Role of Social Media in Social Change: An Analysis of Collective Sense Making During the 2011 Egypt Revolution

被引:101
|
作者
Oh, Onook [1 ]
Eom, Chanyoung [2 ]
Rao, H. R. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Colorado, Sch Business, Informat Syst Program, Denver, CO 80202 USA
[2] Hanyang Univ, Dept Finance, Sch Business, Seoul 133791, South Korea
[3] SUNY Buffalo, Management Sci & Syst Dept, Buffalo, NY 14260 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
social media; social change; 2011 Egypt Revolution; Twitter; hashtag; sociomateriality; collective sense making; human-machine collaborative information process; NATURAL-LANGUAGE USE; INFORMATION FLOWS; TECHNOLOGY;
D O I
10.1287/isre.2015.0565
中图分类号
G25 [图书馆学、图书馆事业]; G35 [情报学、情报工作];
学科分类号
1205 ; 120501 ;
摘要
This study explores the role of social media in social change by analyzing Twitter data collected during the 2011 Egypt Revolution. Particular attention is paid to the notion of collective sense making, which is considered a critical aspect for the emergence of collective action for social change. We suggest that collective sense making through social media can be conceptualized as human-machine collaborative information processing that involves an interplay of signs, Twitter grammar, humans, and social technologies. We focus on the occurrences of hashtags among a high volume of tweets to study the collective sense-making phenomena of milling and keynoting. A quantitative Markov switching analysis is performed to understand how the hashtag frequencies vary over time, suggesting structural changes that depict the two phenomena. We further explore different hashtags through a qualitative content analysis and find that, although many hashtags were used as symbolic anchors to funnel online users' attention to the Egypt Revolution, other hashtags were used as part of tweet sentences to share changing situational information. We suggest that hashtags functioned as a means to collect information and maintain situational awareness during the unstable political situation of the Egypt Revolution.
引用
收藏
页码:210 / 223
页数:14
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