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New Media & Society, Volume 26
Volume 26, Number 1, January 2024
- Steve Jones, David W. Park:
Editorial. 3-4 - David W. Park:
Tribute to the Voluntarist Ethos of New Media & Society: A Farewell. 5-6 - Jutta Joachim, Andrea Schneiker:
Public or private? Blurring the lines through YouTube recruitment of military veterans by private security companies. 7-28 - Chun Lai:
The influences of different types of social media activities on ethnic minorities' acculturation. 29-52 - Michael Chan, Francis L. F. Lee, Hsuan-Ting Chen:
Examining the roles of social media use and connections to public actors on democratic engagement: An analysis of young adults in three Asian societies. 53-70 - Nicola Ens, Attila Marton:
"Sure, I saw sales, but it consumed me" from resilience to erosion in the digital hustle economy. 71-90 - Wenjing Pan, Jorge Peña:
A replication and expansion of the exposure effects of online model photos and social comparison goals on planned behaviors and self-efficacy to lose weight. 91-112 - Matthias Hofer, Eszter Hargittai:
Online social engagement, depression, and anxiety among older adults. 113-130 - Marcelo Luis Barbosa dos Santos, Magdalena Saldaña, Ksenia Tsyganova:
Subversive affordances as a form of digital transnational activism: The case of Telegram's native proxy. 131-153 - Veronica Sheanoda, Kay Bussey, Tiffany Jones:
Sexuality, gender and culturally diverse interpretations of cyberbullying. 154-171 - Moritz Büchi:
Digital well-being theory and research. 172-189 - Eliane Bucher, Christian Fieseler, Christoph Lutz, Alexander Buhmann:
Professionals, purpose-seekers, and passers-through: How microworkers reconcile alienation and platform commitment through identity work. 190-215 - Saif Shahin, Junki Nakahara, Mariana Sánchez:
Black Lives Matter goes global: Connective action meets cultural hybridity in Brazil, India, and Japan. 216-235 - Thomas Wimark, Daniel Hedlund:
From individuals to emotional drones: Technology-driven change in the collective conditioning of intimacy. 236-252 - Nicholas Holm:
Deadpan humour, the comic disposition and the interpretation of ironic ambiguity online. 253-270 - Cato Waeterloos, Michel Walrave, Koen Ponnet:
The role of multi-platform news consumption in explaining civic participation during the COVID-19 pandemic: A communication mediation approach. 271-291 - Hannah K. Jarman, Siân A. McLean, Amy Slater, Mathew D. Marques, Susan J. Paxton:
Direct and indirect relationships between social media use and body satisfaction: A prospective study among adolescent boys and girls. 292-312 - Jathan Sadowski:
'Anyway, the dashboard is dead': On trying to build urban informatics. 313-328 - Hanne Marleen Stegeman:
Regulating and representing camming: Strict limits on acceptable content on webcam sex platforms. 329-345 - Peng Zheng, Paul C. Adams, Jiejie Wang:
Shifting moods on Sina Weibo: The first 12 weeks of COVID-19 in Wuhan. 346-367 - Matthew Barnidge, Michael A. Xenos:
Social media news deserts: Digital inequalities and incidental news exposure on social media platforms. 368-388 - Gabriele Fariello, Dariusz Jemielniak, Adam Sulkowski:
Does Godwin's law (rule of Nazi analogies) apply in observable reality? An empirical study of selected words in 199 million Reddit posts. 389-404 - Jin Lee, Crystal Abidin:
Backdoor advertising scandals, Yingyeo culture, and cancel culture among YouTube Influencers in South Korea. 405-425 - Martha Newson, Yi Zhao, Marwa El Zein, Justin Sulik, Guillaume Dezecache, Ophelia Deroy, Bahar Tunçgenç:
Digital contact does not promote wellbeing, but face-to-face contact does: A cross-national survey during the COVID-19 pandemic. 426-449 - Qinfeng Zhu, Brian E. Weeks, Nojin Kwak:
Implications of online incidental and selective exposure for political emotions: Affective polarization during elections. 450-472 - Emily Edwards, Sarah Ford, Radhika Gajjala, Padmini Ray Murray, Kiran Vinod Bhatia:
Shaheen Bagh: Making sense of (re)emerging "Subaltern" feminist political subjectivities in hashtag publics through critical, feminist interventions. 473-494 - Sanna Malinen:
The owners of information: Content curation practices of middle-level gatekeepers in political Facebook groups. 495-512 - Bradley J. Bond, Brandon Miller:
YouTube as my space: The relationships between YouTube, social connectedness, and (collective) self-esteem among LGBTQ individuals. 513-533 - Daniel G. Heslep, P. S. Berge:
Mapping Discord's darkside: Distributed hate networks on Disboard. 534-555 - Daniel Kreiss, Shannon C. McGregor:
A review and provocation: On polarization and platforms. 556-579 - Sophie Toupin:
Shaping feminist artificial intelligence. 580-595 - Subhalakshmi Gooptu, Shiv Issar:
Book Reviews: Worn Out: How Retailers Surveil and Exploit Workers in the Digital Age and How Workers Are Fighting Back Madison Van Oort. 596-598 - Hakan Karahasan:
Book Reviews: Stolen Focus: Why You Can't Pay Attention Johann Hari. 598-600 - Kat Fuller:
Book Reviews: Red Pilled: The Allure of Digital Hate Luke Munn. 600-602 - Reviewer acknowledgements. 603-615
Volume 26, Number 2, February 2024
- Yiyi Yin, Zhuoxiao Xie:
Playing platformized language games: Social media logic and the mutation of participatory cultures in Chinese online fandom. 619-641 - Lea Püchel, Christian-Mathias Wellbrock:
Examining the digital renewal of news communication: A categorization of presentation modes in digital journalism. 642-673 - Jeffrey Lane, Fanny A. Ramirez:
Carceral communication: Mass incarceration as communicative phenomenon. 674-691 - Mingxuan Liu, Sukyoung Choi, Do Own (Donna) Kim, Dmitri Williams:
Connecting in-game performance, need satisfaction, and psychological well-being: A comparison of older and younger players in World of Tanks. 692-710 - Cornelia Sindermann, Christopher Kannen, Christian Montag:
The degree of heterogeneity of news consumption in Germany - Descriptive statistics and relations with individual differences in personality, ideological attitudes, and voting intentions. 711-731 - Neil Alperstein:
A study of web ecology: The use of trackers on pro science climate change and climate denier websites. 732-756 - Nina Savela, David García, Max Pellert, Atte Oksanen:
Emotional talk about robotic technologies on Reddit: Sentiment analysis of life domains, motives, and temporal themes. 757-781 - Saifuddin Ahmed, Teresa Gil-Lopez:
The company you keep: Social network characteristics and political participation disparity among adolescents and young adults. 782-804 - Mika-Petri Laakkonen, Ville Kivivirta:
Elevators as media objects manipulating information in time. 805-822 - Orlando Woods:
The affective embeddings of gacha games: Aesthetic assemblages and the mediated expression of the self. 823-838 - Anders Nj Lien:
A battle for truth: Islam-related counterpublic discourse on Scandinavian news media Facebook pages. 839-858 - Grace H. Wolff, Cuihua Shen:
Audience size, moderator activity, gender, and content diversity: Exploring user participation and financial commitment on Twitch.tv. 859-881 - Anat Leshnick:
Deletion discussions on Hebrew Wikipedia: Negotiating global and local ideologies. 882-898 - Shengchun Huang, Tian Yang:
No trade-offs between news and entertainment: Evidence from online engagement data. 899-920 - Ines Engelmann, Hanna Marzinkowski, Klara Langmann:
Salient deliberative norm types in comment sections on news sites. 921-940 - Hyunyi Cho, Julie Cannon, Rachel Lopez, Wenbo Li:
Social media literacy: A conceptual framework. 941-960 - Molly Pocock, Michael Skey:
'You feel a need to inspire and be active on these sites otherwise . . . people won't remember your name': Elite female athletes and the need to maintain 'appropriate distance' in navigating online gendered space. 961-977 - Will Marler, Eszter Hargittai:
Division of digital labor: Partner support for technology use among older adults. 978-994 - Teresa Correa, Sebastián Valenzuela, Isabel Pavez:
For better and for worse: A panel survey of how mobile-only and hybrid Internet use affects digital skills over time. 995-1017 - Colten Meisner, Brooke Erin Duffy, Malte Ziewitz:
The labor of search engine evaluation: Making algorithms more human or humans more algorithmic? 1018-1033 - Axel Kuhn, Annika Schwabe, Hajo Boomgarden, Lukas Brandl, Günther Stocker, Gerhard Lauer, Ina Brendel-Kepser, Marion Krause-Wolters:
Who gets lost? How digital academic reading impacts equal opportunity in higher education. 1034-1055 - Urs Stäheli, Luise Stoltenberg:
Digital detox tourism: Practices of analogization. 1056-1073 - Zhicong Chen, Eric Jardine, Xiao Fan Liu, Jonathan J. H. Zhu:
Seeking anonymity on the Internet: The knowledge accumulation process and global usage of the Tor network. 1074-1095 - Dominik Neumann, Nancy Rhodes:
Morality in social media: A scoping review. 1096-1126 - Cristiane Melchior, Mírian Oliveira:
A systematic literature review of the motivations to share fake news on social media platforms and how to fight them. 1127-1150 - Rebecca Scales:
Book Review: Media of the Masses: Cassette Culture in Modern Egypt. 1151-1153 - Minghao Ma, Zhen Hu:
Book Review: Translation, Adaptation and Digital Media. 1153-1155 - Dorota Domalewska:
Book Review: Social Media as Social Science Data. 1155-1157 - Yongjian Li:
Book Review: Digital Migration. 1157-1160 - Elizabeth Schiffler:
Book Review: Food Instagram: Identity, Influence, and Negotiation. 1160-1162
