scholarly journals Big Data, Big Opportunities: Revenue Sources of Social Media Services Besides Advertising

Author(s):  
Julian Bühler ◽  
Aaron W. Baur ◽  
Markus Bick ◽  
Jimin Shi
Author(s):  
Gry C Rustad ◽  
Anders Olof Larsson

This article introduces quantitative reception aesthetics as a method and demonstrates how big data derived from social media services and textual analysis can be employed to uncover hitherto hidden processes of media spectatorship. It demonstrates how mixing quantitative and qualitative methods allows us to understand textual engagement and how media spectatorship evolves over time. Taking the Norwegian web series, Skam (2015–2017), as its case study, the article demonstrates how (web)television engagement on Instagram is linked to aesthetics and narrative events and how textual engagement is more universal than perhaps post-structuralist reception studies of media reception might have us believe.


2014 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ting Liu ◽  
Wei-Nan Zhang ◽  
Yu Zhang

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 3703-3711
Author(s):  
N. Oberoi ◽  
S. Sachdeva ◽  
P. Garg ◽  
R. Walia

Author(s):  
Philip Habel ◽  
Yannis Theocharis

In the last decade, big data, and social media in particular, have seen increased popularity among citizens, organizations, politicians, and other elites—which in turn has created new and promising avenues for scholars studying long-standing questions of communication flows and influence. Studies of social media play a prominent role in our evolving understanding of the supply and demand sides of the political process, including the novel strategies adopted by elites to persuade and mobilize publics, as well as the ways in which citizens react, interact with elites and others, and utilize platforms to persuade audiences. While recognizing some challenges, this chapter speaks to the myriad of opportunities that social media data afford for evaluating questions of mobilization and persuasion, ultimately bringing us closer to a more complete understanding Lasswell’s (1948) famous maxim: “who, says what, in which channel, to whom, [and] with what effect.”


2021 ◽  
Vol 1839 (1) ◽  
pp. 012004
Author(s):  
W Sardjono ◽  
G Rama Putra ◽  
E Selviyanti ◽  
A Cholidin ◽  
G Salim

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