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Showing papers by "Eric Gilbert published in 2008"


Proceedings ArticleDOI
06 Apr 2008
TL;DR: Behavioral differences between rural and urban social media users are investigated and it is indicated that rural people articulate far fewer friends online, and those friends live much closer to home.
Abstract: History repeatedly demonstrates that rural communities have unique technological needs. Yet, we know little about how rural communities use modern technologies, so we lack knowledge on how to design for them. To address this gap, our empirical paper investigates behavioral differences between more than 3,000 rural and urban social media users. Using a dataset collected from a broadly popular social network site, we analyze users' profiles, 340,000 online friendships and 200,000 interpersonal messages. Using social capital theory, we predict differences between rural and urban users and find strong evidence supporting our hypotheses. Namely, rural people articulate far fewer friends online, and those friends live much closer to home. Our results also indicate that the groups have substantially different gender distributions and use privacy features differently. We conclude by discussing design implications drawn from our findings; most importantly, designers should reconsider the binary friend-or-not model to allow for incremental trust-building.

155 citations



01 Jan 2008
TL;DR: This paper discusses the problem and proposes four interaction techniques to help visualization annotation scale for a Web audience and strives for clarity of the underlying visualization while providing integrated and rapid feedback about.
Abstract: Visualization annotation allows users to communicate within a visualization as opposed to outside it. While effective in research settings, the technique has not found a home on today’s social data analysis sites. Scaling the technique to an Internet-sized audience represents the most significant obstacle to its widespread adoption. In this paper, we discuss the problem and propose four interaction techniques to help visualization annotation scale for a Web audience. Our designs strive for clarity of the underlying visualization while providing integrated and rapid feedback about