#TeamTrees: Investigating How YouTubers Participate in a Social Media Campaign
暂无分享,去创建一个
D. S. McCrickard | SHUO NIU | CAT MAI | KATHERINE G. MCKIM | D. SCOTT MCCRICKARD | Katherine G. McKim | Shuo Niu | Cat Mai
[1] Ashley A. Anderson. Effects of Social Media Use on Climate Change Opinion, Knowledge, and Behavior , 2017 .
[2] Svetlana Yarosh,et al. Do It for the Viewers!: Audience Engagement Behaviors of Young YouTubers , 2016, IDC.
[3] Xianhui Che,et al. A Survey of Current YouTube Video Characteristics , 2015, IEEE MultiMedia.
[4] Roger Wattenhofer,et al. The YouTube Social Network , 2012, ICWSM.
[5] Lynn Dombrowski,et al. Working toward Empowering a Community: How Immigrant-Focused Nonprofit Organizations Use Twitter during Political Conflicts , 2018, GROUP.
[6] K. H. Kwon,et al. Public Referral, Viral Campaign, and Celebrity Participation: A Social Network Analysis of the Ice Bucket Challenge on YouTube , 2019, Journal of Interactive Advertising.
[7] D. Vallone,et al. Boosting Health Campaign Reach and Engagement Through Use of Social Media Influencers and Memes , 2020, Social Media + Society.
[8] Peter Thomas,et al. Collaboration on Social Network Sites: Amateurs, Professionals and Celebrities , 2010, Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW).
[9] P. Wicks. The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge – Can a splash of water reinvigorate a field? , 2014, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis & frontotemporal degeneration.
[10] G. Joo,et al. Talking about Climate Change and Global Warming , 2015, PloS one.
[11] Jennifer Preece,et al. The 'WeTube' in YouTube - creating an online community through video sharing , 2010, Int. J. Web Based Communities.
[12] Niklas Carlsson,et al. The untold story of the clones: content-agnostic factors that impact YouTube video popularity , 2012, KDD.
[13] Julie Uldam,et al. Online social media for radical politics: climate change activism on YouTube , 2011 .
[14] Brian Harmer,et al. YouTube: Online Video and Participatory Culture , 2010 .
[15] Shuo Niu,et al. #StayHome #WithMe: How Do YouTubers Help with COVID-19 Loneliness? , 2021, CHI.
[16] Stephanie Vie,et al. In defense of "slacktivism": The Human Rights Campaign Facebook logo as digital activism , 2014, First Monday.
[17] S. M. Jang,et al. Polarized frames on ''climate change'' and ''global warming'' across countries and states: Evidence from Twitter big data , 2015 .
[18] Tawfiq Ammari,et al. LGBT Parents and Social Media: Advocacy, Privacy, and Disclosure during Shifting Social Movements , 2016, CHI.
[19] Jennifer Cantrell,et al. Harnessing Youth and Young Adult Culture: Improving the Reach and Engagement of the truth® Campaign , 2017, Journal of health communication.
[20] Alice E. Marwick. You May Know Me from YouTube: (Micro‐)Celebrity in Social Media , 2015 .
[21] M. Pantti. Grassroots humanitarianism on YouTube: Ordinary fundraisers, unlikely donors, and global solidarity , 2015 .
[22] Gunnar Harboe,et al. Real-World Affinity Diagramming Practices: Bridging the Paper-Digital Gap , 2015, CHI.
[23] Jamie Woodcock,et al. ‘It’s like the gold rush’: the lives and careers of professional video game streamers on Twitch.tv , 2017 .
[24] M. McHugh. Interrater reliability: the kappa statistic , 2012, Biochemia medica.
[25] James D. Herbsleb,et al. Identity-Based Roles in Rhizomatic Social Justice Movements on Twitter , 2020, ICWSM.
[26] B. Søborg,et al. Using Facebook to increase coverage of HPV vaccination among Danish girls: An assessment of a Danish social media campaign. , 2020, Vaccine.
