Connected Action
Menu
  • Services
    • Buy a social media network map and report
    • Training
    • Conferences
    • Data Reporting
    • Log in or Join us
    • Customize NodeXL
    • NodeXL
    • Marc Smith
    • About Us
  • Buy maps
    • Twitter Search Network Map and Report
    • Graph Server Twitter Search Network Map and Report
    • Other products and services
  • Sample maps
  • Blog
    • Books
    • NodeXL
    • Events
  • Newsletter
  • Videos
  • Contact
  • Log In

Marc

November 3, 2011: Seoul, South Korea – International Symposium on Convergence Technology (ConTech 2011)

22OctMay 7, 2015 By Marc Smith

I will speak at the International Symposium on Convergence Technology (ConTech 2011) – Smart & Humane World – on November 3rd in Seoul, South Korea.

Date: 2011 November 3 (Thurs)
Place: COEX Grand Ballroom, Seoul, Korea
Organized by Advanced Institutes of Convergence Technologies (AICT), Seoul National University (SNU)
In Cooperation with Ministry of Knowledge Economy, Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, National Research Foundation of Korea, Graduate School of Convergence Science and Technology (GSCST)
Symposium Chair : Choi, Yanghee (President, AICT)

Program
09:00~09:30 Registration
09:30~10:00 Opening Ceremony
Plenary Session : Smart & Humane World through Convergence
10:00~10:40 Speaker (TBD)
10:50~11:30 Speaker (TBD)
11:30~13:00 Lunch
Session 1 : Bio Convergence (Chair : Prof. Kim, Sunghoon)
Session 2 : IT Convergence (Chair : Dr. Lee, Manjai)
Session 3 : Appropriate Technology (Chair : Prof. Kang, Namjun)
13:00~15:00 Scott A. Strobel (Professor, Yale University)
Speaker Kevin Kim (Professor, University of Illinois)
Speaker Masaru Kitsuregawa (Professor, Tokyo University)
Speaker Haesun Park (Professor, Georgia Institute of Technology)
Speaker Marc Smith (Connected Action)
Speaker Sang-goo Lee (Professor, Seoul National University)
Speaker Haklae Kim (Samsung)
Speaker Raghu Ramakrishnan (Yahoo)

My slides: 20111103 con tech2011-marc smith

View more presentations from Marc Smith.

I will also visit Professor Han Woo Park at YeungNam University (Wikipedia) in Daegu, South Korea to meet with his students in the Webometrics Institute program.

This will be my second trip to Korea, I was there last year for a related event.  Pictures after the jump:

Continue reading →

Posted in All posts, Connected Action, Measuring social media, Mobile Social Software, NodeXL, Research, Social Media, Social network, Social Network Analysis, Talks, Visualization Tagged 2011, COEX, Conference, ConTech, ConTech2011, Korea, Marc, Marc Smith, network, NodeXL, November, Presentation, Smith, SNA, Social Media, South Korea, Talk, Visualization

Webshop 2011 review: 4 days, 20 talks, 45 students, an earthquake, a hurricane and many new connections

25SepMay 7, 2015 By Marc Smith

 

 

Summer Social Webshop
on
T
echnology-Mediated Social Participation
University of Maryland, College Park
August 23-26, 2011

Eventful.  The 2011 Webshop at the University of Maryland was certainly that with both an earthquake and a hurricane to mark the start and end of the event.  We really moved heaven and earth at this workshop.

In 4  days, 20 talks, 45 students, an earthquake, a hurricane and many new connections – the Webshop touched on a set of related concepts, methods, and findings about ways to use communication and computation technology to help groups, neighborhoods, cities, states, and nations work collectively towards common goals.

Several years ago a program at the University of Maryland called “Webshop” (Web Workshop) was organized by Professor John Robinson and held for three consecutive Summers.  I visited and spoke at two of these events and know many people who attended or spoke at one or more and remember the event enthusiastically.   The students who attended include some of the now leading researchers in the field of social science studies of the internet.  There is an impressive alumni list.

