default search action
First Monday, Volume 19
Volume 19, Number 1, January 2014
- Hemant Purohit, Carlos Castillo, Fernando Diaz, Amit P. Sheth, Patrick Meier:
Emergency-relief coordination on social media: Automatically matching resource requests and offers. - Chih-Hui Lai:
Understanding the evolution of bona fide mixed-mode groups: An example of Meetup groups. - Rebecca English:
Rent-a-crowd? Crowdfunding academic research. - Brendan O'Hallarn, Stephen Shapiro:
#NBCFail: A qualitative review of the shared experience as a social movement. - Roderick Lamar Lee, Lynette Kvasny:
Understanding the role of social media in online health: A global perspective on online social support. - Jeongsub Lim:
Redefinition of online scoops: Online journalists' personal and institutional responses to online scoops. - Weiai Wayne Xu, Liangyue Li, Michael A. Stefanone, Yun Fun:
Does social media users' commenting behavior differ by their local community tie? A computer-assisted linguistic analysis approach. - John D. Cokley, Daniel Angus:
The effect that robots instead of spacemen landing on Mars can have on spacecraft development.
Volume 19, Number 2, February 2014
- Erhardt Graeff, Matt Stempeck, Ethan Zuckerman:
The battle for 'Trayvon Martin': Mapping a media controversy online and off-line. - Kevin P. Donovan, Aaron K. Martin:
The rise of African SIM registration: The emerging dynamics of regulatory change. - Liam Mitchell:
Life on automatic: Facebook's archival subject. - Melissa Loudon:
'Research in the wild' in online communities: Reddit's resistance to SOPA. - Bradley C. Love, Michael Mackert:
"You may have a cancer-causing virus and not even know it" Fear appeals in online news. - Anita Howarth, Gemma Martínez Fernández:
Governing risks and benefits: Mobile communication technologies in British universities. - Matthew Trammell:
User investment and behavior policing on 4chan. - Antony Bryant, Uzma Raja:
In the realm of Big Data ...
Volume 19, Number 3, March 2014
- Marco Toledo Bastos, Raquel da Cunha Recuero, Gabriela da Silva Zago:
Taking tweets to the streets: A spatial analysis of the Vinegar Protests in Brazil. - Sky Croeser, Tim Highfield:
Occupy Oakland and #oo: Uses of Twitter within the Occupy movement. - Jes A. Koepfler, Christopher M. Mascaro, Paul T. Jaeger:
Homelessness, wirelessness, and (in)visibility: Critical reflections on the Homeless Hotspots Project and the ensuing online discourse. - Jennie Germann Molz:
Toward a network hospitality. - Katharine Sarikakis, Joan Ramon Rodriguez-Amat:
Intellectual property law change and process: The case of Spanish Ley Sinde as policy laundering. - Erik Choi, Vanessa Kitzie, Chirag Shah:
Investigating motivations and expectations of asking a question in social Q&A. - Indhu Rajagopal:
Does the Internet shape a disciplinary society? The information-knowledge paradox.
Volume 19, Number 4, April 2014
- Dan Jurafsky, Victor Chahuneau, Bryan R. Routledge, Noah A. Smith:
Narrative framing of consumer sentiment in online restaurant reviews. - Axel Bruns, Darryl Woodford, Troy Sadkowsky:
Towards a methodology for examining Twitter follower accession. - Anne-Mette Bech Albrechtslund, Anders Albrechtslund:
Social media as leisure culture. - Manuel Goyanes, George Sylvie:
Customer orientation on online newspaper business models with paid content strategies: An empirical study. - Stephanie Vie:
In defense of "slacktivism": The Human Rights Campaign Facebook logo as digital activism. - Anders Olof Larsson, Jakob Svensson:
Politicians online - Identifying current research opportunities. - Dylan Eric Wittkower:
Facebook and dramauthentic identity: A post-Goffmanian theory of identity performance on SNS.
- Suen de Andrade e Silva:
Review of The culture of connectivity: A critical history of social media.
