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New Media & Society, Volume 18
Volume 18, Number 1, January 2016
- Steve Jones, David W. Park:
Editorial. 3-4
- Chingching Chang:
Responses to conflicting information in computer-mediated communication: Gender difference as an example. 5-24 - Andrew Rojecki, Sharon Meraz:
Rumors and factitious informational blends: The role of the web in speculative politics. 25-43 - Sakari Taipale:
Do the mobile-rich get richer? Internet use, travelling and social differentiations in Finland. 44-61 - Megan K. Halpern, Lee Humphreys:
Iphoneography as an emergent art world. 62-81 - Elsa Costa e Silva:
Beyond links: Understanding meaning and control in political blogs. 82-98 - Maximillian Hänska Ahy:
Networked communication and the Arab Spring: Linking broadcast and social media. 99-116 - Blake Hallinan, Ted Striphas:
Recommended for you: The Netflix Prize and the production of algorithmic culture. 117-137 - Stephanie M. Santoso, Stephen B. Wicker:
The future of three-dimensional printing: Intellectual property or intellectual confinement? 138-155
- Sophie Lecheler, Sanne Kruikemeier:
Re-evaluating journalistic routines in a digital age: A review of research on the use of online sources. 156-171
Volume 18, Number 2, February 2016
- DJ Wolover:
An issue of attribution: The Tunisian revolution, media interaction, and agency. 185-200 - Julie Uldam:
Corporate management of visibility and the fantasy of the post-political: Social media and surveillance. 201-219 - Dennis O. Frohlich, Anne Zmyslinski-Seelig:
How Uncover Ostomy challenges ostomy stigma, and encourages others to do the same. 220-238 - Anne C. Fletcher, Bethany L. Blair:
Implications of the family expert role for parental rules regarding adolescent use of social technologies. 239-256 - Mareike Jenner:
Is this TVIV? On Netflix, TVIII and binge-watching. 257-273 - Anders Olof Larsson:
Online, all the time? A quantitative assessment of the permanent campaign on Facebook. 274-292 - Ian Graves, Nora McDonald, Sean P. Goggins:
Sifting signal from noise: A new perspective on the meaning of tweets about the "big game". 293-312 - Thomas N. Friemel:
The digital divide has grown old: Determinants of a digital divide among seniors. 313-331 - Hector Postigo:
The socio-technical architecture of digital labor: Converting play into YouTube money. 332-349
Volume 18, Number 3, March 2016
- Su Jung Kim:
A repertoire approach to cross-platform media use behavior. 353-372 - Jed R. Brubaker, Mike Ananny, Kate Crawford:
Departing glances: A sociotechnical account of 'leaving' Grindr. 373-390 - Emily Weinstein, Robert Louis Selman:
Digital stress: Adolescents' personal accounts. 391-409 - Kate Crawford, Tarleton Gillespie:
What is a flag for? Social media reporting tools and the vocabulary of complaint. 410-428 - Inbal Klein-Avraham, Zvi Reich:
Out of the frame: A longitudinal perspective on digitization and professional photojournalism. 429-446 - Suvi Uski, Airi Lampinen:
Social norms and self-presentation on social network sites: Profile work in action. 447-464 - Martin Karlsson, Joachim Åström:
The political blog space: A new arena for political representation? 465-483 - Peter English:
Twitter's diffusion in sports journalism: Role models, laggards and followers of the social media innovation. 484-501 - Thomas Ksiazek, Limor Peer, Kevin Lessard:
User engagement with online news: Conceptualizing interactivity and exploring the relationship between online news videos and user comments. 502-520
- Lucas Graves:
Thinking ahead: Prospects for public-service journalism in the new news world. 521-527
- Bill D. Herman:
Digital depression: Information technology and economic crisis. 528-530 - Stefania Milan:
Low power to the people: Pirates, protest, and politics in FM radio activism. 530-532
Volume 18, Number 4, April 2016