The last Webshop was held in 2003 and many years and significant changes have occurred in the time since. Twitter, Facebook, StreetView, iPad,FourSquare, Android, Kinect, EC2, Mechanical Turk, Arduino, were all new or non-existent when the first Webshops were run.  Today we have more reason than ever to focus on the details and patterns of computer-mediated human association. Ever more people channel more of their communications with others through more digital media, often of the social kind.  A new data resource for the social sciences is growing in scale and promise: from billions of events it is possible to start to build a picture of an aggregate whole, and to start to grasp the terrain and landscape of social media.

After many years of inactivity, the Summer Social Webshop (@Webshop2011) happened again!  With the generous support of the National Science Foundation and additional assistance from Google Research, on August 23-26, 2011 at the University of Maryland, College Park, a group of students heard and engaged with more than two dozen leading researchers exploring digital social landscapes from a variety of perspectives.  Organized by a collaboration between the University of Maryland’s Human Computer Interaction Laboratory (HCIL), the College of Information Studies, the Sociology and Computer Science Department, and the Social Media Research Foundation, the event gathered students from a wide range of disciplines to get a concentrated dose of advanced efforts to gather data from social media and people’s understanding and practices around digital technologies.   Doctoral students in computer science, iSchools, sociology, communications, political science, anthropology, psychology, journalism, and related disciplines applied to attend the 4-day intensive workshop on Technology-Mediated Social Participation (TMSP).  The workshop explored the many ways social media can be applied to national priorities such as health, energy, education, disaster response, political participation, environmental protection, business innovation, or community safety.  The workshop attracted graduate students at US universities studying social-networking tools, blogs and microblogs, user-generated content sites, discussion groups, problem reporting, recommendation systems, mobile and location aware media creation, and other social media.

–

Organizers

Alan Neustadtl (@smilex3md) – Sociology, University of Maryland
Jennifer Preece (@jenpre) – iSchool, University of Maryland
Marc Smith(@Marc_Smith) – Social Media Research Foundation
Ben Shneiderman (@benbendc) – Computer Science, University of Maryland
PJ Rey (@pjrey) – Sociology, University of Maryland, Student Coordinator

–

Photos

[flickrset id=”72157627509211294″ thumbnail=”thumbnail” photos=”” overlay=”true” size=”small”]

Posted in All posts, Collective Action, Common Goods, Community, Companies, Conference, Foundation, Google, Industry, Maryland, Measuring social media, NodeXL, Politics, Research, SMRF, Social Interaction, Social Media, Social Media Research Foundation, Social network, Social Network Analysis, Social Roles, Social Theories and concepts, Sociology, Talks, Technology, University, Visualization, Webshop Tagged 2011, Alan, Ben, Conference, DC, earthquake, Foundation, Google, hurricane, Intel, Jenny, Marc, Marc Smith, Maryland, Media, NSF, Research, SMRF, social, Social Media Research Foundation, Sociology, Students, University, Webshop, Webshop2011, workshop

September 22-23, 2011: Purdue University – Lecture on Social Media Networks

16SepMay 7, 2015 By Marc Smith

I will speak at Purdue University on September 22 and 23, 2011 about mapping social media networks.

My host is Sorin Matei, professor of Communications, who has been researching the social structure of social media networks.

I will also speak at Professor Matei’s class: COM 63200 On-line Interaction and Facilitation

Here is an example map of the connections among the people who tweeted the word “Purdue” on September 16th, 2011:

Connections among the Twitter users who recently tweeted the word Purdue when queried on September 16, 2011, scaled by numbers of tweets (with outliers thresholded). Connections created when users reply, mention or follow one another.

See: www.purdue.edu/

Layout using the “Group Layout” composed of tiled bounded regions. Clusters calculated by the Clauset-Newman-Moore algorithm are also encoded by color.

(Edges connecting users are bundled and curved with recent features added to NodeXL v.177.)

