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[ecrea] Digital data – lost, found, and made -- Seminar in Copenhagen, October 16, 2012
Fri Aug 31 16:07:49 GMT 2012
*Digital data – lost, found, and made*
Seminar
Center for Communication and Computing – http://ccc.ku.dk/
University of Copenhagen
Southern Campus, Room 24.4.01
October 16, 2012
Communication on the internet and in other digital media is continuously
recording itself – these data are there to be found. They
include meta-data – data about data – that carry much information beyond
the actual messages that are ‘sent’ and ‘received.’ Meta-data situate
these messages in relation to their contexts – the source of
information, its connections with other items of information, their
trajectories across sites and servers, and the local users of the
information, who, perhaps, add their own meta-data. At the same time,
various other kinds of data must be made in order to account for the
place of digital media in social interaction on a global scale. The
resulting challenges to research are as massive as the amounts of data
involved – what is referred to in both academia and industry as big data.
This seminar brings key contributors to the first decade of internet
research to the Copenhagen Center for Communication and Computing in
order to address these challenges in an interdisciplinary dialogue. Each
presentation is followed by Q&A, and the seminar concludes with a panel
debate and plenary discussion.
The seminar is open and free – no registration is required. For further
information, please contact Kasper Rasmussen <(kasper.r /at/ diku.dk)>
PROGRAM
9:45 Welcome (Head of Center, Professor Jørgen Bansler)
10:00 Lost, found, and made – meta-data, meta-media, and
meta-communication (Klaus Bruhn Jensen)
10:30 The data we can’t see (Nancy Baym)
11:00 COFFEE
11:15 The analytical construction of web data (Casper Radil)
11:45 Jumping to conclusions – making sense of the long
tail of Danes’ internet use by incorporating content analysis
and probabilistic sampling (Rasmus Helles)
12:15 LUNCH
13:15 Twitter, big data, and the search for meaning –
methodology in progress (Axel Bruns)
13:45 Towards more intelligent search engines (Christian
Lioma)
14:15 Detecting learning in networked environments (Alex
Halavais)
14:45 Representation vs. invention in the age of endless
data: Looking closely at methodological and ethical choices
(Annette Markham)
15:15 COFFEE
15:30 Panel debate with presenters
16:30 Closing
PRESENTERS
Nancy Baym. Principal Researcher, Microsoft Research Cambridge. She has
written on online community, online audiences, and interpersonal
relationships and new media. Her books include Personal Connections in
the Digital Age (Polity) and, with Annette Markham, Internet Inquiry:
Conversations about Method (Sage.)
Axel Bruns. Associate Professor at Queensland University of Technology,
Australia. Chief Investigator at the ARC Centre of Excellence
for Creative Industries and Innovation (CCI) and General Editor at M/C
- Media and Culture. Publications include Blogs, Wikipedia, Second Life
and Beyond: From Production to Produsage (2008).
Alex Halavais. Associate Professor of Communications at Arizona State
University, USA. Halavais’s recent work has focused on tracing learning
within networked communities, particularly using social media ("Do Dugg
Diggers Digg
Diligently," published in iCS last year, and ongoing research on the use
of Twitter in social protest). Other publications include Search Engine
Society (2009).
Rasmus Helles. Associate Professor, Department of Media, Cognition, and
Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Rasmus’ work focuses
on the everyday use of digital media, especially through log files as a
source of empirical data. Recent publications include articles on mobile
phone and internet use patterns.
Klaus Bruhn Jensen. Professor, Department of Media, Cognition,
and Communication, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Publications include A Handbook of Media and Communication Research:
Qualitative and Quantitative Methodologies,
2nd edition (Routledge, 2012), contributions to
the International Encyclopedia of Communication (12 vols, Blackwell,
2008), for which he serves as Area Editor of Communication Theory and
Philosophy, and Media Convergence: The Three Degrees of Network, Mass,
and Interpersonal Communication (Routledge, 2010).
Christina Lioma. Assistant Professor at the Department of Computer
Science, University of Copenhagen. Her research focuses on
the computational science behind search engines (Information Retrieval)
and human language (Computational Linguistics). Since 2004, she has been
working at the crossroads of these two areas, effectively alternating
between thinking like a computer scientist and thinking like a linguist.
Annette Markham. Guest Professor, Department of Informatics, Umeaa
University, Sweden. Annette serves as the co-editor of the International
Journal of Internet Research Ethics.
Publications include Internet Inquiry: Dialogue Among
Scholars (co-edited with Nancy Baym, Sage 2009); Life Online:
Researching Real Experience in Virtual Space (Sage, 1998); and a range
of articles and book chapters related to interpretive qualitative
research in internet studies. She is currently working on a
book manuscript entitled: The Ethics of Fabrication.
Casper Radil. PhD fellow at the University of Copenhagen, Department of
Media, Cognition, and Communication, writing his dissertation on how the
Internet is changing Danish football fan culture. Outside the
university, he is working in the company Interfazes that develops new
conceptual tools and methods to comprehend online behavior as well as
using these methods to advise large public organizations and private
companies.
**********************************************************
Klaus Bruhn Jensen
Professor, dr.phil.
Film and Media Studies Section
Department of Media, Cognition, and Communication
University of Copenhagen
DK-2300 Copenhagen S
Denmark
(kbj /at/ hum.ku.dk) <mailto:(kbj /at/ hum.ku.dk)>
www.media.ku.dk
Tel +45-35328100
Fax +45-35328110
**********************************************************
*New publication - 2nd edition*
Jensen, KB (Ed.) (2012). A Handbook of Media and Communication Research:
Qualitative and Quantitative Methodologies. 2nd edition. London, New
York: Routledge, www.routledge.com/9780415609661
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