifty shades of open. - Liz Dowthwaite, Robert J. Houghton, Richard Mortier:
How relevant is copyright to online artists? A qualitative study of understandings, coping strategies, and possible solutions. - Christopher J. Carpenter, Bree McEwan:
The players of micro-dating: Individual and gender differences in goal orientations toward micro-dating apps. - Jessa Lingel, Aram Sinnreich:
Incoded counter-conduct: What the incarcerated can teach us about resisting mass surveillance. - Nora Schmidt:
Tackling complexity in an interdisciplinary scholarly network: Requirements for semantic publishing. - Benjamin Peters:
Excerpts from How Not to Network a Nation: The Uneasy History of the Soviet Internet.
Volume 21, Number 6, 2016
- Michael Zimmer, Anna Lauren Hoffmann:
Preface: A decade of Web 2.0 - Reflections, critical perspectives, and beyond. - Nicholas Proferes:
Web 2.0 user knowledge and the limits of individual and collective power. - Jack Jamieson:
Many (to platform) to many: Web 2.0 application infrastructures. - Oliver L. Haimson, Anna Lauren Hoffmann:
Constructing and enforcing "authentic" identity online: Facebook, real names, and non-normative identities. - David Nemer:
Rethinking social change: The promises of Web 2.0 for the marginalized. - Mathias Klang, Nora Madison:
The domestication of online activism. - Ben Light:
The rise of speculative devices: Hooking up with the bots of Ashley Madison. - Scott Kushner:
Read only: The persistence of lurking in Web 2.0. - Christine T. Wolf:
DIY videos on YouTube: Identity and possibility in the age of algorithms. - Dan Perkel:
Share wars: Sharing, theft, and the everyday production of Web 2.0 on DeviantArt. - Alexander Halavais:
The blogosphere and its problems: Web 2.0 undermining civic Webspaces.
Volume 21, Number 7, 2016
- Yubo Kou, Bonnie A. Nardi:
Rethinking civic computing in China. - Jonathan Mavroudis, Esther Milne:
Researching microcelebrity: Methods, access and labour. - Margaret Jackson, Jonathan O'Donnell, Joann Cattlin:
Simple online privacy for Australia. - Maria Eriksson:
Close reading big data: The Echo Nest and the production of (rotten) music metadata. - Ben Egliston:
Big playerbase, big data: On data analytics methodologies and their applicability to studying multiplayer games and culture. - Andrew Michael Duffy:
Who needs trust when you know everything? Dealing with information abundance on a consumer-review Web site. - Jayan Chirayath Kurian:
User-generated content on Facebook: Implications from the perspective of two organisations. - Shai Ophir:
Big data for the humanities using Google Ngrams: Discovering hidden patterns of conceptual trends.
Volume 21, Number 8, 2016
- Jeff Hemsley:
Studying the viral growth of a connective action network using information event signatures. - Christopher D. F. Honig, Lachlan MacDowall:
Audience constructed genre with Instagram: Street art and graffiti. - Michael Dahlberg-Grundberg, Ragnar Lundström, Simon Lindgren:
Social media and the transnationalization of mass activism: Twitter and the labour movement. - Quinn DuPont, Yuri Takhteyev:
Ordering space: Alternative views of ICT and geography. - Joo-Young Jung:
Connectedness and disconnectedness to new and old media within different age groups. - Daniel Scain Farenzena, Luís da Cunha Lamb, Ricardo Matsumura de Araújo:
The cost of search and evaluation in online problem-solving social networks with financial and non-financial incentives. - Alison N. Novak, Kristine Johnson, Manuel Pontes:
LatinoTwitter: Discourses of Latino civic Engagement in social medie.
