by Webmoor on 22 July 2010
I advocate an agile research principle for working in the digital social sciences. This is a mode of engagement, a sensibility for good practice, more than a formal list of procedures or protocols. An agile research approach emerged as an attitude within design driven software development. It is form fit for the broad programme of [...]
by Kate ORiordan on 22 July 2010
Challenges in internet research are part of a broader landscape of change in the production, dissemination and status of knowledge. Such shifts include the blurring of producer and consumer, the moving perimeters of private and public, and the changing forms and value of information and knowledge. In this sense issues in internet research ethics also [...]
by Annamaria Carusi on 21 July 2010
When the word ‘ethics’ is used in an e-research context, very often it is closely followed by the word ‘regulation’. This is understandable, since many of the capabilities of e-research technologies leave us perplexed as to whether to go on applying existing regulations or whether to make a change, and if so, which changes. But [...]
by Sabina Leonelli on 13 July 2010
by Sabina Leonelli
ESRC Centre for Genomics in Society (Egenis)
University of Exeter
Web interactions and ICTs enable the production and dissemination of huge masses of data of different types. On the one hand, this leads to the proliferation of new data types, which were not available to social scientists before the advent of Internet and information technology. [...]
by Michael Thelwall on 12 July 2010
by Mike Thelwall,
Statistical Cybermetrics Research Group,
University of Wolverhampton, UK.
I would like to make the case that academic researchers should not have any restrictions placed on the kinds of (legal) data that they investigate on the public web. In particular, researchers should be allowed to investigate personal information in the public web, such as social network [...]