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Scott A. Hale

Researcher at University of Oxford

Publications -  94
Citations -  2270

Scott A. Hale is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social media & Collective action. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 91 publications receiving 1792 citations. Previous affiliations of Scott A. Hale include The Turing Institute & Eckerd College.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

User Reviews and Language: How Language Influences Ratings

TL;DR: This paper assesses the similarity in the ratings given by speakers of different languages to London tourist attractions on TripAdvisor and questions the common practice of computing average ratings from reviews in many languages.

Government on the web: about

TL;DR: In this paper, an academic team researched all aspects of citizens, governments and information technologies, particularly the Internet, with an aim to improve knowledge and understanding of digital era government and to help shape policy design.
Posted Content

Investigating Political Participation and Social Information Using Big Data and a Natural Experiment

TL;DR: The introduction of the trending feature on the homepage of the UK government petitions platform had no statistically significant effect on the overall number of signatures per day, but that the distribution of signatures across petitions changes — the most popular petitions gain even more signatures at the expense of those with less signatories.
Journal Article

Iterative 3-D Pose Correction and Content-Based Image Retrieval for Dorsal Fin Recognition

TL;DR: This work presents an application that employs an iterative approach to the alignment of open contours for the purposes of image retrieval and demonstrates its success in identifying individual bottlenose dolphins from the profiles of their dorsal fins.
Journal ArticleDOI

Digital traces of distinction? Popular orientation and user-engagement with status hierarchies in TripAdvisor reviews of cultural organizations:

TL;DR: Overall, it is found that an online space in the cultural sphere in which cultural hierarchies are not relevant is found, and a very small minority of reviewers claim status honor on a variety of bases.