A larger version of the image is here: www.flickr.com/photos/marc_smith/6155750905/sizes/o/in/ph…

Betweenness Centrality is defined here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centrality#Betweenness_centrality

Clauset-Newman-Moore algorithm is defined here: pre.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v70/i6/e066111

Top most between users:
@lifeatpurdue
@jajuanjohnson
@stfu_gabby
@purdueexponent
@charliienosheen
@mbrister2
@boilerfootball
@purduesports
@hipandresanbo
@cheesebrrrrr

Graph Metric: Value
Graph Type: Directed
Vertices: 1000
Unique Edges: 4045
Edges With Duplicates: 706
Total Edges: 4751
Self-Loops: 977
Connected Components: 429
Single-Vertex Connected Components: 395
Maximum Vertices in a Connected Component: 528
Maximum Edges in a Connected Component: 4134
Maximum Geodesic Distance (Diameter): 12
Average Geodesic Distance: 3.517707
Graph Density: 0.003507508
NodeXL Version: 1.0.1.177

More NodeXL network visualizations are here: www.flickr.com/photos/marc_smith/sets/72157622437066929/

NodeXL is free and open and available from www.codeplex.com/nodexl

NodeXL is developed by the Social Media Research Foundation (www.smrfoundation.org) – which is dedicated to open tools, open data, and open scholarship.

The book, Analyzing social media networks with NodeXL: Insights from a connected world, is available from Morgan Kaufmann and from Amazon.

Posted in All posts, Collective Action, Common Goods, Community, Companies, Connected Action, Foundation, Industry, Measuring social media, Mobile Social Software, Network visualization layouts, NodeXL, Research, SMRF, Social Interaction, Social Media, Social Media Research Foundation, Social network, Social Network Analysis, Social Roles, Social Theories and concepts, Sociology, Talks, University, Visualization Tagged 2011, Indiana, Infovis, Lecture, Marc, Marc Smith, NodeXL, Presentation, Purdue, Smith, SMRF, SNA, Social Media, Social Media Research Foundation, Sociology, Talk, Trip, University, workshop

9 August 2011 – Social Media SNA Workshop – Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (http://www.aejmc.com/)

31JulMay 7, 2015 By Marc Smith

Here is a map of the connections among the people who tweeted the term “AEJMC” on August 7, 2011:

The top most between people in this network are:@aejmc, @jlab, @karenrussell, @terryflynn, @natcomm, @tmccorkindale, @derigansilver, @tkell, @aejmconlineads, and @jeremyhl:

I will present a Workshop on Social Media Network Analysis and NodeXL at the 9 August 2011 – Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (http://www.aejmc.com) in St. Louis, Missouri along with my colleague Professor Hernando Rojas, from the School of Journalism & Mass Communication, University of Wisconsin – Madison.

See: http://www.aejmc.com/home/events/annual-convention/

The Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) is a nonprofit, educational association of journalism and mass communication educators, students and media professionals. The Association’s mission is to promote the highest possible standards for journalism and mass communication education, to cultivate the widest possible range of communication research, to encourage the implementation of a multi-cultural society in the classroom and curriculum, and to defend and maintain freedom of communication in an effort to achieve better professional practice and a better informed public.

Our session is:

Using NodeXL for Social Network Analysis
Tuesday — 
2 pm to 5 pm
Presented by Communication Theory and Methodology Division
This pre-conference workshop examines social network analysis. Social network analysis can be used to examine message boards, blogs, and friend networks (amongmany other phenomena). Participants will learn to use the NodeXL program to conduct a network analysis. For information, contact Michel M. Haigh, Pennsylvania State University at mmh25@psu.edu.

