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Social Media Network Mapping

Snurb — Friday 20 March 2009 02:33

WebSci '09: So Many Posters...

Politics | Internet Technologies | Social Media Network Mapping | WebSci '09 |

WebSci '09 Poster

Athens.


Finally for this first day at WebSci '09, we move to the poster session, which includes our poster on the Australian political blogosphere mapping project; the A1 poster itself is available here, and there's also a brief article to provide further background detail. From the post slideshow that's playing at the moment, there's quite a bit of really interesting stuff here - and all of the posters are also available online.

» continue reading...
Snurb — Thursday 19 March 2009 18:30

What Is Web Science?

Internet Technologies | Social Media Network Mapping | WebSci '09 |

Athens.


The first full day here at WebSci '09 begins with a keynote by NIgel Shadbolt, founding director of the Web Science Research Initiative (WSRI). As we're in Athens, he begins by taking the historical approach: he notes that another way to describe Web science is as 'philosophical engineering', which links back ultimately to the founding fathers of philosophy, including Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. Their pure philosophical speculation, indeed, formed the basis not only for modern philosophy, but also for modern science.

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Snurb — Sunday 15 March 2009 11:37

Data Visualisation (CCi Symposium, 2009)

Produsers and Produsage | Social Media Network Mapping | CCi |

Data Visualisation

Axel Bruns

  • 30 Mar. 2009 - CCi Symposium 2009, Brisbane
CCi Symposium: Data Visualisation

View more presentations from Axel Bruns.

Technorati : Web 2.0, data, mapping, network, produsage, social media, visualisation

Del.icio.us : Web 2.0, data, mapping, network, produsage, social media, visualisation

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Snurb — Thursday 12 March 2009 22:56

Chinese Mobile News, Australian Bloggers, and Youdecide2007: Publications Roundup

Politics | Journalism | Blogs and Blogging | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Participatory Journalism and Citizen Engagement (ARC Linkage) | Mobile Media 2007 | Youdecide2007 | Social Media Network Mapping | Mobile Telephony | Publications |

Time to catch up with a few publications - my recent work is featured in a number of new collections:

Mobile Technologies: From Telecommunications to Media, edited by Gerard Goggin and Larissa Hjorth, collects some of the best papers from the Mobile Media 2007 conference (which I blogged about at the time) in Sydney. Looks like a fabulous collection, and I'm delighted that an article by former QUT Visiting Scholar Liu Cheng and me about SMS news in China has been included. We're looking especially at the experience at Yunnan Daily Press, where Cheng led the roll-out of SMS news functionality, and we're including some staggering statistics about the growth of Internet and mobile use in China as well (I wonder how they'll be affected by the global financial crisis...).

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Snurb — Friday 6 March 2009 12:35

Coming Up: Athens and Frankfurt

Travel | Produsers and Produsage | Social Media Network Mapping | WebSci '09 | Prosumer Revisited 2009 |

In just over a week, I'm off to Europe for the first of a number of conference trips this year; as always, I'll try to blog my progress as I go. My first stop is the WebSci '09 conference, where I'm presenting a poster on the background to our blog mapping project (which has already produced papers at the AoIR and ISEA conferences last year, with more to come). Should be interesting, even if it's a lot more (computer and social) science-y than what I'd usually attend. And, they've got Tim Berners-Lee as a keynote speaker - no doubt in honour of yet another anniversary, and one which I didn't even mention in my post the other day: yes, the Web, too, first happened 20 years ago (or at least that's when Sir Tim first proposed his hypertext transfer protocol)!.

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Snurb — Saturday 18 October 2008 18:30

Examining the Role of the Internet in Korean, Australian, and Danish Elections

Politics | Produsage Communities | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Social Media Network Mapping | AoIR 2008 | ir9 |

Copenhagen.
We're starting the last day of this very enjoyable AoIR 2008 conference already. This one is going to busy for me, as three of my papers are scheduled for today - two of them, in fact, in competing sessions (but luckily my colleagues Lars Kirchhoff and Thomas Nicolai, who are the lead authors, are able to present one of them). This morning, we're starting with a session on the online dimensions of national elections across a number of countries.

The first presenter is Yeon-Ok Lee, whose focus is on last December's presidential election in South Korea. The previous election to this, of course, was won by a small margin by the liberal underdog Rooh Moo-Hyun, due in good part to the activism of Korea's Netizens and to coverage by citizen journalism site OhmyNews. This made the 2007 election a particularly interesting case for further research.

