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JournalISSN: 1369-118X

Information, Communication & Society 

Routledge
About: Information, Communication & Society is an academic journal published by Routledge. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Social media & The Internet. It has an ISSN identifier of 1369-118X. Over the lifetime, 2088 publications have been published receiving 89518 citations. The journal is also known as: ICS & Information, communication and society.


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Journal ArticleDOI
danah boyd1, Kate Crawford1
TL;DR: The era of Big Data has begun as discussed by the authors, where diverse groups argue about the potential benefits and costs of analyzing genetic sequences, social media interactions, health records, phone logs, government records, and other digital traces left by people.
Abstract: The era of Big Data has begun. Computer scientists, physicists, economists, mathematicians, political scientists, bio-informaticists, sociologists, and other scholars are clamoring for access to the massive quantities of information produced by and about people, things, and their interactions. Diverse groups argue about the potential benefits and costs of analyzing genetic sequences, social media interactions, health records, phone logs, government records, and other digital traces left by people. Significant questions emerge. Will large-scale search data help us create better tools, services, and public goods? Or will it usher in a new wave of privacy incursions and invasive marketing? Will data analytics help us understand online communities and political movements? Or will it be used to track protesters and suppress speech? Will it transform how we study human communication and culture, or narrow the palette of research options and alter what ‘research’ means? Given the rise of Big Data as a socio-tech...

3,955 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results from a series of social network studies of media use reveal that those more strongly tied used more media to communicate than weak ties, and that media use within groups conformed to a unidimensional scale, leading to a number of implications regarding media and Internet connectivity.
Abstract: This paper explores the impact of communication media and the Internet on connectivity between people. Results from a series of social network studies of media use are used as background for exploration of these impacts. These studies explored the use of all available media among members of an academic research group and among distance learners. Asking about media use as well as about the strength of the tie between communicating pairs revealed that those more strongly tied used more media to communicate than weak ties, and that media use within groups conformed to a unidimensional scale, showing a configuration of different tiers of media use supporting social networks of different ties strengths. These results lead to a number of implications regarding media and Internet connectivity, including: how media use can be added to characteristics of social network ties; how introducing a medium can create latent tie connectivity among group members that provides the technical means for activating weak ties, a...

1,079 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This chapter discusses how Wiki-Government and other open-source technologies can make government decisionmaking more expert and more democratic.
Abstract: Big Data: A Revolution That Will Transform How We Live, Work, and Think is a piece on the advancements, uses, and promises of big data. Viktor Mayer-Schonberger, Professor of Internet Governance an...

771 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the results of a meta-analysis of research on social media use and participation, concluding that more than 80% of the metadata demonstrate a positive relationship between social media usage and participation.
Abstract: Social media has skyrocketed to popularity in the past few years. The Arab Spring in 2011 as well as the 2008 and 2012 Obama campaigns have fueled interest in how social media might affect citizens’ participation in civic and political life. In response, researchers have produced 36 studies assessing the relationship between social media use and participation in civic and political life. This manuscript presents the results of a meta-analysis of research on social media use and participation. Overall, the metadata demonstrate a positive relationship between social media use and participation. More than 80% of coefficients are positive. However, questions remain about whether the relationship is causal and transformative. Only half of the coefficients were statistically significant. Studies using panel data are less likely to report positive and statistically significant coefficients between social media use and participation, compared to cross-sectional surveys. The metadata also suggest that social media...

722 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors locate existing scholarship within a common framework for explaining the emergence, development and outcomes of social movement activity, and provide a logical structure that facilitates conversations across the field around common issues of c...
Abstract: New Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) are changing the ways in which activists communicate, collaborate and demonstrate. Scholars from a wide range of disciplines, among them sociology, political science and communication, are working to understand these changes. The diversity of perspectives represented enriches the literature, providing an abundant repertoire of tools for examining these phenomena, but it is also an obstacle to understanding. Few works are commonly cited across the field, and most are known only within the confines of their discipline. The absence of a common set of organizing theoretical principles can make it difficult to find connections between these disparate works beyond their common subject matter. This paper responds by locating existing scholarship within a common framework for explaining the emergence, development and outcomes of social movement activity. This provides a logical structure that facilitates conversations across the field around common issues of c...

698 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202361
2022115
2021254
2020196
2019114
201888