Volume 21, Number 9, 2016
- Gowtham Bellala, Bernardo A. Huberman:
Securing private data sharing in multi-party analytics. - Kim Holmberg, Iina Hellsten:
Integrating and differentiating meanings in tweeting about the fifth Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report. - Rich Ling:
Soft coercion: Reciprocal expectations of availability in the use of mobile communication. - Xinning Gui, Julien Forbat, Bonnie A. Nardi, Dan Stokols:
Use of information and communication technology among street drifters in Los Angeles. - Danielle K. Kilgo, Joseph J. Yoo, Vinicio Sinta, Stephanie Geise, Melissa Suran, Thomas J. Johnson:
Led it on Reddit: An exploratory study examining opinion leadership on Reddit. - Gregory D. Saxton, Amanda Ghosh:
Curating for engagement: Identifying the nature and impact of organizational marketing strategies on Pinterest. - Charles Wagner, Ester Aguirre, Erin M. Sumner:
The relationship between Instagram selfies and body image in young adult women.
Volume 21, Number 10, 2016
- Kylie Jarrett, D. E. Wittkower:
Economies of the Internet. - Kylie Jarrett:
Queering alienation in digital media. - Julia Velkova:
Open cultural production and the online gift economy: The case of Blender. - Dylan Eric Wittkower:
Lurkers, creepers, and virtuous interactivity: From property rights to consent and care as a conceptual basis for privacy concerns and information ethics. - Susanna Paasonen:
Fickle focus: Distraction, affect and the production of value in social media. - Sharif Mowlabocus:
The 'mastery' of the swipe: Smartphones, transitional objects and interstitial time. - Holly Kruse:
Terminal markets: Gender and online horse racing economies. - Cindy Tekobbe, John Carter McKnight:
Indigenous cryptocurrency: Affective capitalism and rhetorics of sovereignty. - David Gehring:
The depoliticized politics of crowdfunding: A critical examination of the Darren Wilson crowdfunding campaign. - Roderick Graham:
Nurturing non-market spaces in the digital environment. - Brendan O'Hallarn:
The public sphere and social capital: Unlikely allies in social media interactions?
Volume 21, Number 11, 2016
- Alessandro Bessi, Emilio Ferrara:
Social bots distort the 2016 U.S. Presidential election online discussion. - Umashanthi Pavalanathan, Jacob Eisenstein:
More emojis, less : ) The competition for paralinguistic function in microblog writing. - Helen Kennedy, Rosemary Lucy Hill, William L. Allen, Andy Kirk:
Engaging with (big) data visualizations: Factors that affect engagement and resulting new definitions of effectiveness. - Andrew Tsou:
How does the front page of the Internet behave? Readability, emoticon use, and links on Reddit. - Paul Reilly:
Tweeting for peace? Twitter and the Ardoyne parade dispute in Belfast, July 2014. - Hyunjin Seo, Ren-Whei Harn, Husain Ebrahim, José Aldana:
International students' social media use and social adjustment. - Jette Kofoed, Malene Charlotte Larsen:
A snap of intimacy: Photo-sharing practices among young people on social media. - Lene Pettersen, Anders Olof Larsson:
The winners take it all: A comparative study of Twitter campaigns under pressure.
Volume 21, Number 12, 2016
- Francesca Musiani, Cécile Méadel:
"Reclaiming the Internet" with distributed architectures: An introduction. - Harry Halpin, Alexandre Monnin:
The decentralization of knowledge: How Carnap and Heidegger influenced the Web. - Paris Chrysos:
Monuments of cyberspace: Designing the Internet beyond the network framework. - Primavera De Filippi, Samer Hassan:
Blockchain technology as a regulatory technology: From code is law to law is code. - Mélanie Dulong de Rosnay:
Peer to party: Occupy the law. - Argyro P. Karanasiou:
Law encoded: Towards a free speech policy model based on decentralized architectures. - Federica Giovanella:
Alternative rules for alternative networks? Tort law meets wireless community networks. - Panayotis Antoniadis:
Local networks for local interactions: Four reasons why and a way forward. - Dominique Boullier:
Cosmopolitical composition of distributed architectures.
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