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First Monday, Volume 16
Volume 16, Number 1, January 2011
- Alistair Black, Antony Bryant:
Knowledge management and diplomacy: Reflections on the demise of the valedictory despatch in the context of an informational history of the British Diplomatic Service. - Colleen A. Reilly:
Teaching Wikipedia as a mirrored technology. - Daniel Ashton:
Awarding the self in Wikipedia: Identity work and the disclosure of knowledge. - Panayiota Tsatsou:
EU regulations on telecommunications: The role of subsidiarity and mediation. - Tibor Koltay:
New media and literacies: Amateurs vs. professionals.
Volume 16, Number 2, February 2011
- Jennifer Golbeck:
The more people I meet, the more I like my dog: A study of pet-oriented social networks on the Web. - Michael Stefanone, Kyounghee Hazel Kwon, Derek Lackaff:
The value of online friends: Networked resources via social network sites. - Martin Feuz, Matthew Fuller, Felix Stalder:
Personal Web searching in the age of semantic capitalism: Diagnosing the mechanisms of personalisation. - Aziz Douai:
The age of Web diplomacy: Exploration of international broadcasting online. - Henrik Serup Christensen:
Political activities on the Internet: Slacktivism or political participation by other means? - Chirag Shah:
Measuring effectiveness and user satisfaction in Yahoo! Answers. - Michael Gurstein:
Open data: Empowering the empowered or effective data use for everyone?
Volume 16, Number 3, March 2011
- Donghee Yvette Wohn, Eun-Kyung Na:
Tweeting about TV: Sharing television viewing experiences via social media message streams. - Michaël Opgenhaffen:
Multimedia, interactive and hypertextual features in divergent online news platforms: An exploratory study of Flemish online news. - Anthony Lincoln:
FYI: TMI: Toward a holistic social theory of information overload. - Anders Olof Larsson, Stefan Hrastinski:
Blogs and blogging: Current trends and future directions. - Lori Kupczynski, Angela M. Gibson, Linda Challoo:
The role of online learning in the merit and promotion process: Is credit necessary or applied?
Volume 16, Number 4, April 2011
- David A. Huffaker:
The impact of group attributes on communication activity and shared language in online communities. - Alison J. Head, Michael B. Eisenberg:
How college students use the Web to conduct everyday life research. - Azi Lev-On, Rivka Neriya-Ben Shahar:
A forum of their own: Views about the Internet among ultra-Orthodox Jewish women who browse designated closed fora. - Sook Lim, Christine Simon:
Credibility judgment and verification behavior of college students concerning Wikipedia. - Anders Olof Larsson:
"Extended infomercials" or "Politics 2.0"? A study of Swedish political party Web sites before, during and after the 2010 election.
Volume 16, Number 5, May 2011
- Finn Brunton, Helen Nissenbaum:
Vernacular resistance to data collection and analysis: A political theory of obfuscation. - Chris Fullwood, Mike Thelwall, Sam O'Neill:
Clandestine chatters: Self-disclosure in U.K. chat room profiles. - Gwen Shaffer:
Banding together for bandwidth: An analysis of survey results from wireless community network participants. - Michael Simeone, Jennifer Guiliano, Rob Kooper, Peter Bajcsy:
Digging into data using new collaborative infrastructures supporting humanities-based computer science research. - Tiina Malinen, Teemu Mikkonen, Vesa Tienvieri, Tere Vadén:
Community created open source hardware: A case study of "eCars - Now!". - Jeremy Morris:
Sounds in the cloud: Cloud computing and the digital music commodity. - Teun Lucassen, Jan Maarten Schraagen:
Evaluating WikiTrust: A trust support tool for Wikipedia.
Volume 16, Number 6, June 2011
- Cuihua Shen, Peter Monge:
Who connects with whom? A social network analysis of an online open source software community. - Kalika Navin Doloswala, Ann Dadich:
The accidental criminal: Using policy to curb illegal downloading. - Sandy Schumann, Francois Luong:
Tool for or source of action? A social psychological perspective on the influence of virtual worlds on reality. - Kirsten Foot, Carole Groleau:
Contradictions, transitions, and materiality in organizing processes: An activity theory perspective. - Barry W. Cull:
Reading revolutions: Online digital text and implications for reading in academe.
Volume 16, Number 7, July 2011
- Anne-Mette Albrechtslund:
Online identity crisis: Real ID on the World of Warcraft forums. - Jinghui Hou:
Uses and gratifications of social games: Blending social networking and game play. - Dorit Geifman, Daphne Ruth Raban, Sheizaf Rafaeli:
P-MART: Towards a classification of online prediction markets. - Francesca Romana Seganti, David Smahel:
Finding the meaning of emo in youths' online social networking: A qualitative study of contemporary Italian emo. - Sheri V. T. Ross, Christina Buckles:
The Health Internetwork Access to Research Initiative (HINARI) in eligible American countries: Benefits, challenges and relationship to Internet use.