Volume 19, Number 5, May 2014
- Shawna Kelly, Bonnie A. Nardi:
Playing with sustainability: Using video games to simulate futures of scarcity. - Muhammad Adnan, Paul A. Longley, Shariq M. Khan:
Social dynamics of Twitter usage in London, Paris, and New York City. - Francisco Paulo Jamil Almeida Marques, Jakson Alves de Aquino, Edna Miola:
Congressmen in the age of social network sites: Brazilian representatives and Twitter use. - Aaron Delwiche:
Scanner tags, comic book piracy and participatory culture. - Patryk Galuszka, Victor Bystrov:
The rise of fanvestors: A study of a crowdfunding community. - Michael Stephens, David Wedaman, Ellen Freeman, Alison Hicks, Gail Matthews-DeNatale, Diane Wahl, Lisa M. Spiro:
Academic 15: Evaluating library and IT staff responses to disruption and change in higher education. - Mei-Yuit Chan, Shameem Rafik-Galea, Ngee-Thai Yap:
Hidden participation in the public sphere: Understanding Malaysian university students' public discourse practices in cyberspace.
- David Pettersen:
Review of Beyond choices: The design of ethical gameplay.
Volume 19, Number 6, June 2014
- Hamid R. Ekbia, Bonnie A. Nardi:
Heteromation and its (dis)contents: The invisible division of labor between humans and machines. - Katy E. Pearce, Deen Freelon, Sarah Kendzior:
The effect of the Internet on civic engagement under authoritarianism: The case of Azerbaijan. - Alex Clark, Brenda Chawner:
Enclosing the public domain: The restriction of public domain books in a digital environment. - Nicola Wright:
Death and the Internet: The implications of the digital afterlife. - Robin Rymarczuk, Maarten Derksen:
Different spaces: Exploring Facebook as heterotopia. - Tiziano Bonini:
The new role of radio and its public in the age of social network sites.
Volume 19, Number 7, July 2014
- Elizeu Santos-Neto, David Condon, Nazareno Andrade, Adriana Iamnitchi, Matei Ripeanu:
Reuse, temporal dynamics, interest sharing, and collaboration in social tagging systems. - Patrick Chin-Hooi Soh, John P. Charlton, Kok-Wai Chew:
The influence of parental and peer attachment on Internet usage motives and addiction. - Christoph Lutz, Christian Pieter Hoffmann, Miriam Meckel:
Beyond just politics: A systematic literature review of online participation. - Sophia Alim:
An initial exploration of ethical research practices regarding automated data extraction from online social media user profiles. - Michelangelo Magasic:
Travel blogging: An auto-ethnographic study of how online interactions influence a journey. - Jessa Lingel, Bradley Wade Bishop:
The GeoWeb and everyday life: An analysis of spatial tactics and volunteered geographic information. - Zeynep Tufekci:
Engineering the public: Big data, surveillance and computational politics.
Volume 19, Number 8, August 2014
- Martin Hentschel, Omar Alonso:
Follow the money: A study of cashtags on Twitter. - Kate M. Miltner:
"There's no place for lulz on LOLCats": The role of genre, gender, and group identity in the interpretation and enjoyment of an Internet meme. - Caren Crowley, Wilfried Daniels, Rafael Bachiller, Wouter Joosen, Danny Hughes:
Increasing user participation: An exploratory study of querying on the Facebook and Twitter platforms. - Amit Rechavi, Sheizaf Rafaeli:
Active players in a network tell the story: Parsimony in modeling huge networks. - Jessica Roberts, Michael Koliska:
The effects of ambient media: What unplugging reveals about being plugged in. - Sara Mannheimer, Ayoung Yoon, Jane Greenberg, Elena Feinstein, Ryan Scherle:
A balancing act: The ideal and the realistic in developing Dryad's preservation policy. - Jakob Svensson:
Activist capitals in network societies: Towards a typology for studying networking power within contemporary activist demands. - Stacey L. Morrison, Ricardo Gómez:
Pushback: Expressions of resistance to the "evertime" of constant online connectivity.
