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The empowerment of subaltern groups in Chinese cyberspace: a case study of Gandanxiangzhao Forum.January 2007 (has links)
Tang, Li. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 130-137). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Chapter 1 --- Introduction --- p.1 / Chapter 2 --- Literature Review --- p.9 / Chapter 2.1 --- Subaltern Public Sphere --- p.9 / Chapter 2.1.1 --- Public Sphere: Liberal Model --- p.9 / Chapter 2.1.2 --- Criticism on Unitary Public Sphere --- p.11 / Chapter 2.1.3 --- Subaltern Public Sphere --- p.12 / Chapter 2.1.4 --- Criteria for Subaltern Public Sphere --- p.14 / Chapter 2.1.5 --- External Parties --- p.16 / Chapter 2.1.6 --- Public Sphere in the Cyberspace --- p.17 / Chapter 2.2 --- Public Sphere in Contemporary China --- p.19 / Chapter 2.2.1 --- Application of the Concept of Public Sphere in China --- p.19 / Chapter 2.2.2 --- Dominant Public Sphere in China --- p.21 / Chapter 2.2.3 --- Subaltern Groups in China --- p.23 / Chapter 2.2.4 --- Subaltern Public Spheres in Chinese Cyberspace --- p.25 / Chapter 2.2.5 --- HBV Carriers Group and the Forum --- p.28 / Chapter 3 --- Research Design --- p.32 / Chapter 3.1 --- Overall Conceptual Framework --- p.32 / Chapter 3.2 --- Research Questions --- p.33 / Chapter 3.3 --- Research Methods --- p.36 / Chapter 3.3.1 --- Textual Analysis --- p.36 / Chapter 3.3.2 --- Interviews --- p.39 / Chapter 4 --- Brief Overview of the Forum --- p.43 / Chapter 4.1 --- Overall Development --- p.43 / Chapter 4.2 --- Structure --- p.46 / Chapter 4.3 --- Users --- p.50 / Chapter 5 --- Empowerment on the Discursive Level --- p.53 / Chapter 5.1 --- Characteristics of the Forum --- p.53 / Chapter 5.1.1 --- Alternative Topic --- p.53 / Chapter 5.1.2 --- Alternative Information of HBV --- p.54 / Chapter 5.1.3 --- Discourse of Self-Narrative --- p.59 / Chapter 5.1.4 --- Forum Accessibility --- p.61 / Chapter 5.1.5 --- Relative Equality --- p.62 / Chapter 5.2 --- Rhetoric of Innocence --- p.64 / Chapter 5.2.1 --- Attribution of the Spread of HBV --- p.65 / Chapter 5.2.2 --- Attribution of Discrimination --- p.68 / Chapter 5.3 --- Summary --- p.70 / Chapter 6 --- Empowerment and Collective Action --- p.73 / Chapter 6.1 --- The State --- p.73 / Chapter 6.1.1 --- State's Impact on HBV Carriers --- p.75 / Chapter 6.1.2 --- Resistance Enabled by the Internet --- p.76 / Chapter 6.1.3 --- Challenges from the State --- p.84 / Chapter 6.1.4 --- Compromise with the State --- p.86 / Chapter 6.2 --- The Market --- p.88 / Chapter 6.2.1 --- Market Domination --- p.89 / Chapter 6.2.2 --- Resistance against the Market --- p.91 / Chapter 6.2.3 --- Challenges from the market --- p.99 / Chapter 6.3 --- The Mass Media --- p.101 / Chapter 6.3.1 --- Mass Media's Domination --- p.102 / Chapter 6.3.2 --- Forum's Efforts to Get Favourably Represented --- p.106 / Chapter 6.3.3 --- Mass Media's Influence over the Forum --- p.111 / Chapter 6.4 --- Summary --- p.113 / Chapter 7 --- Conclusion and Discussion --- p.116 / Chapter 7.1 --- Assessing Empowerment Capacity --- p.116 / Chapter 7.1.1 --- Formation of a Subaltern Public Sphere --- p.116 / Chapter 7.1.2 --- Discursive Empowerment --- p.117 / Chapter 7.1.3 --- Transformed Relationships with External Parties --- p.118 / Chapter 7.2 --- Internet and Empowerment --- p.123 / Chapter 7.3 --- Limitations of the study --- p.127 / Bibliography --- p.130
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International students' reliance on home-country related internet useSukontapatipak, Songkwun 01 January 2005 (has links)
The present study draws on uses and gratifications and media system dependency perspectives for examining factors related to Internet usage behaviors of international students and their motives to use their home-country Internet resources.