Volume 26, Number 3, 2024
- Mark Andrejevic, Chris O'Neill:
Automated responses to the coronavirus disease-19 pandemic: An overview. 1165-1182 - Anna Jackman, Michael Richardson, Madelene Veber:
Where are the pandemic drones? On the 'failure' of automated aerial solutionism. 1183-1203 - Mark Andrejevic, Chris O'Neill, Gavin Smith, Neil Selwyn, Xin Gu:
Granular biopolitics: Facial recognition, pandemics and the securitization of circulation. 1204-1226 - Lauren Kelly:
Supermarket 'dark jobs' and rapid grocery delivery: Transformations in labour, technology and logistics. 1227-1248 - Georgia van Toorn, Lloyd Cox:
Digital citizenship and disability in the covid era. 1249-1267 - Gerard Goggin, Rowan Wilken:
QR codes and automated decision-making in the COVID-19 pandemic. 1268-1289 - Ariadna Matamoros-Fernández, Louisa Bartolo, Betsy Alpert:
Acting like a bot as a defiance of platform power: Examining YouTubers' patterns of 'inauthentic' behaviour on Twitter during COVID-19. 1290-1314 - Silvia Ximena Montaña-Niño, Jean Burgess:
Beyond the 'critical incident': COVID-19, data journalism and the slow road to editorial automation in Australian newsrooms. 1315-1332 - Christopher O'Neill:
Disaster, facial recognition technology, and the problem of the corpse. 1333-1348 - Sarah Pink, Yolande A. A. Strengers, Hannah Korsmeyer:
Future notification: Living and breathing in post-pandemic climate change. 1349-1365 - Heather Horst, Adam Sargent, Luke Gaspard:
Beyond extraction: Data strategies from the Global South. 1366-1383 - Stefanie Duguay, Christopher Dietzel, David Myles:
The year of the "virtual date": Reimagining dating app affordances during the COVID-19 pandemic. 1384-1402 - Svenja Schäfer, Philipp Müller, Marc Ziegele:
The double-edged sword of online deliberation: How evidence-based user comments both decrease and increase discussion participation intentions on social media. 1403-1428 - Yu-Leung Ng:
Exploring the association between use of conversational artificial intelligence and social capital: Survey evidence from Hong Kong. 1429-1444 - Ann Rousseau:
The role of task relevance and information credibility in adolescents' internalization of and reliance on social media ideals. 1445-1466 - Johanna Arnesson:
'Endorsing a dictatorship and getting paid for it': Discursive struggles over intimacy and authenticity in the politicisation of influencer collaborations. 1467-1483 - Baruch Shomron, Yossi David:
Protecting the community: How digital media promotes safer behavior during the Covid-19 pandemic in authoritarian communities - a case study of the ultra-Orthodox community in Israel. 1484-1504 - Magdalena Wischnewski, Thao Ngo, Rebecca Bernemann, Martin Jansen, Nicole Krämer:
"I agree with you, bot!" How users (dis)engage with social bots on Twitter. 1505-1526 - Andrea Alarcón:
The usefulness of open events: Navigating professional spaces of urban Meetups. 1527-1543 - Tobias Heidenreich, Jakob-Moritz Eberl, Fabienne Lind, Hajo G. Boomgaarden:
Discontentment trumps Euphoria: Interacting with European Politicians' migration-related messages on social media. 1544-1565 - Pascal Lupien, Adriana Rincón, Andrés Lalama, Gabriel Chiriboga:
Framing Indigenous protest in the online public sphere: A comparative frame analysis. 1566-1584 - Carlo Perrotta, Neil Selwyn, Carrie A. Ewin:
Artificial intelligence and the affective labour of understanding: The intimate moderation of a language model. 1585-1609 - Jasmine Fardouly, Natasha R. Magson, Ronald M. Rapee, Ella L. Oar, Carly J. Johnco, Cele Richardson, Justin Freeman:
Investigating longitudinal and bidirectional relationships between parental factors and time spent on social media during early adolescence. 1610-1626 - Chao Yu, Drew Margolin:
Sharing inequalities: Racial discrimination in review acquisition on Airbnb. 1627-1647 - Liam Cross, Linda K. Kaye, Juris Savostijanovs, Neil McLatchie, Matthew Johnston, Liam Whiteman, Robyn Mooney, Gray Atherton:
Gendered violence and sexualized representations in video games: (Lack of) effect on gender-related attitudes. 1648-1669 - Jennifer Park, Jada Hallman, Sunny Xun Liu, Jeff T. Hancock:
Black representation in social media well-being research: A scoping review of social media experience and psychological well-being among Black users in the United States. 1670-1702 - Wenting Yu, Fei Shen:
Mapping verification behaviors in the post-truth era: A systematic review. 1703-1727 - Mark Brewin:
Book Review: Hyperculture: Culture and globalization Byung-Chul Han. 1728-1730 - Mel Monier:
Book Review: Racialized Media: The Design Matthew W. Hughey and Emma González-Lesser. 1730-1732
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