Volume 19, Number 9, September 2014
- Kaja Scheliga, Sascha Friesike:
Putting open science into practice: A social dilemma? - Matthew X. Curinga:
Critical analysis of interactive media with software affordances. - Devendra Potnis, Kanchan Deosthali:
Factors influencing adoption of Web 1.0, Web 2.0, and mobile technologies by the growth engine of the U.S. economy. - David Kamerer:
Understanding the Yelp review filter: An exploratory study. - Athanasios Kokkos, Theodoros Tzouramanis:
A robust gender inference model for online social networks and its application to LinkedIn and Twitter. - Jason R. Simpson:
Towards a relational theory of IS/IT adoption and usage: Metaphor and lessons from interpersonal relationship literature. - Tamas Tofalvy:
'MySpace bands' and 'tagging wars': Conflicts of genre, work ethic and media platforms in an extreme music scene. - David Michael Douglas:
The social goods of information networks: Complex equality and Wu's separation principles.
Volume 19, Number 10, October 2014
- Raphaël Nowak, Andrew Whelan:
Editorial: On the 15-year anniversary of Napster - Digital music as boundary object. - David Carter, Ian Rogers:
Fifteen years of 'Utopia': Napster and Pitchfork as technologies of democratization. - Dan L. Burk:
Copyright and the architecture of digital delivery. - Andrea L. Guzman, Steve Jones:
Napster and the press: Framing music technology. - Ard Huizing, Jan A. van der Wal:
Explaining the rise and fall of the Warez MP3 scene: An empirical account from the inside. - Florence Nowak:
Challenging opportunities: When Indian regional music gets online. - Philip Stade:
"This video is not available in Germany": Online discourses on the German collecting society GEMA and YouTube. - Margie Borschke:
The new romantics: Authenticity, participation and the aesthetics of piracy. - Raphaël Nowak:
Investigating the interactions between individuals and music technologies within contemporary modes of music consumption. - Monika Stern:
"Mi wantem musik blong mi hemi blong evriwan" ["I want my music to be for everyone"]: Digital developments, copyright and music circulation in Port Vila, Vanuatu. - Jhessica Reia:
Napster and beyond: How online music can transform the dynamics of musical production and consumption in DIY subcultures. - Haftor Medbøe, José Dias:
Improvisation in the digital age: New narratives in jazz promotion and dissemination. - Stéphanie Khoury, Joséphine Simonnot:
Applications and implications of digital audio databases for the field of ethnomusicology: A discussion of the CNRS - Musée de l'Homme sound archives.
Volume 19, Number 11, 2014
- Zubair Nabi:
R̶e̶s̶i̶s̶t̶a̶n̶c̶e̶ censorship is futile. - Francesca Musiani, Enoch Peserico:
A second-hand market for digital goods? - Filippo Trevisan:
Search engines: From social science objects to academic inquiry tools. - Anne Kaun, Christian Schwarzenegger:
"No media, less life?" Online disconnection in mediatized worlds. - Katy Jordan:
Academics and their online networks: Exploring the role of academic social networking sites. - Marcus Messner, Marcia W. DiStaso, Yan Jin, Shana Meganck, Scott Sherman, Sally Norton:
Influencing public opinion from corn syrup to obesity: A longitudinal analysis of the references for nutritional entries on Wikipedia. - Paul T. Jaeger, Ursula Gorham, John Carlo Bertot, Natalie Greene Taylor, Elizabeth Larson, Ruth Lincoln, Jonathan Lazar, Brian Wentz:
Connecting government, libraries and communities: Information behavior theory and information intermediaries in the design of LibEGov.org. - Nina Verishagen, Carolyn Hank:
Are there birds in the library? The extent of Twitter adoption and use by Canadian academic libraries.
Volume 19, Number 12, 2014
- Karin van Es, Daniela van Geenen, Thomas Boeschoten:
Mediating the Black Pete discussion on Facebook: Slacktivism, flaming wars, and deliberation. - George N. Dafermos, Michel J. G. van Eeten:
Images of innovation in discourses of free and open source software. - Ole J. Mjøs, Hallvard Moe, Vilde Schanke Sundet:
The functions of buzzwords: A comparison of 'Web 2.0' and 'telematics'. - Sun Kyong Lee, James E. Katz:
Disconnect: A case study of short-term voluntary mobile phone non-use. - Federica Fornaciari:
Pricey privacy: Framing the economy of information in the digital age. - Laura Morris:
Contextualizing the power of social media: Technology, communication and the Libya Crisis. - Steven Corbett:
Challenging the commodification of public spheres: The hacker work ethic in a free media lab.
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.