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[Commlist] CFP: Innovative Methods for Video-on-Demand Research
Fri Mar 01 16:50:10 GMT 2024
*CFP: Innovative Methods for Video-on-Demand Research*
An international workshop at Utrecht University, 12 September 2024
Video-on-demand services (VODs) are often assumed by researchers to be
black boxes, impenetrable to academic inquiry. Data on VOD catalogs,
audiences, and usage can be challenging to source and may be
commercially protected, leading to concerns about transparency and
access (Wayne 2022).
Nonetheless, in recent years researchers have found many innovative
workarounds to investigate VODs, publishing important studies of VOD
libraries, recommendations, promotion, and use. This scattered but
vibrant field of empirical VOD research now spans television and screen
studies, media industry studies, platform studies, law, economics,
computer science, and policy research. We see for instance advances in
catalog research (Grece 2018), distant readings of VOD interfaces (Kelly
2021), reverse engineering of algorithms (Pakovic 2022), logging user
interactions through browser extensions (Castro et al. 2021), and
quantitative analysis of proprietary data sets from third-parties (Lotz
et al. 2022). Such research is valuable for scholarly debate because it
allows us, in the absence of industry disclosure, to better understand
trends in production, distribution and consumption of content; and from
a policy perspective, it is also vital to establish if local content
quotas and requirements for prominence/visibility are being met.
Topics of interest within VOD research include:
* What makes up the library of a VOD?
* How do libraries differ between services and across space and time?
* How is content circulated? (interfaces, recommendations and promotion)
* What do we know about usage of different VODs?
* How is usage shaped by prominence and discoverability within the
interface?
* What VOD content is popular/culturally significant?
* How are data used by VODs for producing and distributing content?
* What can VOD research contribute to public policy debates?
We invite papers that propose, modify, elaborate, demonstrate or reflect
on innovative methods for studying VODs, including empirical methods for
data collection and/or critical and interpretive methods for data
analysis. Our focus is on research methods for subscription
video-on-demand (SVOD) and broadcaster video-on-demand (BVOD) services,
rather than on social video platforms such as YouTube and Tiktok.
*Submission details:*
Abstracts of 500 words are due by 1 May 2024 along with a 100 word bio
and should be sent to Karin van Es ((K.F.vanEs /at/ uu.nl)
<mailto:(K.F.vanEs /at/ uu.nl)>) and Ramon Lobato ((ramon.lobato /at/ rmit.edu.au)
<mailto:(ramon.lobato /at/ rmit.edu.au)>).
Notifications of acceptance will be sent by 1 June, and accepted authors
will be invited to submit extended abstracts of 2,000 words by 5
September. The workshop will be held on 12 September at Utrecht
University, The Netherlands. A special journal issue is planned
following the workshop. We also welcome expressions of interest from
scholars who cannot attend the workshop but would like to be considered
for the special issue. Please feel free to reach out to the organisers
by email.
*References*
Castro D, Rigby J, Cabral D and Nisi V (2021) The Binge-watcher’s
Journey: Investigating Motivations, Contexts, and Affective States
Surrounding Netflix Viewing. /Convergence/ 27 (1): 3-20.
Grece, Christian (2018) /Films in VOD catalogues – Origin, Circulation
and Age/. Strasbourg: European Audiovisual Observatory.
Kelly JP (2021). ‘Recommended for you’: A Distant Reading of BBC
iPlayer. /Critical Studies in Television/, /16/(3), 264-285
Lotz A, Eklund O and Suroka S (2022) Netflix, Library Analysis, and
Globalization: Rethinking Mass Media Flows. /Journal of Communication
/72 (4): 511–521.
PajkovicN (2022) Algorithms and Taste-making: Exposing the Netflix
Recommender System’s Operational Logics. /Convergence/ 28 (1): 214–235
Wayne ML (2022) Netflix Audience Data, Streaming Industry Discourse, and
the Emerging Realities of ‘Popular’ Television. /Media, Culture &
Society/ 44 (2): 193–20.
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