Thursday, April 28, 2005

Research process

Since I'm about to finish my last exam of the semester and start into the heavy research phase for my Alley Talk paper for HICSS, I started refreshing my memory on the research process, per what I learned in one of my classes last semester.

Seems I'm not the only one doing this - much talk about this on the AoIR list lately, which yielded this excellent overview of a good and manageable research process for the social sciences. Yes it is one person's account of how he does research, but I find it to be fairly solid.

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Academic career greenlighted

April has been an odd month, full of trials and tribulations.

I will stop working for big Pharma next month and will start concentrating solely on my academic advancement and career. I've waited for this for a long time and it seems the day is fast approaching.

Also, to my shock, awe and no small amount of nervousness, my paper "Fear, Risk in the Digital Anomaly" got accepted to the Association of Internet Researcher's annual conference "Internet Research 6.0: Internet Generations" in Chicago in the fall!

Here I am in the listings and here's the abstract that I submitted.

Luckily the paper itself is already written, as I'm taking four courses in May and June so I expect to be up to my ears in writing for sociology and poli sci courses.

As I mentioned here a few weeks back, I'm also working on a paper for the HICSS annual conference in Hawaii in January 2006 - my abstract got accepted there too. Deadline for it is June 15 and my ethnography is barely started. Eeps!

The next 12 months will be very busy and hopefully rewarding.

Friday, April 15, 2005

Gaming for education

The UN has entered the gaming fray with an online Flash-based game designed to teach youth about world hunger. In this video game, hunger is the enemy and the air workers have to get food to the masses on a fictional island in order to vanguish it.

Conference submission prank

In an attempt to highlight how many conferences are setup these days in the name of money rather than furthering research and understanding, three studentsfrom MIT got together and wrote a computer program that generates a "research" paper based on random but contextual grammatical sentences. While it may sound far-fetched, they succeeded in getting a paper accepted to a supposedly academic-oriented technology conference.

Wednesday, April 13, 2005

Think Media program

So what about Switzerland for graduate studies? The Alps? This program and its faculty reads like a who's who of digital culture.

Digital Culture reading list

Now this is a digital culture reading list! wow!

Sociolinguistics of texting

While doing searches this evening for graduate programs in digital culture studies, I stumbled across this essay on the sociolinguistics of youth texting. As it might play into a paper I'm working on for a conference, it is useful to have around.