SOCIOLOGY 167 QUIZ 1
Google is making us stupid
- Google has rewired the ways in which we read and process information - we now seek short and simple answers, we skim articles
Density
- a measure of how close a network is by displaying all of the possible ties - all the strong ties in a network compared to the number of people who know each other
Virtual communities as "real communities"
- a social unit of any size that shares common values - may manifest differently in different cultures
Bonding social capital
- associated with strong ties - parent supporting your education, emotional support
Bridging social capital
- associated with weak ties - for example, info about job opportunities
Hyperpersonal space
- computer mediated communication = freer of social judgments - less emphasis on appearance, more on conversation
Gender and SNS (kin-keepers)
- female use = 80% - male use = 73%
Facebook use and social capital
- leads to greater bridging - mitigates the fear of rejection and facilitates convo - maintains the connection between weak ties
Actor-Network Theory
- networks are materially heterogeneous - objects and materials must be analyzed as actors too! - equality of analytical importance assigned to different agents in a network
Pervasive awareness
- passively keeping up with other people - helps users identify the person most equipped to provide a particular resource
'Real' communities
- shares common values - may manifest differently in different cultures
Technology determinism
- technologies have their own inertia, totally separate from the influences of people. - technological change comes from outside society as part of an autonomous scientific development - technically maybe even cause change
Duality of Technology
- technology is the product of human action while it also assumes structural properties (structural model) - an example, perhaps, of how technology and society are embedded in one another (Orlikowski 1992)
Heterogenous Network
- the social is a network of heterogeneous materials - networks are composed of people, AS WELL AS machines, animals, texts, money, architecture, and many other materials
Dunbar's number
150 persons in a network
Seek and ye shall find
If you search hard enough for something (friends online), you will find it
Three Periods of History
McLuhan divides this into - oral (traditional societies) - writing and print (modern societies) - electrical (global societies)
The WELL
Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link one of the first virtual communities
Bridge
a "bridge" is the only path between two points/nodes, or when there is only one connection that ties an entire group to another. Important to note is that all bridges are weak ties, but not all weak ties are bridges
Medium Theory
a system of ideas that explores the potential influence of the means of expression of communication (technological) impact the meanings of human communication
Alone together
book by Sherry Turkle, where she proposes a dystopian view of technology (we need it when most vulnerable; increased anxiety; alienation)
Bowling alone
by Putnam; he writes about decline in social capital since 1950 and how it has negative effects, including undermining civic engagement which is necessary for a strong democracy
YMMV (Your Mileage May Vary)
how you use virtual communities will affect your experience and what you get out of it
Solitude vs Loneliness
loneliness is where being alone feels like a problem to be fixed, but solitude is being secure while being by oneself
Strength of ties (measurements)
measured through emotional attachment, frequency of interaction, time commitment, closeness
Technopanic
moral panics about contemporary technology
Dystopian discourse
more "negative" feelings about technology - shallow communication - social isolation - privatism - decline in network diversity - laziness - moral degradation - loss of privacy
Utopian discourse
more "positive" feelings about technology - more supportive networks - shrinking of time and space - increase in network diversity - connect with similar others - greater political engagement - freedom
Goldilocks Principle
not too close not too far, but just right
Strong ties
peer group and kinship contacts which are quantitatively small but qualitatively powerful
Social compensation
people who are more introverted are active online to compensate for real life
Interactivity
refers to the ability of a communication tool to facilitate social interaction between groups or individuals
Temporal Structure
refers to the time it takes to send and receive messages
Second Generation of Medium Theory
says that social identity is based on your social roles as defined by your social network
Virtual Community
social aggregations that emerge from the internet when enough people carry on those public discussions long enough, with sufficient human feeling, to form webs of personal relationships in cyberspace
Fear of missing out
social media users' fear that others are engaging in activities without them, constant connection leads to anxiety about no communication
Domestication of technology
technology become so normal in our environment that it become part of the landscape
Social shaping
the concept that there are choices (though not necessarily conscious choices) inherent in both the design of individual artifacts and systems, and in the direction or trajectory of innovation programs
Interpretive Flexibility
the degree to which users can alter and decide how they want to use the technology (Orlikowski 1992)
Robotic Moment
the moment in the near future, introduced by Professor Turkle, when humans will merge with robotic companions in dramatic ways, resulting in new species of super-intelligent beings and new kinds of relationships
Strength of weak ties
the notion that relatively weak ties often turn out to be quite valuable because they yield new information
Social capital
the sum of the resources, actual or virtual, that accrue to an individual or a group by virtue of possessing a durable network of more or less institutionalized relationships of mutual acquaintance and recognition
Homophily
the tendency for people to seek out or be attracted to those who are similar to themselves. In simpler terms, similarity breeds connection.
Social cues
the verbal and nonverbal features of a message that offer more information about the context, the meaning, and the identities of the involved parties
Social constructivism
theoretical perspective that focuses on people's collective efforts to impose meaning on the world
Rich get richer
this model predicts that those who are highly sociable and have existing social support will get more social benefit from using the internet
Latent ties
ties that are technically possible but have not been activated yet
Social Media
tools used to create and interact in virtual communities and online networks
Punctualization
we simplify the networks into singular objects and ignore other connected networks
SNS
web-based services that allow individuals to... - construct a public or semi-public profile within a bounded system - articulate a list of other users with whom they share a connection - view and traverse their list of connections and those made by others within the system
Social decapitalization
why is it happening: women joining labor force, increased mobility, people moving more, demographic changes-divorce up, marriages down, fewer children, lower wages, technology replacing other forms of leisure (does not include face to face engagements)
Moral Panic
widespread social fear over a group of deviants who display a behavior that is considered "evil"