- Jeremy Hunsinger, Andrew Schrock:
The democratization of hacking and making. 535-538
- Thomas James Lodato, Carl F. DiSalvo:
Issue-oriented hackathons as material participation. 539-557 - Daniela K. Rosner, Sarah E. Fox:
Legacies of craft and the centrality of failure in a mother-operated hackerspace. 558-580 - Andrew R. Schrock:
Civic hacking as data activism and advocacy: A history from publicity to open government data. 581-599 - Alison Powell:
Hacking in the public interest: Authority, legitimacy, means, and ends. 600-616 - François Bar, Matthew S. Weber, Francis Pisani:
Mobile technology appropriation in a distant mirror: Baroquization, creolization, and cannibalism. 617-636 - Lilly U. Nguyen:
Infrastructural action in Vietnam: Inverting the techno-politics of hacking in the global South. 637-652 - Mark Richardson:
Pre-hacked: Open Design and the democratisation of product development. 653-666
- Liam Cole Young:
Cultural techniques: Grids, filters, doors, and other articulations of the real. 667-669 - Anthony Bak Buccitelli:
Mobility and locative media: Mobile communication in hybrid spaces. 669-672 - Chris Featherman:
DIY citizenship: Critical making and social media. 672-674 - Kristen Wright:
The app generation: How today's youth navigate identity, intimacy, and imagination in a digital world. 674-676 - Tara Burke:
Disconnected: Youth, new media and the ethics gap. 676-677 - Melissa Aronczyk:
Reading the comments: Likers, haters, and manipulators at the bottom of the web. 677-679 - Nasrine Olson:
The Internet of things. 680-682 - Dawn Shepherd:
Rhetoric and the digital humanities. 682-684 - Peter English:
Sport history in the digital era. 684-686 - Leslie Regan Shade:
Sexting panic: rethinking criminalization, privacy, and consent. 686-688
Volume 18, Number 5, May 2016
- Joseph Reagle:
The obligation to know: From FAQ to Feminism 101. 691-707 - Merel Borger, Anita van Hoof, José Sanders:
Expecting reciprocity: Towards a model of the participants' perspective on participatory journalism. 708-725 - Bram Büscher:
Nature 2.0: Exploring and theorizing the links between new media and nature conservation. 726-743 - Paula Nitschke, Patrick Donges, Henriette Schade:
Political organizations' use of websites and Facebook. 744-764 - Todd Graham, Dan Jackson, Marcel Broersma:
New platform, old habits? Candidates' use of Twitter during the 2010 British and Dutch general election campaigns. 765-783 - Greg Goldberg:
Antisocial media: Digital dystopianism as a normative project. 784-799 - Joachim Vlieghe, Geert Vandermeersche, Ronald Soetaert:
Social media in literacy education: Exploring social reading with pre-service teachers. 800-816 - Yannis Theocharis, Ellen Quintelier:
Stimulating citizenship or expanding entertainment? The effect of Facebook on adolescent participation. 817-836 - Yi Mou, Kevin Wu, David J. Atkin:
Understanding the use of circumvention tools to bypass online censorship. 837-856 - Shira Dvir-Gvirsman, Yariv Tsfati, Ericka Menchen-Trevino:
The extent and nature of ideological selective exposure online: Combining survey responses with actual web log data from the 2013 Israeli Elections. 857-877
- Mariam Betlemidze:
Neoliberalism and against-the-grain activism in the age of new media. 878-883
- Peter Schaefer:
Critical theory and the digital. 884-885 - Catherine Francis Brooks:
Digital shift: The cultural logic of punctuation. 886-888
Volume 18, Number 6, June 2016
- Stefanie Duguay:
"He has a way gayer Facebook than I do": Investigating sexual identity disclosure and context collapse on a social networking site. 891-907 - Mariek Vanden Abeele:
Mobile lifestyles: Conceptualizing heterogeneity in mobile youth culture. 908-926 - Siân Lincoln, Brady Robards:
Being strategic and taking control: Bedrooms, social network sites and the narratives of growing up. 927-943 - Miriam Feuls, Christian Fieseler, Miriam Meckel, Anne Suphan:
Being unemployed in the age of social media. 944-965 - Natascha Notten, Peter Nikken:
Boys and girls taking risks online: A gendered perspective on social context and adolescents' risky online behavior. 966-988 - Aristea Fotopoulou:
Digital and networked by default? Women's organisations and the social imaginary of networked feminism. 989-1005 - Petra Saskia Bayerl, Lachezar Stoynov:
Revenge by photoshop: Memefying police acts in the public dialogue about injustice. 1006-1026 - Joan Ramon Rodriguez-Amat, Cornelia Brantner:
Space and place matters: A tool for the analysis of geolocated and mapped protests. 1027-1046
- George C. Vollrath:
Digital phenomenology and locative infrastructures in location-based social networking. 1047-1052
- Christopher A. Paul:
Values at play in digital games. 1053-1054 - Derek Hrynyshyn:
The real cyber war: The political economy of internet freedom. 1054-1056
Volume 18, Number 7, August 2016
Introduction
- Niels Brügger:
Introduction: The Web's first 25 years. 1059-1065
- Paolo Bory, Eleonora Benecchi, Gabriele Balbi:
How the Web was told: Continuity and change in the founding fathers' narratives on the origins of the World Wide Web. 1066-1087 - Michael Stevenson:
The cybercultural moment and the new media field. 1088-1102 - Anat Ben-David:
What does the Web remember of its deleted past? An archival reconstruction of the former Yugoslav top-level domain. 1103-1119 - Marta Musso, Francesco Merletti:
This is the future: A reconstruction of the UK business web space (1996-2001). 1120-1142 - Valérie Schafer, Benjamin G. Thierry:
The "Web of pros" in the 1990s: The professional acclimation of the World Wide Web in France. 1143-1158 - Eric T. Meyer, Ralph Schroeder, Josh Cowls:
The net as a knowledge machine: How the Internet became embedded in research. 1159-1189
- Matthew P. McAllister:
Optimism and pessimism about the democratic potential of media. 1190-1195
- Lars Nyre:
The marvelous clouds: Toward a philosophy of elemental media. 1196-1198 - Andrea Braithwaite:
Feminist surveillance studies. 1198-1200
- Mathieu Rousselin:
Modern communication technologies and the extension of the territory of struggle: Conceptualising Tunisia's jasmine revolution. 1201-1218 - Robert W. Gehl:
Power/freedom on the dark web: A digital ethnography of the Dark Web Social Network. 1219-1235 - Juyeon Ahn, Yoonhyuk Jung:
The common sense of dependence on smartphone: A comparison between digital natives and digital immigrants. 1236-1256 - Jaime Banks, Nicholas David Bowman:
Avatars are (sometimes) people too: Linguistic indicators of parasocial and social ties in player-avatar relationships. 1257-1276 - Dal Yong Jin, Kyong Yoon:
The social mediascape of transnational Korean pop culture: Hallyu 2.0 as spreadable media practice. 1277-1292 - Troels Fibæk Bertel, Rich Ling:
"It's just not that exciting anymore": The changing centrality of SMS in the everyday lives of young Danes. 1293-1309 - Cheng-Yu Lai, Heng-Li Yang:
Determinants and consequences of Facebook feature use. 1310-1330 - Michael Stevenson:
Rethinking the participatory web: A history of HotWired's "new publishing paradigm, " 1994-1997. 1331-1346 - Katharina Freund:
"Fair use is legal use": Copyright negotiations and strategies in the fan-vidding community. 1347-1363 - Fan Yang:
Rethinking China's Internet censorship: The practice of recoding and the politics of visibility. 1364-1381 - Itai Himelboim, Kaye D. Sweetser, Spencer F. Tinkham, Kristen Cameron, Matthew Danelo, Kate West:
Valence-based homophily on Twitter: Network Analysis of Emotions and Political Talk in the 2012 Presidential Election. 1382-1400
Volume 18, Number 8, September 2016
- Jeongsub Lim:
Effects of social media users' attitudes on their perceptions of the attributes of news agency content and their intentions to purchase digital subscriptions. 1403-1421 - Amy L. Gonzales, Lindsay Ems, Venkata Ratnadeep Suri:
Cell phone disconnection disrupts access to healthcare and health resources: A technology maintenance perspective. 1422-1438 - Graeme Kirkpatrick:
Making games normal: Computer gaming discourse in the 1980s. 1439-1454 - Elena Gonzalez-Polledo, Jen Tarr:
The thing about pain: The remaking of illness narratives in chronic pain expressions on social media. 1455-1472 - Daniel Kreiss:
Seizing the moment: The presidential campaigns' use of Twitter during the 2012 electoral cycle. 1473-1490 - Magdalena Obermaier, Nayla Fawzi, Thomas Koch:
Bystanding or standing by? How the number of bystanders affects the intention to intervene in cyberbullying. 1491-1507 - Cédric Courtois, Pieter Verdegem:
With a little help from my friends: An analysis of the role of social support in digital inequalities. 1508-1527 - Fernando de la Cruz Paragas, Trisha T. C. Lin:
Organizing and reframing technological determinism. 1528-1546 - Yu-Kei Tse:
Television's changing role in social togetherness in the personalized online consumption of foreign TV. 1547-1562 - Katrin Tiidenberg:
Boundaries and conflict in a NSFW community on tumblr: The meanings and uses of selfies. 1563-1578 - Eun-Ju Lee, Ye Weon Kim:
Effects of infographics on news elaboration, acquisition, and evaluation: Prior knowledge and issue involvement as moderators. 1579-1598 - Leonie Maria Tanczer:
Hacktivism and the male-only stereotype. 1599-1615 - Marta Severo, Tommaso Venturini:
Intangible cultural heritage webs: Comparing national networks with digital methods. 1616-1635 - Ginette Wessel, Caroline Ziemkiewicz, Eric Sauda:
Revaluating urban space through tweets: An analysis of Twitter-based mobile food vendors and online communication. 1636-1656 - Giovanna Mascheroni, Kjartan Ólafsson:
The mobile Internet: Access, use, opportunities and divides among European children. 1657-1679 - Christopher E. Whyte:
Thinking inside the (black) box: Agenda setting, information seeking, and the marketplace of ideas in the 2012 presidential election. 1680-1697 - Noam Gal, Limor Shifman, Zohar Kampf:
"It Gets Better": Internet memes and the construction of collective identity. 1698-1714 - Miriam Sobré-Denton:
Virtual intercultural bridgework: Social media, virtual cosmopolitanism, and activist community-building. 1715-1731 - Jeroen Bourgonjon, Geert Vandermeersche, Bram de Wever, Ronald Soetaert, Martin Valcke:
Players' perspectives on the positive impact of video games: A qualitative content analysis of online forum discussions. 1732-1749 - Lindsay Ems, Amy L. Gonzales:
Subculture-centered public health communication: A social media strategy. 1750-1767 - Sarah Wagner, Mireia Fernández-Ardèvol:
Local content production and the political economy of the mobile app industries in Argentina and Bolivia. 1768-1786
- Ioana Literat:
Interrogating participation across disciplinary boundaries: Lessons from political philosophy, cultural studies, art, and education. 1787-1803
Volume 18, Number 9, October 2016
- Karolina Koc-Michalska, Darren G. Lilleker, Thierry Vedel:
Civic political engagement and social change in the new digital age. 1807-1816
- Marko M. Skoric, Qinfeng Zhu, Debbie Goh, Natalie Pang:
Social media and citizen engagement: A meta-analytic review. 1817-1839 - Shelley Boulianne:
Online news, civic awareness, and engagement in civic and political life. 1840-1856 - Augusto Valeriani, Cristian Vaccari:
Accidental exposure to politics on social media as online participation equalizer in Germany, Italy, and the United Kingdom. 1857-1874 - Trevor Diehl, Brian E. Weeks, Homero Gil de Zúñiga:
Political persuasion on social media: Tracing direct and indirect effects of news use and social interaction. 1875-1895 - Marta Cantijoch, Silvia Galandini, Rachel Gibson:
'It's not about me, it's about my community': A mixed-method study of civic websites and community efficacy. 1896-1915 - G. R. Boynton, Glenn W. Richardson Jr.:
Agenda setting in the twenty-first century. 1916-1934 - Andrea Ceron, Giovanna d'Adda:
E-campaigning on Twitter: The effectiveness of distributive promises and negative campaign in the 2013 Italian election. 1935-1955 - Mina Tsay-Vogel:
Me versus them: Third-person effects among Facebook users. 1956-1972 - Tamara Kharroub, Ozen Bas:
Social media and protests: An examination of Twitter images of the 2011 Egyptian revolution. 1973-1992 - Neta Kligler-Vilenchik, Kjerstin Thorson:
Good citizenship as a frame contest: Kony2012, memes, and critiques of the networked citizen. 1993-2011 - Patricia Aufderheide, Tijana Milosevic, Bryan Bello:
The impact of copyright permissions culture on the US visual arts community: The consequences of fear of fair use. 2012-2027 - Tim Highfield:
News via Voldemort: Parody accounts in topical discussions on Twitter. 2028-2045 - James Pamment:
Digital diplomacy as transmedia engagement: Aligning theories of participatory culture with international advocacy campaigns. 2046-2062 - Lisa M. Jones, Kimberly J. Mitchell:
Defining and measuring youth digital citizenship. 2063-2079 - Iginio Gagliardone:
'Can you hear me?' Mobile-radio interactions and governance in Africa. 2080-2095 - Gadi Wolfsfeld, Moran Yarchi, Tal Samuel-Azran:
Political information repertoires and political participation. 2096-2115 - Yngvar Kjus:
Reclaiming the music: The power of local and physical music distribution in the age of global online services. 2116-2132
- Paul Candon:
Digital publics: Re-defining 'the civic' and re-locating 'the political'. 2133-2138
- Todd Davies:
Mind change: How digital technologies are leaving their mark on our brains. 2139-2141 - Pedro Jacobetty:
Digital sociology. 2141-2143
Volume 18, Number 10, November 2016
- Sun Sun Lim, Tabea Bork-Hüffer, Brenda Sa Yeoh:
Mobility, migration and new media: Manoeuvring through physical, digital and liminal spaces. 2147-2154
- Tabea Bork-Hüffer:
Mediated sense of place: Effects of mediation and mobility on the place perception of German professionals in Singapore. 2155-2170 - Sun Sun Lim, Becky Pham:
'If you are a foreigner in a foreign country, you stick together': Technologically mediated communication and acculturation of migrant students. 2171-2188 - Jozon A. Lorenzana:
Mediated recognition: The role of Facebook in identity and social formations of Filipino transnationals in Indian cities. 2189-2206 - Maria Platt, Brenda Sa Yeoh, Kristel Anne F. Acedera, Khoo Choon Yen, Grace Baey, Theodora Lam:
Renegotiating migration experiences: Indonesian domestic workers in Singapore and use of information communication technologies. 2207-2223 - Joong-Hwan Oh:
Immigration and social capital in a Korean-American women's online community: Supporting acculturation, cultural pluralism, and transnationalism. 2224-2241
- Tobias Olsson:
Social media and new forms for civic participation. 2242-2248
- Nicholas W. Jankowski:
Handbook of digital politics. 2249-2251 - Yijin Wu, Lan Li:
Sociolinguistics and mobile communication. 2251-2253
- Yeon-Ok Lee:
The fragile beauty of peer-to-peer activism: The public campaign for the rights of media consumers in South Korea. 2254-2270 - S. Mo Jang, Yu Won Oh:
Getting attention online in election coverage: Audience selectivity in the 2012 US presidential election. 2271-2286 - Evelien D'heer, Pieter Verdegem:
@THEVIEWER: Analyzing the offline and online impact of a dedicated conversation manager in the newsroom of a public broadcaster. 2287-2304 - Jolie C. Matthews:
Professionals and nonprofessionals on Goodreads: Behavior standards for authors, reviewers, and readers. 2305-2322 - Carl Therrien, Martin Picard:
Enter the bit wars: A study of video game marketing and platform crafting in the wake of the TurboGrafx-16 launch. 2323-2339 - Bas Hofstra, Rense Corten, Frank van Tubergen:
Who was first on Facebook? Determinants of early adoption among adolescents. 2340-2358 - Marco T. Bastos, Dan Mercea:
Serial activists: Political Twitter beyond influentials and the twittertariat. 2359-2378 - Andrea Ballatore, Simone Natale:
E-readers and the death of the book: Or, new media and the myth of the disappearing medium. 2379-2394 - Natàlia Cantó-Milà, Francesc Núñez-Mosteo, Swen Seebach:
Between reality and imagination, between you and me: Emotions and daydreaming in times of electronic communication. 2395-2412 - Adrian Rauchfleisch, Julia Metag:
The special case of Switzerland: Swiss politicians on Twitter. 2413-2431
Volume 18, Number 11, December 2016
- Rosemary Pennington, Jessica Birthisel:
When new media make news: Framing technology and sexual assault in the Steubenville rape case. 2435-2451 - Cynthia A. Hoffner, Sangmi Lee, Se Jung Park:
"I miss my mobile phone!": Self-expansion via mobile phone and responses to phone loss. 2452-2468 - Sharif Mowlabocus:
'Y'all need to hide your kids, hide your wife': Mobile applications, risk and sex offender databases. 2469-2484 - Jude P. Mikal, Ronald E. Rice, Robert G. Kent, Bert N. Uchino:
100 million strong: A case study of group identification and deindividuation on Imgur.com. 2485-2506 - Amit Pinchevski, John Durham Peters:
Autism and new media: Disability between technology and society. 2507-2523 - James N. Gilmore:
Everywear: The quantified self and wearable fitness technologies. 2524-2539 - Christian Licoppe, Carole Anne Rivière, Julien Morel:
Grindr casual hook-ups as interactional achievements. 2540-2558 - Alex Lambert:
Intimacy and social capital on Facebook: Beyond the psychological perspective. 2559-2575 - Jessica Gall Myrick, Bartosz W. Wojdynski:
Moody news: The impact of collective emotion ratings on online news consumers' attitudes, memory, and behavioral intentions. 2576-2594 - Katy E. Pearce, Jessica Vitak:
Performing honor online: The affordances of social media for surveillance and impression management in an honor culture. 2595-2612 - Elija Cassidy:
Social networking sites and participatory reluctance: A case study of Gaydar, user resistance and interface rejection. 2613-2628 - María Luisa Zorrilla Abascal:
Transmedia intertextualities in educational media resources: The case of BBC Schools in the United Kingdom. 2629-2648 - Nahuel Ribke, Jerome Bourdon:
Transnational activism, new and old media: The case of Israeli adoptees from Brazil. 2649-2663 - Florian Schneider:
China's 'info-web': How Beijing governs online political communication about Japan. 2664-2684 - Sonja Utz:
Is LinkedIn making you more successful? The informational benefits derived from public social media. 2685-2702 - Moritz Büchi, Natascha Just, Michael Latzer:
Modeling the second-level digital divide: A five-country study of social differences in Internet use. 2703-2722 - Michael Salter:
Privates in the online public: Sex(ting) and reputation on social media. 2723-2739 - Stefan Geiß, Melanie Leidecker, Thomas Roessing:
The interplay between media-for-monitoring and media-for-searching: How news media trigger searches and edits in Wikipedia. 2740-2759 - Clifford G. Christians:
Social justice and Internet technology. 2760-2773 - Phoebe Moore, Andrew Robinson:
The quantified self: What counts in the neoliberal workplace. 2774-2792
- David S. Heineman:
Porting game studies research to virtual reality. 2793-2799
- Britney Summit-Gil:
This is why we can't have nice things: Mapping the relationship between online trolling and mainstream culture. 2800-2802 - Kevin J. Calderwood:
Digital research confidential: The secrets of studying behavior online. 2802-2803
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