 

Posted in All posts, Collective Action, Common Goods, Community, Conference, Foundation, Measuring social media, Metrics, Network clusters and communities, Network data providers (spigots), Network metrics and measures, Network visualization layouts, NodeXL, Performance scale parallel and cloud computing, SMRF, Social Media, Social network, Social Network Analysis, Social Roles, Social Theories and concepts, Sociology, Technology, User interface, Visualization Tagged 2011, AEJMC, Analysis, August, Chart, Conference, Diagram, Education, Journalism, Map, Marc, Marc Smith, Marc_Smith, Mass Communication, network, NodeXL, Smith, SNA, Social Media, Social network, Visualization, workshop

July 6th to July 13th, 2011 – Web Science Trust Graduate Summer School, DERI, NUI Galway Ireland

24AprMay 7, 2015 By Marc Smith

Web Science Doctoral Summer School 2011

I will be attending and speaking at the upcoming 2011 Web Science Trust Graduate Summer School tobe held at DERI, NUI Galway Ireland from July 6th to July 13th, 2011.  I will speak about social media network analysis and run a workshop on using NodeXL.  There is a packed schedule featuring a great group of researchers who are gathering at the event, including:

* Prof. Wendy Hall is Professor of Computer Science at the University of Southampton, UK, and Dean of the Faculty of Physical and Applied Sciences.
* Prof. Nigel Shadbolt is Professor of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Deputy Head (Research) of the School of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton.
* Prof. Stefan Decker is a professor at the National University of Ireland, Galway, and director of the Digital Enterprise Research Institute.
* Dr. Harith Alani is a senior lecturer at the Knowledge Media Institute, where he is heading a group specialising in Social Semantics.
* Dr. Bernie Hogan is a Research Fellow at the Oxford Internet Institute. He specializes in novel methods for online data capture and analysis, especially via social media.
* Prof. Scott Kirkpatrick has a background in physics (AB Princeton, PhD Harvard) and 15 years of developing new technologies at IBM’s TJ Watson Research Center before coming to the Hebrew University in 2000.
* Prof. Enric Plaza holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science by the Technical University of Catalonia (UPC) and is Research Professor of the Spanish Council for Scientific Research (CSIC).
* Prof. Steffen Staab is the director of Institute WeST – Web Science and Technologies and of the Institute for Computer Science of the University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany.
* Dr. Derek Greene is a Research Fellow at the School of Computer Science and Informatics, University College Dublin. As part of the Clique Research Cluster, his focus is on network analysis and community finding, with a particular emphasis on dynamic mobile and social media networks.
* Dr. Michael Hausenblas is a Research Fellow at DERI, NUI Galway, where he leads the Linked Data Research Centre.
* Dr. Daniele Quercia is Horizon researcher at the University of Cambridge (UK). he is interested in computational social science, web science, and social computing.
* Dr. Markus Strohmaier
is an Assistant Professor at the Knowledge Management Institute, Faculty of Computer Science at Graz University of Technology.

The event is focused on the methods and theories needed to grasp the nature of the social implications of the rapid changes in the technologies of communication and computation:

“The Web is the largest technological artefact in existence, comprising a global network of information sites and services. It is a social machine, delivering information between people and communities, embedded in almost all processes of human society: education, medicine, science and technology, commerce, entertainment and social activity. It is often simply supposed that the Web is a neutral technology, a stable computing platform for the delivery of information and services. What is overlooked is that the Web is changing constantly in response to the demands of human society. Incremental innovations leads to changes in how people use the Web and in turn how Web technology responds to changed human interaction. Small technological decisions influence how individuals use the Web and ripple out to have unanticipated macro-effects. Sometimes these effects are beneficial such as the emergence of Web 2.0 technologies. Other technologies such as the rise of spam bots or ‘blackhat’ search engine optimisation techniques clutter the Web with irrelevant, distracting information. While influential corporations such as Google, Facebook and Microsoft generate huge revenues from the Web, the Web itself is owned by everyone and no-one. We need to fully understand the demands placed on the Web by human society, so that its fate does not lead to a ‘tragedy of the commons’ but to a sustainable technological resource for the future.”

