4,515 research outputs found

    Community tracking in a cMOOC and nomadic learner behavior identification on a connectivist rhizomatic learning network

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    This article contributes to the literature on connectivism, connectivist MOOCs (cMOOCs) and rhizomatic learning by examining participant interactions, community formation and nomadic learner behavior in a particular cMOOC, #rhizo15, facilitated for 6 weeks by Dave Cormier. It further focuses on what we can learn by observing Twitter interactions particularly. As an explanatory mixed research design, Social Network Analysis and content analysis were employed for the purposes of the research. SNA is used at the macro, meso and micro levels, and content analysis of one week of the MOOC was conducted using the Community of Inquiry framework. The macro level analysis demonstrates that communities in a rhizomatic connectivist networks have chaotic relationships with other communities in different dimensions (clarified by use of hashtags of concurrent, past and future events). A key finding at the meso level was that as #rhizo15 progressed and number of active participants decreased, interaction increased in overall network. The micro level analysis further reveals that, though completely online, the nature of open online ecosystems are very convenient to facilitate the formation of community. The content analysis of week 3 tweets demonstrated that cognitive presence was the most frequently observed, while teaching presence (teaching behaviors of both facilitator and participants) was the lowest. This research recognizes the limitations of looking only at Twitter when #rhizo15 conversations occurred over multiple platforms frequented by overlapping but not identical groups of people. However, it provides a valuable partial perspective at the macro meso and micro levels that contribute to our understanding of community-building in cMOOCs

    Coopetition in an open-source way : lessons from mobile and cloud computing infrastructures

