In media history, there exists a perpetual cycle in which humanity’s innovation of communication technology shapes world culture and political climate, eventually resulting in humanity’s delayed response to these changes. Using this framework, this paper addresses the recent innovations of the social media era and the spread of online communication in regards to their impact on behavioral conditioning, democracy, and generally how people process information. The discussion takes a nuanced stance between two popular ways of imagining social media’s effect on the world: arguing for both an oppressive, authoritarian reality, likened to Orwell’s 1984, and a senseless, over-stimulated one, likened to Huxley’s Brave New World. First, the paper...
Making use of three historic philosophical thought experiments, this paper blends psychological pers...
This article explores the idea that research into media communications and information has recently ...
Over the past 20 years, the computers in our pockets have become increasingly more prominent in dail...
In media history, there exists a perpetual cycle in which humanity’s innovation of communication tec...
How the World Changed Social Media is the first book in Why We Post, a book series that investigates...
Media, and specifically, social media, is playing an increasingly central role within American polit...
Amid a broader reckoning about the role of social media in public life, this article argues that the...
The conceptual boundary between the subject and user parallels the boundary between humanist and pos...
Paper presented at ICT conference of 2009.Paper presented at Strathmore ICT Conference, 200
With the current saturation of digital devices in contemporary society, the boundaries between human...
I suggest that Social Media and Society will be substantially focused on questions of social change....
There are a lot of claims about social and other media’s power today: Some say that we have experien...
The paper examines the intersection of technological design of Social Media communication, the notio...
With the current saturation of digital devices in contemporary society, the boundaries between human...
Uttering “facts are passé” captures the spirit of post-truth. However, it often leads to addressing ...
Making use of three historic philosophical thought experiments, this paper blends psychological pers...
This article explores the idea that research into media communications and information has recently ...
Over the past 20 years, the computers in our pockets have become increasingly more prominent in dail...
In media history, there exists a perpetual cycle in which humanity’s innovation of communication tec...
How the World Changed Social Media is the first book in Why We Post, a book series that investigates...
Media, and specifically, social media, is playing an increasingly central role within American polit...
Amid a broader reckoning about the role of social media in public life, this article argues that the...
The conceptual boundary between the subject and user parallels the boundary between humanist and pos...
Paper presented at ICT conference of 2009.Paper presented at Strathmore ICT Conference, 200
With the current saturation of digital devices in contemporary society, the boundaries between human...
I suggest that Social Media and Society will be substantially focused on questions of social change....
There are a lot of claims about social and other media’s power today: Some say that we have experien...
The paper examines the intersection of technological design of Social Media communication, the notio...
With the current saturation of digital devices in contemporary society, the boundaries between human...
Uttering “facts are passé” captures the spirit of post-truth. However, it often leads to addressing ...
Making use of three historic philosophical thought experiments, this paper blends psychological pers...
This article explores the idea that research into media communications and information has recently ...
Over the past 20 years, the computers in our pockets have become increasingly more prominent in dail...