http://webscience.deri.ie/index.html

Read More

Posted in All posts, Collective Action, Common Goods, Community, Conference, Connected Action, Data Mining, Foundation, Measuring social media, NodeXL, Research, SMRF, Social Interaction, Social Media, Social network, Social Network Analysis, Social Roles, Social Theories and concepts, Sociology, Talks, Twitter, University, Visualization Tagged 2011, Analysis, Bernie Hogan, DERI, Ireland, Marc, Marc Smith, network, NodeXL, NUI, Smith, SMRF, SMRFoundation, SNA, social, Social Media, Social Media Research Foundation

Video: Talk at Personal Digital Archives 2011 at the Internet Archive (24 February 2011)

21MarMay 7, 2015 By Marc Smith

I gave a talk at the Personal Digital Archives conference held at the Internet Archive in San Francisco, California on 24 February 2011.  The videos of the talks at the event are now available from the Internet Archive web site.

Here is a NodeXL map of the connections among the people who tweeted the term PDA2011 OR PDA11:

The top most between people in this graph were: @anarchivist, @blefurgy, @naypinya, @rodanda, @jeffubois, @scottros, @evancaroll, @kevinmarks, @vurayav, and @sshreeves.

Here is the video from my talk:

Posted in All posts, Common Goods, Conference, Foundation, Measuring social media, Metrics, NodeXL, Research, SMRF, Social Media, Social network, Social Network Analysis, Talks, Visualization Tagged 2011, Analysis, Archive, Edges, February, graph, Internet, Internet Archive, Map, Marc, Marc Smith, network, NodeXL, PDA, PDA2011, Presentation, San Francisco, Smith, SNA, Social network, Talk, Video, Visualization

Social Media Network Analysis Workshop – October 29th in Mountain View, CA

27SepMay 7, 2015 By Marc Smith

2009 - September - NodeXL - CHI 2010 Tag Network
The network created by “Who follows who among the people who tweeted “#CHI2010”. Node size is proportional to total tweets. Generated with NodeXL

On October 29th, I will be offering a workshop in Mountain View, California on the application of social network analysis to the measurement of social media.

The workshop will run from 9m to 4pm and include hands-on exercises using real world social media data sets and the free and open NodeXL social network analysis add-in for Excel 2007.  We will create social network metrics and visualizations from personal email, twitter, facebook, and message board records to reveal the broad outline of a community, its various kinds of leaders and active participants, major cliques and clusters, and pivotal events.

The workshop will make use of the NodeXL tutorial:
http://casci.umd.edu/NodeXL_Teaching

Registration at:
http://www.eventbrite.com/event/386418789

I will post the slides for those who cannot attend, but the live event will allow me to help those interested in learning how to visualize social media networks and generate and interpret social network metrics.  What’s an “eigenvector centrality”?  Come find out why that number highlights special people in a network and how to calculate it on your own network data sets.  Find experts, identify the people who are most heavily connected, and key contributors. If you plan to attend, it would be great if you bring sample data: any edge list or matrix is fine.  We can plot and measure sample data participants bring along with them.

I will demonstrate how to create twitter network maps like the one above which shows networks of follows connections among a group of people who tweeted the string “#CHI2010” (as returned by search.twitter.com).  You can make your own twitter maps with NodeXL!  Similar maps can be made with a user name. In the workshop we will be sure to make a twitter network for anyone there who tweets.

Upon completion of this workshop, participants will:
* be able to understand the basics of SNA, its terminology and background.
* be able to transform communication data (e.g. Twitter, email, flickr, message boards etc.) into network data.
* understand the different possible presentations of social networks, e.g. in a matrix or a sociogram.
* apply network metrics and visualizations to find clusters and key contributors in real world social media data sets.
* get familiar with the use of standard SNA tools and software in general and the NodeXL social network analysis add-in for Excel in particular.
* be able to derive practical and useful information through SNA analysis that would help design an innovative and successful online community.

Who should attend? People interested in community management, social media monitoring and marketing, knowledge management, collaboration and human resources, legal discovery, organizational behavior and management

Registration.