[27] Gohar Feroz Khan,et al. Virality over YouTube: an empirical analysis , 2014, Internet Res..
[28] Chih-Ping Chen,et al. Exploring Personal Branding on YouTube , 2013 .
[29] A. Hepp,et al. Mediatized worlds : culture and society in a media age , 2014 .
[30] Sucheta Ghoshal,et al. The Role of Social Computing Technologies in Grassroots Movement Building , 2019, ACM Trans. Comput. Hum. Interact..
[31] Yong Ming Kow,et al. One Social Movement, Two Social Media Sites: A Comparative Study of Public Discourses , 2017, Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW).
[32] Clement Chau,et al. YouTube as a participatory culture. , 2010, New directions for youth development.
[33] D. Snow,et al. Framing Processes and Social Movements: An Overview and Assessment , 2000 .
[34] Bryan C. Semaan,et al. Mediating the Undercurrents: Using Social Media to Sustain a Social Movement , 2016, CHI.
[35] Amy Bruckman,et al. Hollaback!: the role of storytelling online in a social movement organization , 2013, CSCW.
[36] Victoria L. Crittenden,et al. We're all connected: The power of the social media ecosystem , 2011 .
[37] Svetlana Yarosh,et al. YouthTube: Youth Video Authorship on YouTube and Vine , 2016, CSCW.
[38] L. Connelly. Grounded theory. , 2013, Medsurg nursing : official journal of the Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses.
[39] Michalis Faloutsos,et al. A First Step Towards Understanding Popularity in YouTube , 2010, 2010 INFOCOM IEEE Conference on Computer Communications Workshops.
[40] Hyunjin Seo,et al. Social Media and Environmental Activism: Framing Climate Change on Facebook by Global NGOs , 2020, Science Communication.
[41] J. Dijck. The Culture of Connectivity: A Critical History of Social Media , 2013 .
[42] Mingli Zhang,et al. Understanding participation on video sharing communities: The role of self-construal and community interactivity , 2016, Comput. Hum. Behav..
[43] Mingyi Hou,et al. Social media celebrity and the institutionalization of YouTube , 2019 .
[44] Tanushree Mitra,et al. Many Faced Hate: A Cross Platform Study of Content Framing and Information Sharing by Online Hate Groups , 2020, CHI.
[45] Diana Maynard,et al. Talking climate change via social media: communication, engagement and behaviour , 2016, WebSci.
[46] Erin Brady,et al. Slacktivists or Activists?: Identity Work in the Virtual Disability March , 2018, CHI.
[47] L. Rasmussen,et al. Parasocial Interaction in the Digital Age: An Examination of Relationship Building and the Effectiveness of YouTube Celebrities , 2018 .
[48] Margaret Holland,et al. How YouTube Developed into a Successful Platform for User-Generated Content , 2016 .
[49] Jean Burgess. YouTube and the formalisation of amateur media , 2012 .
[50] Vahab S. Mirrokni,et al. Large-Scale Community Detection on YouTube for Topic Discovery and Exploration , 2011, ICWSM.
[51] Joshua A. Tucker,et al. The Critical Periphery in the Growth of Social Protests , 2015, PloS one.
[52] Tom Feltwell,et al. Counter-Discourse Activism on Social Media: The Case of Challenging “Poverty Porn” Television , 2017, Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW).
[53] C. Mascaro,et al. Movember: Twitter Conversations of a Hairy Social Movement , 2016 .
[54] Paul Dourish,et al. Re-place-ing space: the roles of place and space in collaborative systems , 1996, CSCW '96.
[55] Emma S. Spiro,et al. Shifting Stakes: Understanding the Dynamic Roles of Individuals and Organizations in Social Media Protests , 2016, PloS one.
[56] Daniel Gatica-Perez,et al. Wearing a YouTube hat: directors, comedians, gurus, and user aggregated behavior , 2009, MM '09.
[57] M. Broersma,et al. Hot weather, hot topic. Polarization and sceptical framing in the climate debate on Twitter , 2020, Information, Communication & Society.