0000000000704299

AUTHOR

Kari A. Hintikka

showing 3 related works from this author

Communication structure and collective actions in social media

2010

In this paper I present results a study of different types of social media communication and networking channels that allow for collective action (CA): Twitter, Jaiku / Qaiku, Ning and Facebook. My preliminary findings indicate, that the visual outlining and the structure of communication create different kinds of collectivity and collective actions. A status stream is effective for simple and fast repetitive mass actions and for individual mass broadcasting, while channels and threads are needed as a backchannel for more complicated, coordinated and iterative tasks and support a sense of community. When planning collective action on the Internet, ranging from citizen participation to marke…

Backchannelbusiness.industryPolitical scienceReal-time webSense of communityCollective intelligenceThe InternetSocial mediaPublic relationsbusinessCollective actionCrowdsourcingProceedings of the 14th International Academic MindTrek Conference: Envisioning Future Media Environments
researchProduct

Co-designing a social media service for civic participation

2010

User participation in social media design processes has similarities with civic participation for example in urban planning. Internet enables new virtual environments that can be planned collaboratively and be used for civic participation. In the Monimos case study we developed a social media website for immigrants and multicultural associations in a participatory design process together with the users. In this paper we present the critical issues in co-designing a social media service that aims at civic participation. We also give suggestions for how to cope with the challenges in a multicultural participation process. We claim that constant meta-level discussion about the goals and partic…

Service (systems architecture)business.industryProcess (engineering)social mediamedia_common.quotation_subjectPublic relationscivic participationUrban planningMulticulturalismParticipatory designPolitical scienceThe InternetSocial mediaparticipatory designbusinessEngineering design processmedia_commonProceedings of the 14th International Academic MindTrek Conference: Envisioning Future Media Environments
researchProduct

Web 2.0 and the collective intelligence

2008

In this paper, I describe a new form of collective intelligence (CI) on the Internet. It is project-like self-organization of masses of ordinary people on the Internet. These crowds emerge, define the collective problem or task by themselves, solve it, and vanish as entities. I have coined this phenomena to netcrowd ('verkkovoima' in Finnish). I compare netcrowd to other forms of CI and suggest a typology for CI types.

TypologyCognitive scienceCrowdsWeb 2.0business.industryCollective intelligenceThe InternetSocial mediaPsychologybusinessSocial psychologySwarming (military)Task (project management)Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Entertainment and media in the ubiquitous era
researchProduct