Social Network Theory

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The Experts below are selected from a list of 360 Experts worldwide ranked by ideXlab platform

Ethan Zuckerman - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...

Hal Roberts - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...

Emily Robinson - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...

Sands Alden Fish - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...

Brittany Seymour - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...

  • digital health communication and global public influence a study of the ebola epidemic
    Journal of Health Communication, 2017
    Co-Authors: Hal Roberts, Brittany Seymour, Sands Alden Fish, Emily Robinson, Ethan Zuckerman
    Abstract:

    Scientists and health communication professionals expressed frustration over the relationship between misinformation circulating on the Internet and global public perceptions of and responses to the Ebola epidemic originating in West Africa. Using the big data platform Media Cloud, we analyzed all English-language stories about keyword “Ebola” published from 1 July 2014 to 17 November 2014 from the media sets U.S. Mainstream Media, U.S. Regional Media, U.S. Political Blogs, U.S. Popular Blogs, Europe Media Monitor, and Global Voices to understand how Social Network Theory and models of the Networked global public may have contributed to health communication efforts. 109,400 stories met our inclusion criteria. The CDC and WHO were the two media sources with the most inlinks (hyperlinks directed to their sites). Twitter was fourth Significantly more public engagement on Social media globally was directed toward stories about risks of U.S. domestic Ebola infections than toward stories focused on Ebola infect...