Digital Ethnography

The first-hand observation of a social situation or setting. Digital ethnography specifically refers to the use of technology and digital resources to observe society. 

 

Related Publications:

  • [WebSci2017] Govind, Marc Spaniol - ELEVATE: A Framework for Entity-level Event Diffusion Prediction into Foreign Language Communities
  • [WebSci2017] Yongren Shi, Kai Mast, Ingmar Weber, Agrippa Kellum, Michael Macy - Cultural Fault Lines and Political Polarization
  • [WebSci2017] Jessica Ogden, Susan Halford, Leslie Carr - Observing Web Archives: The Case for an Ethnographic Study of Web Archiving
  • [WebSci2017] Lindsay Poirier - A Turn for the Scruffy: An Ethnographic Study of Semantic Web Architecture
  • [WebSci2015] Christopher Wienberg, Andrew S. Gordon - Insights on Privacy and Ethics from the Web's Most Prolific Storytellers
  • [WebSci2012] Huw C. Davies, Susan J. Halford, Nick Gibbins - ‘Digital Natives? Investigating young people’s critical skills in evaluating web based information’
  • [WebSci2012] Lisa Sugiura, Catherine Pope, Craig Webber - Buying unlicensed slimming drugs from the Web: a virtual ethnography
  • [WebSci2012] Emilio Zagheni, IngmarWeber - You are where you E-mail: Using E-mail Data to Estimate International Migration Rates
  • [WebSci2013] Bernhard Haslhofer, Werner Robitza, Carl Lagoze, Francois Guimbretiere - Semantic Tagging on Historical Maps