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The Oxford handbook of networked communication /

The Oxford handbook of networked communication / Networked communication edited by Brooke Foucault Welles and Sandra Gonzâalez-Bailâon. - 1 online resource (616 pages). - Monthly, 2018-2020 - Oxford handbooks online . - Oxford handbooks online. .

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: Communication in the Networked Age / The New Dynamics of Organizational Change / Online Communication by Emergency Responders during Crisis Events / Understanding Social Dynamics Online: Social Networks, Social Capital, and Social Interactions / Revolutionizing Mental Health with Social Media / The Analysis of Social Capital in Digital Environments: A Social Investment Approach / Multiplying the Medium: Tie Strength, Social Role, and Mobile Media Multiplexity / Mobile Space and Agility as the Subversive Partner / Our Stage, Our Streets: Brooklyn Drag and the Queer Imaginary / Digital Mapping of Urban Mobility Patterns / Political Communication Research in a Networked World / Networks and Information Flow: The Second Golden Age / Moving Beyond Sentiment Analysis: Social Media and Emotions in Political Communication / Dynamics of Attention and Public Opinion in Social Media / A Satisficing Search Model of Text Production / Modeling and Measuring Deliberation Online / Studying Networked Communication in the Middle East: Social Disrupter and Social Observatory / The Ethics of Digital Research / Unintended Consequences of Using Digital Methods in Difficult Research Environments / A Practitioner's Guide to Ethical Web Data Collection / Responsible Research on Social Networks: Dilemmas and Solutions / Digital Trace Data and Social Research: A Proactive Research Ethics / Partition-Specific Network Analysis of Digital Trace Data: Research Questions and Tools / Conclusion: The Past and Future of Communication Research / Ethical Issues in Internet Research: The Case of China / One Foot on the Streets, One Foot on the Web: Analyzing the Ecosystem of Protest Movements in an Era of Pervasive Digital Communication / Research on Mobile Phone Data in the Global South: Opportunities and Challenges / The Neuroscience of Information Sharing / Dynamical Processes in Time-Varying Networks / Rebooting Mass Communication: Using Computational and Network Tools to Rebuild Media Theory / Propagation Phenomena in Social Media / How Can Computational Social Science Motivate the Development of Theories, Data, and Methods to Advance Our Understanding of Communication and Organizational Dynamics? / Studying Populations of Online Communities / Gender and Networks in Virtual Worlds / Brooke Foucault Welles, Sandra Gonzâalez-Bailâon -- Matthew S. Weber -- Emma S. Spiro -- Nicole Ellison -- Munmun De Choudhury -- K. Hazel Kwon -- Jack Jamieson, Jeffrey Boase, Tetsuro Kobayashi -- Carolyn Marvin -- Jessa Lingel -- Douglas J. Wiebe, Christopher N. Morrison -- Michael X. Delli Carpini -- David Lazer -- Jaime E. Settle -- Emilio Ferrara -- Drew B. Margolin -- Nick Beauchamp -- Javier Borge-Holthoefer, Muzammil M. Hussain, Ingmar Weber -- Jeffrey T. Hancock -- Katy E. Pearce -- Alan Mislove, Christo Wilson -- Jon Crowcroft, Hamed Haddadi, Tristan Henderson -- Ericka Menchen-Trevino -- Deen Freelon -- Sandra Gonzâalez-Bailâon, Brooke Foucault Welles -- Bo Mai, Maria Repnikova -- Paolo Gerbaudo -- Seyram Avle, Emmanuel Quartey, David Hutchful -- Christin Scholz, Emily B. Falk -- Bruno Gonðcalves, Nicola Perra -- Katherine Ognyanova -- Meeyoung Cha, Fabrâicio Benevenuto, Saptarshi Ghosh, Krishna Gummadi -- Noshir Contractor -- Benjamin Mako Hill, Aaron Shaw -- Grace Benefield, Cuihua Shen.

Communication technologies, including the Internet, social media, and countless online applications, create the infrastructure and interface through which many of our interactions take place today. This form of networked communication creates new questions about how we establish relationships, engage in public, build a sense of identity, and delimit the private domain. Digital technologies have also enabled new ways of observing the world; many of our daily interactions leave a digital trail that, if followed, can help us unravel the rhythms of social life and the complexity of the world we inhabit, including dynamics of change. The analysis of digital data requires partnerships across disciplinary boundaries that are still uncommon. This book bridges academic silos so that we can address the big puzzles that beat at the heart of social life in this networked age.

9780190460532 (online resource) : No price


Digital media--Social aspects.
Online social networks.

HM851

302.231

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