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The effect of demographic profiles on household internet usage patterns in the City of TshwaneFisha, Jacobeth Manthokwa. January 2015 (has links)
M. Tech. Business Administration / The purpose of this study is two-fold ; to establish how different demograhic profiles utilise the internet and classifies internet functions mostly used across demographic characteristics. Data was collected through a self-completion structured questionnaire from a sample of 131 households at Menlyn Park Shopping Centre in the City of Tshwane.
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A study on characteristics of youth's interpersonal relationships in cyberspace何健華, Ho, Kin-wa. January 2002 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Education / Master / Master of Science in Information Technology in Education
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Appropriating Language on the UsenetSpinuzzi, Clay I. (Clay Ian) 05 1900 (has links)
The Usenet is a global computer conferencing system on which users can affix textual messages under 4500 different categories. It currently has approximately 4,165,000 readers, and these .readers have appropriated language by adapting it to the Usenet's culture and medium. This thesis conceptualizes the Usenet community's appropriation of language, provides insights into how media and media restrictions cause their users to appropriate language, and discusses how future media may further cause users to appropriate language. With the Usenet we have a chance to study a relatively new community bound by relatively new technology, and perhaps we can learn more about the appropriation process by studying the two.
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Nudity in the name of social change: Twitter reactions to the Marie Claire South Africa 2015 Naked CampaignSibanda, Moagisi Refilwe January 2016 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Journalism and Media Studies, April 2016 / Since 2007, Marie Claire South Africa (SA) — which is a glossy women’s magazine covering fashion and beauty trends, sex, relationships, body image, and celebrity news — has been running a special issue of the print magazine called the “Naked issue”. Each year celebrities pose naked in the special issue to raise awareness for a cause, and in doing so funds in aid of a particular organisation linked to the cause are raised. Marie Claire SA calls this awareness-raising initiative the “Naked Campaign”. For the 2015 Naked Campaign, the magazine had 35 celebrities pose in the nude to raise awareness about sexual violence, in aid of Blow the Whistle (BTW), an anti-rape initiative which supports women and children who are victims of abuse and rape.
This research is a case study of Marie Claire SA’s March 2015 Naked Campaign edition, and focuses on the Twitter reactions to this edition. It asks: to what extent did the Twitter reactions to Marie Claire SA’s 2015 Naked Campaign show engagement on the issue of sexual violence and can the use of nudity to attract attention to a social issue result in the kind of engagement that can be said to drive the cause forward? Using content analysis, it examines the tweets generated by the hashtag #MCNaked in the first week of the naked issue going on sale. It categorises the tweets according to gender, comments on nudity, celebrities and sexual violence, as well as the tone of the tweets and the understanding therein of the campaign and cause.
The research found that the majority (close to 70%) of the Twitter reactions were supportive of the campaign and the cause. Although over half of the comments focused on the celebrities, over 50% of tweets commented or focused on the issue of sexual violence, a positive outcome for the campaign. Despite the magazine catering mostly for female readers, there was an almost equal number of tweets by males and females, which meant men were also drawn to the discussion started by a media product followed mostly by women, another positive finding for the campaign. However, only a few of the tweets displayed more substantial engagement with the issue of sexual violence, through either sharing statistics or further information, or including anti-sexual violence statements in their tweets. The research suggests that, taken as a whole, the campaign can be considered as an example of social marketing, while also fulfilling the news values in terms of elements of surprise, personalities, power and marketability. / GR2017
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#Keywords: não encontrou e agora?!Nunes, Manuela Prey Pereira 24 March 2017 (has links)
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Manuela Prey Pereira Nunes.pdf: 4323622 bytes, checksum: 0cf141f061efd98119e9401d8ed34e99 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2017-05-08T11:32:09Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
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Previous issue date: 2017-03-24 / The purpose of this research is to do evolutionary analysis through a timeline about internet evolution and to understand how this technology gained strength over the years and transformed the society. We develop knowledge on the subject of qualitative research. This technological revolution made possible the dissemination of information. Internet evolved to be ubiquitous in modern life. This converging set of technologies, computing (hardware and software) and telecommunications developed different platforms. The recent migration from desktops and notebooks to smartphones has transformed habits of a whole society through the app’s / O objetivo dessa pesquisa é fazer análise evolutiva através de uma linha do tempo sobre a evolução da Internet e entender como chegamos ao universo informacional de hoje. Desenvolvemos conhecimento suficiente sobre o funcionamento das ferramentas de busca e o comportamento do usuário, através de uma pesquisa qualitativa. Levando em conta os objetivos foi feito, um estudo de caso. Esta revolução tecnológica possibilitou a difusão da informação e a medida que a internet evoluiu para ser onipresente da vida moderna, as transformações psicológicas, econômicas e sociais associadas à chamada revolução das tecnologias de informação e comunicação trouxeram um crescimento de uma série de transformações no comportamento dos seres humanos. Este conjunto convergente de tecnologias, computação (software e hardware) e telecomunicações evoluem para diferentes plataformas e a recente migração dos desktops e notebooks para os smartphones vem transformando hábitos de toda uma sociedade através dos aplicativos
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Characterizing and Leveraging Social Phenomena in Online NetworksAbbassi, Zeinab January 2016 (has links)
Social phenomena have been studied extensively in small scales by social scientists. With the increasing popularity of Web 2.0 and online social networks/media, a large amount of data on social phenomena have become available. In this dissertation we study online social phenomena such as social influence in social networks in various contexts.
