Cyberscience 2.0 - Research in the Age of Digital Social Networks
von: Michael Nentwich, René König
Campus Verlag, 2012
ISBN: 9783593411996
Sprache: Deutsch
237 Seiten, Download: 4935 KB
Format: PDF, auch als Online-Lesen
Contents | 6 | ||
Preface | 10 | ||
1 Introduction | 12 | ||
1.1 Cyberscience 1.0 Revisited | 13 | ||
1.2 Web 2.0 and Cyberscience | 16 | ||
1.2.1 The Internet is becoming a social space | 16 | ||
1.2.2 Social media, digital social networks and digital social culture | 18 | ||
1.2.3 On the path to cyberscience 2.0? | 20 | ||
1.3 Conceptual Framework and Methods | 22 | ||
1.3.1 Modeling scholarly activities and ICT impact on academia | 22 | ||
1.3.2 Methods applied | 26 | ||
2 Case Studies | 28 | ||
2.1 Social Network Sites | 30 | ||
2.1.1 Main functions | 37 | ||
2.1.2 Potential for science and research | 44 | ||
2.1.3 Usage practices and impact | 46 | ||
2.1.4 Interim conclusions | 59 | ||
2.2 Microblogging | 61 | ||
2.2.1 Main functions | 62 | ||
2.2.2 Potentials for academia | 65 | ||
2.2.3 Usage practices and impact | 68 | ||
2.2.4 Interim conclusions | 81 | ||
2.3 Collaborative Knowledge Production—The Case of Wikimedia | 83 | ||
2.3.1 Main functions and core principles | 85 | ||
2.3.2 Potentials for academia | 93 | ||
2.3.3 Usage practices and impact | 96 | ||
2.3.4 Interim conclusions | 108 | ||
2.4 Virtual Worlds—The Case of Second Life | 111 | ||
2.4.1 Main functions | 112 | ||
2.4.2 Potentials for science and research | 114 | ||
2.4.3 Usage practices and impact | 115 | ||
2.4.4 Interim conclusions | 123 | ||
2.5 Search Engines—The Case of Google | 124 | ||
2.5.1 Main functions | 127 | ||
2.5.2 Potential for academia | 136 | ||
2.5.3 User practices and impact | 138 | ||
2.5.4 Interim conclusions | 150 | ||
3 Cross-Cutting Analysis | 154 | ||
3.1 Interactivity as a Crucial Category | 154 | ||
3.1.1 Utopian and dystopian perspectives | 154 | ||
3.1.2 Insiders and outsiders: methodological issues | 157 | ||
3.1.3 Overcoming the barriers between utopians and dystopians | 160 | ||
3.2 New Windows in the Ivory Tower | 162 | ||
3.2.1 Bringing together the academic and the public sphere | 163 | ||
3.2.2 Blurring media formats | 166 | ||
3.2.3 Blurring roles | 169 | ||
3.2.4 Bridging the boundaries? | 172 | ||
3.3 Academic Quality and Digital Social Networks | 174 | ||
3.3.1 Recent developments in academic quality control | 174 | ||
3.3.2 Ex ante quality control for or through digital social networks? | 176 | ||
3.3.3 Ex post quality control in digital social networks | 179 | ||
3.3.4 Crediting and incentives | 182 | ||
3.4 Information Overload or Information Paradise? | 183 | ||
3.4.1 The evolution and diversification of communication channels in academia | 184 | ||
3.4.2 Quantitative impacts of multi-channel communication | 187 | ||
3.4.3 Qualitative impacts? | 189 | ||
3.5 Between Transparency and Privacy | 192 | ||
3.5.1 Privacy versus transparency in the Web 2.0 | 193 | ||
3.5.2 Privacy impact assessment of academic use of social media | 194 | ||
3.5.3 Paths towards transparent and privacy-friendly academic Web 2.0? | 196 | ||
3.6 Towards Democratization of Science? | 199 | ||
3.6.1 What does democratization mean? | 199 | ||
3.6.2 Internal democratization? | 201 | ||
3.6.3 External democratization? | 205 | ||
3.6.4 Obstacles for assessing democratization processes | 208 | ||
4 Overall Conclusions and Outlook | 210 | ||
4.1 Maturing Cyberscience | 210 | ||
4.2 The Cyberscience 2.0 Prospects | 212 | ||
4.3 An Ambivalent Overall Assessment | 216 | ||
Abbreviations | 218 | ||
List of Tables | 220 | ||
List of Figures | 221 | ||
Bibliography | 222 | ||
Index | 244 |