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    An increasing amount of technology is no longer developed in-house. Instead, we are in a new age where technology is developed by a networked community of individuals and organizations, who base their relations to each other on mutual interest. Advances arising from research in platforms, ecosystems, and infrastructures can provide valuable knowledge for better understanding and explaining technology development among a network of firms. More surprisingly, recent research suggests that technology can be jointly developed by rival competing firms in an open-source way. For instance, it is known that the mobile device makers Apple and Samsung continued collaborating in open-source projects while running expensive patent wars in the courts. On top of multidisciplinary theory in open-source software, cooperation among competitors (aka coopetition) and digital infrastructures, I (and my coauthors) explored how rival firms cooperate in the joint development of open-source infrastructures. While assimilating a wide variety of paradigms and analytical approaches, this doctoral research combined the qualitative analysis of naturally occurring data (QA) with the mining of software repositories (MSR) and social network analysis (SNA) within a set of case studies. By turning to the mobile and cloud computing industries in general, and the WebKit and OpenStack opensource infrastructures in particular, we found out that qualitative ethnographic materials, combined with social network visualizations, provide a rich medium that enables a better understanding of competitive and cooperative issues that are simultaneously present and interconnected in open-source infrastructures. Our research contributes back to managerial literature in coopetition strategy, but more importantly to Information Systems by addressing both cooperation and competition within the development of high-networked open-source infrastructures.YhĂ€ suurempaa osaa teknologiasta ei enÀÀ kehitetĂ€ organisaatioiden omasta toimesta. Sen sijaan, olemme uudella aikakaudella jossa teknologiaa kehitetÀÀn verkostoituneessa yksilöiden ja organisaatioiden yhteisössĂ€, missĂ€ toimitaan perustuen yhteiseen tavoitteeseen. Alustojen, ekosysteemien ja infrastruktuurien tutkimuksen tulokset voivat tuottaa arvokasta tietĂ€mystĂ€ teknologian kehittĂ€misestĂ€ yritysten verkostossa. Erityisesti tuore tutkimustieto osoittaa ettĂ€ kilpailevat yritykset voivat yhdessĂ€ kehittÀÀ teknologiaa avoimeen lĂ€hdekoodiin perustuvilla kĂ€ytĂ€nnöillĂ€. Esimerkiksi tiedetÀÀn ettĂ€ mobiililaitteiden valmistajat Apple ja Samsung tekivĂ€t yhteistyötĂ€ avoimen lĂ€hdekoodin projekteissa ja kĂ€vivĂ€t samaan aikaan kalliita patenttitaistoja eri oikeusfoorumeissa. Perustuen monitieteiseen teoriaan avoimen lĂ€hdekoodin ohjelmistoista, yhteistyöstĂ€ kilpailijoiden kesken (coopetition) sekĂ€ digitaalisista infrastruktuureista, minĂ€ (ja kanssakirjoittajani) tutkimme miten kilpailevat yritykset tekevĂ€t yhteistyötĂ€ avoimen lĂ€hdekoodin infrastruktuurien kehityksessĂ€. Sulauttaessaan runsaan joukon paradigmoja ja analyyttisiĂ€ lĂ€hestymistapoja case-joukon puitteissa, tĂ€mĂ€ vĂ€itöskirjatutkimus yhdisti luonnollisesti esiintyvĂ€n datan kvantitatiivisen analyysin ohjelmapakettivarastojen louhintaan ja sosiaalisten verkostojen analyysiin. Tutkiessamme mobiili- ja pilvipalveluiden teollisuudenaloja yleisesti, ja WebKit ja OpenStack avoimen lĂ€hdekoodin infrastruktuureja erityisesti, havaitsimme ettĂ€ kvalitatiiviset etnografiset materiaalit yhdistettyinĂ€ sosiaalisten verkostojen visualisointiin tuottavat rikkaan aineiston joka mahdollistaa avoimen lĂ€hdekoodin infrastruktuuriin samanaikaisesti liittyvien kilpailullisten ja yhteistyökuvioiden hyvĂ€n ymmĂ€rtĂ€misen. Tutkimuksemme antaa oman panoksensa johdon kirjallisuuteen coopetition strategy -alueella, mutta sitĂ€kin enemmĂ€n tietojĂ€rjestelmĂ€tieteeseen, lĂ€pikĂ€ymĂ€llĂ€ sekĂ€ yhteistyötĂ€ ettĂ€ kilpailua tiiviisti verkostoituneessa avoimen lĂ€hdekoodin infrastruktuurien kehitystoiminnassaUma crescente quantidade de tecnologia nĂŁo Ă© desenvolvida internamente por uma sĂł organização. Em vez disso, estamos em uma nova era em que a tecnologia Ă© desenvolvida por uma comunidade de indivĂ­duos e organizaçÔes que baseiam suas relaçÔes umas com as outras numa rede de interesse mĂștuo. Os avanços teĂłrico decorrentes da pesquisa em plataformas computacionais, ecossistemas e infraestruturas digitais fornecem conhecimentos valiosos para uma melhor compreensĂŁo e explicação do desenvolvimento tecnolĂłgico por uma rede de multiplas empresas. Mais surpreendentemente, pesquisas recentes sugerem que tecnologia pode ser desenvolvida conjuntamente por empresas rivais concorrentes e de uma forma aberta (em cĂłdigo aberto). Por exemplo, sabe-se que os fabricantes de dispositivos mĂłveis Apple e Samsung continuam a colaborar em projetos de cĂłdigo aberto ao mesmo tempo que se confrontam em caras guerras de patentes nos tribunais. Baseados no conhecimento cientĂ­fico de software de cĂłdigo aberto, de cooperação entre concorrentes (tambĂ©m conhecida como coopetição) e de infraestruturas digitais, eu e os meus co-autores exploramos como empresas concorrentes cooperam no desenvolvimento conjunto de infraestruturas de cĂłdigo aberto. Ao utilizar uma variedade de paradigmas e abordagens analĂ­ticas, esta pesquisa de doutoramento combinou a anĂĄlise qualitativa de dados de ocorrĂȘncia natural (QA) com a anĂĄlise de repositĂłrios de softwares (MSR) e a anĂĄlise de redes sociais (SNA) dentro de um conjunto de estudos de casos. Ao investigar as industrias de technologias mĂłveis e de computação em nuvem em geral, e as infraestruturas em cĂłdigo aberto WebKit e OpenStack, em particular, descobrimos que o material etnogrĂĄfico qualitativo, combinado com visualizaçÔes de redes sociais, fornece um meio rico que permite uma melhor compreensĂŁo das problemas competitivos e cooperativos que estĂŁo simultaneamente presentes e interligados em infraestruturas de cĂłdigo aberto. A nossa pesquisa contribui para a literatura em gestĂŁo estratĂ©gica e coompetição, mas mais importante para literatura em Sistemas de Informação, abordando a cooperação e concorrĂȘncia no desenvolvimento de infraestruturas de cĂłdigo aberto por uma rede the indivĂ­duos e organizaçÔes em interesse mĂștuo

    Impact in networks and ecosystems: building case studies that make a difference

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    open accessThis toolkit aims to support the building up of case studies that show the impact of project activities aiming to promote innovation and entrepreneurship. The case studies respond to the challenge of understanding what kinds of interventions work in the Southern African region, where, and why. The toolkit has a specific focus on entrepreneurial ecosystems and proposes a method of mapping out the actors and their relationships over time. The aim is to understand the changes that take place in the ecosystems. These changes are seen to be indicators of impact as increased connectivity and activity in ecosystems are key enablers of innovation. Innovations usually happen together with matching social and institutional adjustments, facilitating the translation of inventions into new or improved products and services. Similarly, the processes supporting entrepreneurship are guided by policies implemented in the common framework provided by innovation systems. Overall, policies related to systems of innovation are by nature networking policies applied throughout the socioeconomic framework of society to pool scarce resources and make various sectors work in coordination with each other. Most participating SAIS countries already have some kinds of identifiable systems of innovation in place both on national and regional levels, but the lack of appropriate institutions, policies, financial instruments, human resources, and support systems, together with underdeveloped markets, create inefficiencies and gaps in systemic cooperation and collaboration. In other words, we do not always know what works and what does not. On another level, engaging users and intermediaries at the local level and driving the development of local innovation ecosystems within which local culture, especially in urban settings, has evident impact on how collaboration and competition is both seen and done. In this complex environment, organisations supporting entrepreneurship and innovation often find it difficult to create or apply relevant knowledge and appropriate networking tools, approaches, and methods needed to put their processes to work for broader developmental goals. To further enable these organisations’ work, it is necessary to understand what works and why in a given environment. Enhanced local and regional cooperation promoted by SAIS Innovation Fund projects can generate new data on this little-explored area in Southern Africa. Data-driven knowledge on entrepreneurship and innovation support best practices as well as effective and efficient management of entrepreneurial ecosystems can support replication and inform policymaking, leading thus to a wider impact than just that of the immediate reported projects and initiatives