View Larger Map

Other Maps:
Yahoo | Mapquest | Microsoft

Posted in All posts, Community, Conference, Measuring social media, Metrics, Mobile Devices, Mobile Social Software, NodeXL, Research, Shameless self-promotion, Social Interaction, Social Media, Social network, Social Roles, Sociology, Talks, Visualization Tagged 2009, Action, Analysis, California, Connected, Lecture, Marc, Marc Smith, Mountain View, network, October, Smith, SNA, social, Talk, Training, workshop 1 Comment

Connected Action Services

  • Buy a social media network map
  • Log in or Join us
  • My Cart
  • Training
  • Conferences
  • Data Reporting
  • Customize NodeXL
  • Marc Smith
  • About Us

Subscribe to Connected Action

Get updates when there is new content from Connected Action.

Related content:

Twitter Facebookflickrlinkedin
slidesharedeliciousdeliciousVimeo


Social Media Research Foundation

Help support the Social Media Research Foundation

Book: Analyzing Social Media Networks with NodeXL: Insights from a connected world

The book Analyzing Social Media Networks with NodeXL: Insights from a connected world is now available from Morgan-Kaufman and Amazon.

Communities in Cyberspace

Communities in Cyberspace

Recent Posts

  • Buy a map
  • Book: Transparency in Social Media Edited by Sorin Matei, Martha Russell and Elisa Bertino – with a chapter on NodeXL
  • June 5, 2015: Personal Democracy Forum – Talk on taking pictures of virtual crowds
  • Trust issues and Excel: how to open other people’s NodeXL documents
  • May 1st, 2015 at LSU: NodeXL social media networks talk at the “Telling Stories and Using Visuals for Coastal Environmental Communication” workshop

Tags

2009 2010 2011 2013 2014 2015 Analysis Analytics April Chart Conference Data Event Excel graph June Lecture Map March Marc Smith May Media network NodeXL October Paper Presentation Research San Francisco SMRF SMRFoundation SNA social Social Media socialmedia Social Media Research Foundation Social network Sociology Talk Training Twitter University Video Visualization workshop

Categories

Archives

March 2023
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« Jul    

Transparency in Social Media

2015-07-30-Transparency in Social Media-Structures of Twitter Crowds and COnversations
Transparency in Social Media
Sorin Adam Matei, Martha G. Russell, Elisa Bertino

CÓMO ENCONTRAR LOS HASHTAGS MÁS POTENTES: Para convertir LEADS a VENTAS (SEOHashtag nº 1) (Spanish Edition)

Apply NodeXL in espanol!

CÓMO ENCONTRAR LOS HASHTAGS MÁS POTENTES - Para convertir LEADS a VENTAS (SEOHashtag nº 1) (Spanish Edition)
By: Vivian Francos from #SEOHashtag Comparto algunas de las mejores formas de elegir los hashtags más poderosos y
que puedan generar tráfico a tus redes sociales para aprovechar el poder del
hashtag.
Si quieres aumentar tus interacciones, debes aprender a utilizar los hashtags como herramienta.

https://amzn.to/305Hpsv

Networked


Networked By Lee Rainie and Barry Wellman

Social Media in the Public Sector

2015-07-31Social Media in the Public Sector-Cover
Ines Mergel

Ways of Knowing in HCI

2014-Ways of Knowing in HCI - Olson and Kellogg

The Virtual Community


Virtual Community

The Evolution of Cooperation


The Evolution of Cooperation

Governing the Commons


Governing the Commons

SmartMobs


SmartMobs

Networks, Crowds, and Markets


Networks, Crowds, and Markets

Development of Social Network Analysis


Development of Social Network Analysis: A Study in the Sociology of Science

Search

Services

  • Buy a social media network map
  • Log in or Join us
  • My Cart
  • Training
  • Conferences
  • Data Reporting
  • Customize NodeXL
  • Marc Smith
  • About Us
© 2023 Connected Action
AccessPress Parallax by AccessPress Themes
0

Your Cart