Volume 16, Number 8, August 2011
- Jing (Annie) Wang, David A. Huffaker, Jeffrey William Treem, Lindsay Fullerton, Muhammad A. Ahmad, Dmitri Williams, Marshall Scott Poole, Noshir S. Contractor:
Focused on the prize: Characteristics of experts in massive multiplayer online games. - Kelly Bergstrom:
"Don't feed the troll": Shutting down debate about community expectations on Reddit.com. - Maurice Vergeer, Liesbeth Hermans, Steven Sams:
Is the voter only a tweet away? Micro blogging during the 2009 European Parliament election campaign in the Netherlands. - Mathias Klang, Jan Nolin:
Disciplining social media: An analysis of social media policies in 26 Swedish municipalities. - Naomi S. Baron:
Concerns about mobile phones: A cross-national study. - Amir Hossein Ghapanchi, Aybüke Aurum, Graham Low:
A taxonomy for measuring the success of open source software projects. - Kevin Lee, Nicolas Kaufmann, Georg Buss:
Trust issues in Web service mash-ups. - Jana Bradley, Bruce Fulton, Marlene Helm, Katherine A. Pittner:
Non-traditional book publishing. - Taemin Kim Park:
The visibility of Wikipedia in scholarly publications.
Volume 16, Number 9, September 2011
- Ross Purves, Alistair J. Edwardes, Jo Wood:
Describing place through user generated content. - Kalev Leetaru:
Culturomics 2.0: Forecasting large-scale human behavior using global news media tone in time and space. - Joan Cowdery, Jeannette Kindred, Anna Michalakis, L. Suzanne Suggs:
Promoting health in a virtual world: Impressions of health communication messages delivered in Second Life. - David S. White, Alison Le Cornu:
Visitors and Residents: A new typology for online engagement. - Robert W. Gehl:
Ladders, samurai, and blue collars: Personal branding in Web 2.0. - Alexander Vuylsteke, Simon Fraser:
The impact of industry structure on e-commerce initiatives in the developing world: Two case studies from Trinidad and Tobago. - David Zeitlyn:
You can't build a car with just one wheel (why duplication may not be such a bad thing), and some limitations of Internet search/retrieval.
Volume 16, Number 10, October 2011
- Stefan Hrastinski, Sofie Sjöström, Jenny Eriksson Lundström, Anders Olof Larsson, Håkan Ozan:
Encouraging participation in an intra-organizational online idea community: A case study of a Swedish municipality. - Jeroen De Keyser, Annika Sehl:
May they come in? A comparison of German and Flemish efforts to welcome public participation in the news media. - Helena Bukvova:
Scientists online: A framework for the analysis of Internet profiles. - Jennifer R. Whitson, Claire Dormann:
Social gaming for change: Facebook unleashed. - Lee Knuttila:
User unknown: 4chan, anonymity and contingency. - Thomas P. Mackey:
Transparency as a catalyst for interaction and participation in open learning environments. - Nikolaos Koumartzis, Andreas A. Veglis:
Internet regulation: The need for more transparent Internet filtering systems and improved measurement of public opinion on Internet filtering.
Volume 16, Number 11, November 2011
- danah boyd, Eszter Hargittai, Jason Schultz, John Palfrey:
Why parents help their children lie to Facebook about age: Unintended consequences of the 'Children's Online Privacy Protection Act'. - Steven J. Jackson, Alok Vimawala:
Tightening the Net: Intellectual property micro-regimes and peer-to-peer practice in higher education networks. - Paul T. Jaeger, John Carlo Bertot, Christie M. Kodama, Sarah M. Katz, Elizabeth J. DeCoster:
Describing and measuring the value of public libraries: The growth of the Internet and the evolution of library value. - Brian Wentz, Paul T. Jaeger, Jonathan Lazar:
Retrofitting accessibility: The legal inequality of after-the-fact online access for persons with disabilities in the United States. - Gabe Ignatow, Jessica Lynn Schuett:
Inter-organizational digital divide: Civic groups' media strategies in the Trinity River Corridor Project. - Jan Michael Nolin:
Boundaries of research disciplines are paper constructs: Digital Web-based information as a challenge to disciplinary research.
Volume 16, Number 12, December 2011
- Royce Kimmons:
Understanding collaboration in Wikipedia. - Mark Anderson-Wilk, Jeff Hino:
Achieving rigor and relevance in online multimedia scholarly publishing. - Whitney Phillips:
LOLing at tragedy: Facebook trolls, memorial pages and resistance to grief online. - Caroline Lego Muñoz, Terri Towner:
Back to the "wall": How to use Facebook in the college classroom. - Jeffrey Swift:
Cascades and the political blogosphere. - Yiannis Mylonas:
Accumulation, control and contingency: Towards a critical understanding of intellectual property rights' 'piracy'.
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