scholarly journals Novas páginas de pesquisa em Psicologia Social: o fazer pesquisa na/da internet

2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Flaviane Da Costa Oliveira ◽  
Jaíza Pollyanna Dias da Cruz Rocha ◽  
Ingrid Faria Gianordoli Nascimento ◽  
Luciene Alves Miguez Naiff ◽  
Raphael Ferreira de Ávila

RESUMO: As novas tecnologias midiáticas têm revelado formas de comunicação e práticas sociais que desafiam os modos de fazer ciência. O presente estudo explora, de forma inicial, a diversidade de possibilidades de pesquisas em psicologia social compreendendo os recursos virtuais como campo ou objeto de pesquisa. Propomos um mapeamento de produções científicas, a partir do acesso remoto ao portal de periódicos CAPES, tendo sido utilizados na busca, os descritores “social psychology” and internet. Foram encontrados 1042 itens datados entre 1993 e 2016. Os resultados relacionados ao tópico “Social Psychology” totalizaram 289 produções, das quais, analisamos 134 resumos publicados entre 2011 e 2016. As categorias temáticas de maior expressão foram: Comportamento de usuários da internet (26,12%) e Identidade e relações intergrupais (11,94%). Em relação ao método, 17,16% dos estudos relatam o uso de experimentos, 9,70% o uso de surveys e 5,97% questionários. A análise revelou que a maior parte dos estudos (41,79%) compreende a internet como objeto de investigação, não sendo apenas um campo ou instrumento facilitador da execução das pesquisas. Apesar de 36,57% dos trabalhos não situarem a teoria de base, os dados demonstram uma multiplicidade de abordagens teóricas empregadas. Diante da complexidade deste cenário e dos fenômenos nele analisados, desafios teórico-metodológicos se impõem. Consideramos que o detalhamento e descrição do percurso metodológico, o uso da triangulação de métodos e a articulação entre o campo da psicologia social e as teorias da cibercultura, podem potencializar as produções “na” e “da” internet.Palavras-chave: cibercultura; internet; psicologia social; métodos de pesquisa; mapeamento.ABSTRACT: New media technologies have revealed forms of communication and social practice that challenge ways of doing science. Firstly, the present study explores the diversity of research possibilities in social psychology regarding virtual resources as a field or research object. We propose mapping the scientific production from the remote access to the portal of the CAPES journals. For this purpose we`ve used key-words descriptors "social psychology" and internet. We found 1042 items that matched the criteria. The years of publication ranged from 1993 to 2016. Results related to the topic "Social Psychology" presented 289 papers, of which we analyzed 134 published abstracts between 2011 and 2016. The categories with the most important themes were: Internet user behavior (26.12%) and identity and inter-group relations (11.94%). In relation to the method, 17.16% of the studies were experimental, 9.70% surveys and 5.97%questionnaires. The majority of studies (41.79%) considered the internet as a research object, and not just a field or instrument facilitating the execution of research. Although 36.57% of the studies did not present the base theory, data demonstrates a multiplicity of theoretical approaches employed. Due to the complexity of this scenario and the phenomena itself, methodological challenges are imposed. We considered that detailing and describing the methodological pathway as well as the use of triangulation of methods and articulation between the field of social psychology and theories of cyberculture can stimulate, productions "on" and "from" the internet (that is, using the internet as a research field as well as a research tool).Keywords: cyberculture; internet; social psychology; research methods; mapping.

2002 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Terence Lee

This paper sets out to consider the use of new media technologies in the city-state of Singapore, widely acknowledged as one of the most technologically-advanced and networked societies in the world. Singapore is well-known as a politically censorious and highly-regulated society, which has been subjected to frequent and fierce insults and criticisms by those hailing from liberal democratic traditions. Indeed, much has been said about how the Singapore polity resonates with a climate of fear, which gives rise to the prevalent practice of self-censorship. This paper examines how certain groups in Singapore attempt to employ the Internet to find their voice and seek their desired social, cultural and political ends, and how the regulatory devices adopted by the highly pervasive People Action's Party (PAP) government respond to and set limits to these online ventures whilst concomitantly pursuing national technological cum economic development strategies. It concludes that the Internet in Singapore is a highly contested space where the art of governmentality, in the forms of information controls and 'automatic' modes of regulation, is tried, tested, and subsequently perfected.


MEDIASI ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-53
Author(s):  
Putri Surya Cempaka

This article discussed radio broadcasting technology in general and how the industry is relatively resilient amid the development of other media technologies today, such as the Internet. Internet technology is able to present number of social networks through social media that are interactive, direct, and user generated. In addition, the Internet forces conventional broadcasting industries such as radio to penetrate digital mechanisms by practicing radio streaming. Radio broadcasting also add this type of interaction to their listeners, for example through websites, blogs, vlogs (video blogs), Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, and Facebook accounts. This integrated conventional media technology and new media is often called media convergence. By using qualitative approach and descriptive method, this paper explained a case of media convergence by one of the radio broadcast station in Indonesia that is Delta FM. As a result, Delta FM presents its broadcasts with the help of new media in order to survive in the broadcasting industry amid the current widespread use of new media.