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Snurb — Saturday 18 October 2008 16:48

Australia's Political Blogosphere in the Aftermath of 2007 Federal Election (AoIR 2008)

Politics | Produsers and Produsage | Journalism | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Participatory Journalism and Citizen Engagement (ARC Linkage) | Social Media Network Mapping | AoIR 2008 | ir9 |

AoIR 2008

Australia's Political Blogosphere in the Aftermath of 2007 Federal Election

Axel Bruns, Jason Wilson, Barry Saunders, Lars Kirchhoff, Thomas Nicolai

  • 18 Oct. 2008 - AoIR 2008 conference, Copenhagen
Australias Political Blogosphere in the Aftermath of the 2007 Federal Election (AoIR 2008)

View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: ir9 blogs)



Full Paper


Australian political bloggers and citizen journalists appear to have played an important role in the 2007 federal elections. They provided a highly critical corrective to mainstream journalism, seemed to influence public opinion on key election themes, and offered a coverage of political events which diverted from the customary focus on political leaders and bellwether locations only. Bloggers were wooed by political parties (such as the Australian Labor Party with its Labor First blog site), mainstream media (such as the online arm of public broadcaster ABC, which ran several blogs of its own), and journalism researchers (through projects such as Youdecide2007.org, which provided a space for a hyperlocal citizen journalism coverage of the campaign in participants' individual electorates).

But what remains unclear to date is exactly how information travels within the distributed network of the blogosphere itself, and from here to other (online) spaces of citizen and industrial journalism. To trace such movements may underline (or undermine) news and political bloggers' claims of influence and importance; it would highlight the extent to which blogging operates merely as an echo chamber for the political cognoscenti, or has impact in the wider population. It would provide insight into the extent to which news bloggers and mainstream journalists feed off and respond to one another's work, and outline possible avenues for mutually beneficial collaborations.

This paper presents findings from an ongoing investigation into the inner workings of the Australian political blogosphere, which is based on a long-term process of gathering and archiving new content on a large number of Australian blogs and news sites. Such content is then analysed using a combination of qualitative and quantitative measures which enable the identification and visualisation of page and site interlinkages within and beyond the network of sites examined, and the tracing of themes and memes across the corpus of data gathered by the project.

The paper will outline the underlying research and data gathering methodologies, and highlight key findings from its investigation. In particular, it will examine the shift in online political communication in Australia as the country switched from election to post-election mode, and seek evidence of a paradigm shift in terms of key themes, issues, and opinion leaders as the defeated conservative Coalition government of John Howard was replaced by the incoming Labor government under new Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.

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Snurb — Wednesday 20 August 2008 09:30

Is There an Australian Blogosphere?

Politics | Blogs and Blogging | Social Media Network Mapping |

A few days ago Geert Lovink contacted me with some interview questions regarding our research into the Australian political blogosphere - this is for a new book, Blog Theory, that he's working on with Jodi Dean for release on Polity Press. Here's what I had to say:

GL: You have just done research into the Australian blogosphere. Do you think there is something like an Australian blogosphere and how would you characterize it?

Well, let me start by saying that 'the blog' is simply a media technology (similar to 'the book' or 'the television'), which can be used in any number of different ways. And similar to those other media technologies (where we also don't speak of a 'booksphere' or 'televisionsphere', I've long argued that we're well past the point where to speak of 'blogging' as a unified form makes sense any more.

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Snurb — Wednesday 6 August 2008 18:21

Locating the Australian Blogosphere: Towards a New Research Methodology

Politics | Blogs and Blogging | Gatewatching and Citizen Journalism | Participatory Journalism and Citizen Engagement (ARC Linkage) | Social Media Network Mapping | ISEA 2008 |

ISEA 2008

Locating the Australian Blogosphere: Towards a New Research Methodology

Axel Bruns, Jason Wilson, Barry Saunders, Tim Highfield, Lars Kirchhoff, Thomas Nicolai

  • 26 July 2008 - ISEA 2008 conference, Singapore
Locating The Australian Blogosphere (Isea 2008)

view presentation (tags: isea2008 blogs mapping australia)

Full Paper (PDF)

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Snurb — Wednesday 30 July 2008 23:29

Visualising Cultural Patterns

Social Media Network Mapping | ISEA 2008 | Creative Industries |

Singapore.
The ISEA 2008 conference is pretty much over now - the last event broadly connected with it is a talk by new media theorist Lev Manovich in the beautiful Lasalle arts space. With a title of "Cultural Analytics", I wouldn't be so surprised if this was going to be pretty close to what my colleagues at QUT have in mind when they talk about cultural science...

His aim here is to extrapolate from current to future cultural trends, and he notes that such futurism is traditionally very difficult. Part of his approach, therefore, is to develop new projects with his students which may have the potential to set new trends themselves. Overall, he says, we'll see a very significant new cultural development that builds on data mining and data visualisation technologies.

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