This dissertation has two major components: 1. Identifying and characterizing online social phenomena 2. Leveraging online social phenomena for economic and commercial purposes.
We begin the dissertation by developing multi-level revenue sharing schemes for viral marketing on social networks. Viral marketing leverages social influence among users of the social network. For our proposed models, we develop results on the computational complexity, individual rationality, and potential reach of employing the Shapley value as a revenue sharing scheme. Our results indicate that under the multi-level tree-based propagation model, the Shapley value is a promising scheme for revenue sharing, whereas under other models there are computational or incentive compatibility issues that remain open.
We continue with another application of social influence: social advertising. Social advertising is a new paradigm that is utilized by online social networks. Social advertising is based in the premise that social influence can be leveraged to place ads more efficiently. The goal of our work is to understand how social ads can affect click-through rates in social networks. We propose a formal model for social ads in the context of display advertising. In our model, ads are shown to users one after the other. The probability of a user clicking an ad depends on the users who have clicked this ad so far. This information is presented to users as a social cue, thus the click probability is a function of this cue. We introduce the social display optimization problem: suppose an advertiser has a contract with a publisher for showing some number (say B) impressions of an ad. What strategy should the publisher use to show these ads so as to maximize the expected number of clicks? We show hardness results for this problem and in light of the general hardness results, we develop heuristic algorithms and compare them to natural baseline ones.
We then study distributed content curation on the Web. In recent years readers have turned to the social web to consume content. In other words, they rely on their social network to curate content for them as opposed to the more traditional way of relying on news editors for this purpose -- this is an implicit consequence of social influence as well. We study how efficient this is for users with limited budgets of attention. We model distributed content curation as a reader-publisher game and show various results. Our results imply that in the complete information setting, when publishers maximize their utility selfishly, distributed content curation reaches an equilibrium which is efficient, that is, the social welfare is a constant factor of that under an optimal centralized curation.
Next, we initiate the study of an exchange market problem without money that is a natural generalization of the well-studied kidney exchange problem. From the practical point of view, the problem is motivated by barter websites on the Internet, e.g., swap.com, and u-exchange.com. In this problem, the users of the social network wish to exchange items with each other. A mechanism specifies for each user a set of items that she gives away, and a set of items that she receives. Consider a set of agents where each agent has some items to offer, and wishes to receive some items from other agents. Each agent would like to receive as many items as possible from the items that she wishes, that is, her utility is equal to the number of items that she receives and wishes. However, she will have a large dis-utility if she gives away more items than what she receives, because she considers such a trade to be unfair. To ensure voluntary participation (also known as individual rationality), we require the mechanism to avoid this. We consider different variants of this problem: with and without a constraint on the length of the exchange cycles and show different results including their truthfulness and individual rationality.
In the other main component of this thesis, we study and characterize two other social phenomena: 1. friends vs. the crowd and 2. altruism vs. reciprocity in social networks. More specifically, we study how a social network user's actions are influenced by her friends vs. the crowd's opinion. For example, in social rating websites where both ratings from friends and average ratings from everyone is available, we study how similar one's ratings are to each other. In the next part, we aim to analyze the motivations behind users' actions on online social media over an extended period of time. We look specifically at users' likes, comments and favorite markings on their friends' posts and photos. Most theories of why people exhibit prosocial behavior isolate two distinct motivations: Altruism and reciprocity. In our work, we focus on identifying the underlying motivations behind users' prosocial giving on social media. In particular, our goal is to identify if the motivation is altruism or reciprocity. For that purpose, we study two datasets of sequence of users' actions on social media: a dataset of wall posts by users of Facebook.com, and another dataset of favorite markings by users of Flickr.com. We study the sequence of users' actions in these datasets and provide several observations on patterns related to their prosocial giving behavior.