    Expanded urban media: from discretized social collages to corrugated social brain

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    Big data, the mobile Internet, social media and the Internet of things (IOT) generate more information than ever but the aggregation of social intelligence remains far from realising it’s potential. Two exemplary works, mediated_moments and plasma_flow, exhibited at Beijing’s China Millennium Monument Museum of Digital Arts in 2012 model the scalable potential of urban media to weave itself into the city’s social fabric, mapping and visualizing individuals’ thinking/intelligence onto a mixed-reality urban canvas

    Massidea.org : Defining a Digital Business Ecosystem (DBE) for Massinnovation

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    This study is introducing Massidea.org from Digital Business Ecosystem (DBE) point of view. Massidea.org is an open innovation community for sharing challenges, ideas and visions. It boosts individual and communal creativity by intelligently connecting people and their insights. In Massidea.org, public, private and educational sector organizations and nations can collaborate with the wide range of people. Technologically Massidea.org is grounded on open source solution. Digital Business Ecosystem is divided into two main partitions: 1) digital (ecosystem): the technical infrastructure and 2) business (ecosystem): “An economic community supported by a foundation of interacting organizations and individuals—the ‘organisms of the business world’. Therefore our Massidea.org definition will include both of these approaches. The data collection for this case study was carried out in Finland, which is one of the most competitive countries in the world

    Social network analysis for technology-enhanced learning: review and future directions

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    Sie, R. L. L., Ullmann, T. D., Rajagopal, K., Cela, K., Bitter-Rijpkema, M., & Sloep, P. B. (2012). Social network analysis for technology-enhanced learning: review and future directions. International Journal of Technology Enhanced Learning, 4(3/4), 172-190.By nature, learning is social. The interactions by which we learn from others inherently form a network of relationships among people, but also between people and resources. This paper gives an overview of the potential social network analysis (SNA) may have for social learning. It starts with an overview of the history of social learning and how SNA may be of value. The core of the paper outlines the state-of-art of SNA for technology-enhanced learning (TEL), by means of four possible types of SNA applications: visualisation, analysis, simulation, and interventions. In an outlook, future directions of SNA research for TEL are provided

    Simulating the impact of urban transport infrastructure design on local air quality in Beijing

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    Urban transport infrastructure can result in the physical, psychological and environmental separation of neighborhoods, public space and pedestrian network, leading to negative impacts on citizens’ daily commutes, social activities and health. In this paper, we simulate the impacts of road network design on individual activity patterns, travel mode choices and air pollution using an agent-based model. The simulation model is applied to a case study in Beijing and the air pollution heat maps are produced for road network designs comparing with the real-time pollution data. This illustrates the potential value of such simulation models which generate activities for a given urban layout and transport network, and shows how human behavior can impact air qualit

    Uncovering Hierarchical Structure in Social Networks using Isospectral Reductions

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    We employ the recently developed theory of isospectral network reductions to analyze multi-mode social networks. This procedure allows us to uncover the hierarchical structure of the networks we consider as well as the hierarchical structure of each mode of the network. Additionally, by performing a dynamical analysis of these networks we are able to analyze the evolution of their structure allowing us to find a number of other network features. We apply both of these approaches to the Southern Women Data Set, one of the most studied social networks and demonstrate that these techniques provide new information, which complements previous findings.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, 5 table

    Expanding Eco-Visualization: Sculpting Corn Production

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    This dissertation expands upon the definition of eco-visualization artwork. EV was originally defined in 2006 by Tiffany Holmes as a way to display the real time consumption statistics of key environmental resources for the goal of promoting ecological literacy. I assert that the final forms of EV artworks are not necessarily dependent on technology, and can differ in terms of media used, in that they can be sculptural, video-based, or static two-dimensional forms that communicate interpreted environmental information. There are two main categories of EV: one that is predominantly screen-based and another that employs a variety of modes of representation to visualize environmental information. EVs are political acts, situated in a charged climate of rising awareness, operating within the context of environmentalism and sustainability. I discuss a variety of EV works within the frame of ecopsychology, including EcoArtTech’s Eclipse and Keith Deverell’s Building Run; Andrea Polli’s Cloud Car and Particle Falls; Nathalie Miebach’s series, The Sandy Rides; and Natalie Jeremijenko’s Mussel Choir. The range of EV works provided models for my creative project, Sculpting Corn Production, and a foundation from which I developed a creative methodology. Working to defeat my experience of solastalgia, Sculpting Corn Production is a series of discrete paper sculptures focusing on American industrial corn farming. This EV also functions as a way for me to understand our devastated monoculture landscapes and the politics, economics, and related areas of ecology of our food production
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