Infostorms

Infostorms

Why do we 'like'? Explaining individual behavior on the social net.

Hendricks, Vincent F.; Hansen, Pelle G.

Springer

09/2016

306

Mole

Inglês

9783319327648

15 a 20 dias

3566


ebook

Descrição não disponível.
Chapter 1: Off We Go

1.1 Social Psychology on Speed

1.2 Information vs. Knowledge

1.3 Side-Tracking and Manipulation

1.4 Individual Search and Social Proof

1.5 Parts and Parcels



Part 1: How Information Technologies May Amplify Irrational Group
Behavoir



Chapter 2: Common Knowledge and Public Space

2.1 The Day Public Space Sold Out

2.2 More than the Opposite of Private

2.3 Public Announcements and Infinite Knowledge

2.4 Notions of Group Knowledge

2.5 Public Space as a Fundamental Informational Structure

2.6 The Social Power of Public Space

2.7 Techno-Ideological Pickets

2.8 Public Space and Online Status



Chapter 3: Pluralistic Ignorance and Bystanders

3.1 Computer City

3.2 Today's Lesson: Pluralistic Ignorance

3.3 Pluralistic Ignorance and the Bystander Effect

3.4 The Recipe for Bystander-Effects

3.5 Cyber Bullying - The Case of Amanda Todd

3.6 The Frailty of Ignorance



Chapter 4: Informational Cascades and Lemmings

4.1 Air France, Delta Airlines and Terminals

4.2 Amazon and Sex and the City

4.3 The Nuts And Bolts of Cascades

4.4 Status Economics

4.5 A Decisive Piece of Information

4.6 True Disciples and Disbelievers

4.7 Infostorms in a Connected World



Part Ii: Why Free Choice, Markets and Deliberation Cannot Protect Us



Chapter 5: Choice: Framing Choice

5.1 "Like" It or Not?

5.2 Framing Approval

5.3 Choosing Between Life and Death

5.4 Framing a Problem

5.5 Risky Insurance

5.6 Fumbles in Frames

5.7 Information in a New Key

5.8 The Art of Framing Democracy



Chapter 6: Markets: Choosing Frames

6.1 The Invisible Hands of Democracy

6.2 Positive Freedom

6.3 The Relevance of Self-Determination

6.4 Political Freedom and Individual Choice

6.5 Walking the Dog at Night

6.6 Individual Choice and Climate Negotiations

6.7 Market Competition and Tour De France

6.8 Ulysses and the Song of the Sirens



Chapter 7: Deliberation: Polarized People

7.1. Trouble Either Way

7.2 Deliberating to the Extreme

7.3 Gnomes and People Like Us

7.4 The Brass Tacks of Polarization

7.5 I Want To Be Just Like You All

7.6 Group Polarization and Individual Marginalization

7.7 I Can't Read You Online

7.8 Dissolving Divarication

7.9 Deliberative Democratic Systems

7.10 Echo Chambers and Stomping Grounds

7.11 Deaf, Blind and Mute



Chapter 8: The Constitutive Games We Play

8.1 Decision Frames

8.2 Blood Money

8.3 Inferring Micro-Motives from Macro-Behavior

8.4 Riots and Ghettos

8.5 Why Democracy is not just 'One Vote'

8.6 Mistaking Society for a Company



Part 3: Wars, Bubbles and Democracy



Chapter 9: Wars



9.1 Just Another Day at the Office

9.2 Quicksand at the Bus Stop

9.3 The Logic of Death Tolls

9.4 Taking a Hammering at the Auction

9.5 A Lemon Market for Apples

9.6 Zombies in Vegas

9.7 Escaping the One-Armed Bandit in Afghanistan

9.8 In the Pocket of Taliban



Chapter 10: Bubbles

10.1 Bubble Trouble

10.2 Bubble Sorts

10.3 Science Bubbles

10.4 Status Bubbles

10.5. Enough About Me, What About You, What Do You Think Of Me?

10.6 What Is It With "Likes"?

10.7 Opinion in Excess

10.8 Opinion on The Market

10.9 Noise Traders and Noisemakers

10.10 Bubble-Hospitable Environments



Chapter 11: Democracy

11.1 Taking Stock

11.2 Yesterday's Democracy

11.3 "That's Just Unacceptable!"

11.4 Post-Factual Democracy

11.5 True Democracy

11.6 Democracy in the Process

11.7 Macro- and Micro Control Problems

11.8 Short Summary





Part 4: Postscript: The Social Power Of Information Architecture



Chapter 12: The Social Powers of Infostorms

12.1 Iran's Twitter Revolution

12.2 The Arab Spring of Infostorms

12.3 Peep Shows and Revolutions At $9.99

12.4 The Golden Shield and the Great Wall of Fire

12.5 Stabilizing Forces of Quasi-Democracies

12.6 The Western Puzzle of Truth and Information

12.7 The Gatekeepers of Truth and Information Architects













































































































































































































































































12.8 The Art and Science of Information Architecture
bandwagon effects;belief aggregation;belief polarization;bubbles in science and society;bystander effects;crowd-sourced opinion;cyber-bullying;framing effects;free choice and democracy;information and manipulation;information technology;informational cascades;irrational group behavior;likes as public signals;pluralistic ignorance;social media and group thinking;upvotes and crowd-aggregated opinion;upvotes and public opinion;social psychology;lemming effects