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Internet chat room participation and the coming-out experiences of young gay men : a qualitative studyThomas, Allen Britton 09 May 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Research, methodology and the Internet : a study of the Internet as a data capturing toolDowling, Zoë Teresa 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2001. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: It is widely accepted that the Internet has become a valuable resource for social
scientists, not just for the purpose of information exchange; via e-mail, discussion
groups and electronic journals, but also as a medium for data collection. Its global
nature gives a researcher access to a vast range of individuals located around the
world. It also opens up access to difficult to hitherto penetrate study areas, such as
sensitive research on deviant behaviour. Further, it is claimed that considerable savings
to both research budgets and time frames are made possible with the new technology.
It is not surprising, therefore, that a substantial body of research, employing the
Internet as the primary means of data collection, already exists. This raises a number
of questions as to how the Internet fares as a research tool. Are there any important
methodological issues that this new approach raises? Do the traditional research
methods suffice? Or are adaptations to existing methods necessary when difficulties
are encountered? Does such changes affect the more fundamental question of the
research design? These questions are considered in this thesis.
To answer them, I consider two different types of empirical research designs. The first,'
survey research, is a quantitative, numerical design that traditionally has a high level of
control. I consider in detail issues of sampling, including non-response, and
questionnaire design. The second design examined, ethnographic research, is
qualitative, textual and generally has a low level of researcher control. I address the
methods used in cyber ethnography and then discuss the considerable ethical concerns
that feature in such research. I conclude that, on the whole, the existing methods can be transferred to Internet
research. Indeed, some of the problems faced in traditional research are also
considerations in Internet studies and can be overcome by employing similar
techniques, such as using incentives to reduce non-response rates. However, a number
of new problems emerge, such as the lack of paralinguistic cues, which require
adaptations to the existing methods in order to produce results that can be considered
valid and reliable. However, I also argue that these necessary adaptations to the
methods do not affect the underlying principles found in the research design. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Dit word algemeen aanvaar dat die Internet In waardevolle hulpmiddel is vir
sosiaalwetenskaplikes; nie net vir die uitruil van inligting deur middel van e-pos,
besprekingsforums en elektroniese joernale nie, maar ook as In instrument om inligting
te versamel. Die globale aard van die internet gee die navorser toegang to In wye
spektrum individue internasionaal. Dit verleen ook toegang tot moeilike
navorsingsareas, soos sensitiewe navorsing oor afwykende gedrag. Verder word
beweer dat dit aansienlike besparings moontlik kan maak vir beide die
navorsingsbegroting en tydraamwerk.
Dit is dus nie verbasend dat In substansiële hoeveelheid van navorsing, wat die
Internet as die primêre bron van dataversameling gebruik, reeds bestaan nie. Dit laat
verskeie vrae ontstaan oor hoe die Internet vaar as In navorsingshulpmiddel. Is daar
enige belangrike metodologiese kwessies wat hierdie nuwe metode aanraak? Is die
tradisionele metodes voldoende? Of moet daar veranderinge aan die huidige metodes
aangebring word wanneer probleme ontstaan? Sal hierdie veranderinge die
fundamentele aspekte van navorsingsontwerp beïnvloed? Die vrae saloorweeg word in
hierdie tesis.
Ek gebruik twee empiriese navorsingsontwerpe om die vrae te beantwoord. Die eerste,
steekproefnavorsing, is In kwantitatiewe ontwerp wat tradisioneel In hoë vlak van
beheer toon. Ek ondersoek in detail kwessies van steekproewe, insluitend geen
respons en vraelysontwerp. Die tweede ontwerp wat ondersoek word, etnografiese
navorsing, is kwalitatief, tekstueel en toon in die algemeen In lae vlak van navorser beheer. Ek ondersoek die metodes wat gebruik word in kuberetnografie en bespreek
dan die etiese vraagstukke wat hierdie navorsing kenmerk.
Ek kom tot die gevolgtrekking dat oor die algemeen die huidige metodes toegepas kan
word op Internetnavorsing. Inderdaad kan van die probleme wat ondervind word in
tradisionele navorsing ook ondervind word in Internet studies en ook hier kan dit
oorkom word deur die gebruik van soortgelyke tegnieke, soos om aansporingsbonusse
om geen responskoerse te verminder, hoewel daar nuwe probleme opduik, soos die
gebrek aan para-taalkundige wenke. Dit noodsaak veranderinge aan die huidige
metodes om resultate te lewer wat geldig en betroubaar is. Ek redeneer egter ook dat
hierdie nodige veranderinge aan die metodes nie onderliggende beginsels van
navorsingsontwerp verander nie.
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