2010 ◽  
pp. 222-242
Author(s):  
Jorge Ferraz Abreu ◽  
Pedro Almeida

This chapter focuses on traditional and emergent challenges for the Social (i)TV area focusing on explaining the development and evaluation of one of the first Social iTV prototypes and looking at the challenges new media is introducing to this research field. The authors begin by explaining the conceptualization, development and evaluation process of the 2BeOn system and continue with the most important results from it’s evaluation with a particular focus on the results that can be important when developing any Social iTV platform. In the last part of the chapter recent developments in the broadcast of TV and Audiovisual content, namely considering the Internet as a medium, are addressed. In this scope authors propose a categorization of emergent online distribution platforms along with a set of social activities users perform on those platforms. Taking in consideration some of the challenges surrounding the presented scenario the chapter ends with the conceptualization of UMCA, a system that could increase social interaction activities performed during the consumption of online AV/TV content.


2018 ◽  
Vol 176 ◽  
pp. 03011
Author(s):  
ZHANG Yi-wen ◽  
BAI Yan-qi ◽  
YANG An-ju

In recent years, with the rapid increase of users active on the Internet, Internet users access log is also increasing rapidly. According to the user's Internet access log analysis of the characteristics of user behavior on the Internet. In this paper, we classify the statistical analysis of the behavior of Internet users by collecting information and data on urban and rural Internet user behavior. This result may provide a basis for guiding the behavior of Internet software manufacturers or government.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 515-531 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcus Moberg

This article explores changing discursive practices on the implications of the continuous development of the Internet and information and communications technology (ICTs) within the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland. The article argues that the development of the Internet and new media technologies has been accompanied by the proliferation of a set of influential and widespread discursive formations on the character of institutional communication and practice in a digital era. These developments have motivated an increasing technologization of discourse within the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Finland that has chiefly involved a conscious redesign of its discursive practices vis-à-vis the Internet and ICTs in accordance with new criteria of communication effectivity and a notable new emphasis on training in these new practices.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duan Yiwen

Zazenkai, also known as Zen meditation or Zen Mindfulness, is held in Japan for the general public, usually with time, place and procedures set by a Buddhist Zen Temple. With the emergence of the Internet and new media, several Zen Temples have started to hold Zazenkai by utilizing these media technologies including online live streaming. This new type of Zazenkai is known as Internet Zazenkai. Compared with traditional Zazenkai that are held at a certain time and place, the application of new media enables Internet Zazenkai to go beyond the spatial and temporal limits of nature, where Zen practitioners in different global locations participate together using webcam. Individuals spatially separated from each other could share the same time and space of Zazenkai on the Internet. While the new media technologies open up new opportunities for Zazenkai, they also invite examinations into religious meanings of time and space for Zen practitioners. This paper is based on the study and examination of Internet Zazenkai regularly held by Treeleaf Zendo, a Soto Zen temple in Tsukuba. Its homepage Treeleaf.org is a virtual space where live streaming of Zazenkai is provided, its recorded videos are kept, web podcast of lectures and talks are heard, and so on. By analyzing the techno-ritual phenomenon, this paper attempts to analyze the role of Zen masters and participants in the process of Internet Zazenkai and to examine the differences and similarities between traditional Zazenkai and Internet Zazenkai. This paper will shed new light on the influence of new media upon religious and ritual space in modern society.


2018 ◽  
Vol 232 ◽  
pp. 01004
Author(s):  
Wenshuai Ge ◽  
Gang He ◽  
Xinwen Liu

This paper proposes a big data query system for customized queries based on specific business needs. This paper introduces the components and structure of the query system. ANTLR tools are used as language recognizer to design and implement a customized SQL dialect. The system builds a simpler and easier query interface on Spark SQL, which satisfies the query requirements of the Internet user behavior analysis platform.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 437-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralph Schroeder

AbstractVisions of media spanning the globe and connecting cultures have been around at least since the birth of telegraphy, yet they have always fallen short of realities. Nevertheless, with the internet, a global infrastructure has emerged, which, together with mobile and smartphones, has rapidly changed the media landscape. This far-reaching digital connectedness makes it increasingly clear that the main implications of media lie in the extent to which they reach into everyday life. This article puts this reach into historical context, arguing that, in the pre-modern period, geographically extensive media networks only extended to a small elite. With the modern print revolution, media reach became both more extensive and more intensive. Yet it was only in the late nineteenth century that media infrastructures penetrated more widely into everyday life. Apart from a comparative historical perspective, several social science disciplines can be brought to bear in order to understand the ever more globalizing reach of media infrastructures into everyday life, including its limits. To date, the vast bulk of media research is still concentrated on North America and Europe. Recently, however, media research has begun to track broader theoretical debates in the social sciences, and imported debates about globalization from anthropology, sociology, political science, and international relations. These globalizing processes of the media research agenda have been shaped by both political developments and changes in media, including the Cold War, decolonization, the development of the internet and other new media technologies, and the rise of populist leaders.


2010 ◽  
pp. 762-782
Author(s):  
Jorge Ferraz Abreu ◽  
Pedro Almeida

This chapter focuses on traditional and emergent challenges for the Social (i)TV area focusing on explaining the development and evaluation of one of the first Social iTV prototypes and looking at the challenges new media is introducing to this research field. The authors begin by explaining the conceptualization, development and evaluation process of the 2BeOn system and continue with the most important results from it’s evaluation with a particular focus on the results that can be important when developing any Social iTV platform. In the last part of the chapter recent developments in the broadcast of TV and Audiovisual content, namely considering the Internet as a medium, are addressed. In this scope authors propose a categorization of emergent online distribution platforms along with a set of social activities users perform on those platforms. Taking in consideration some of the challenges surrounding the presented scenario the chapter ends with the conceptualization of UMCA, a system that could increase social interaction activities performed during the consumption of online AV/TV content.


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