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Content Analysis for New Media: Rethinking the Paradigm

Content Analysis for New Media: Rethinking the Paradigm. Susan C. Herring School of Library and Information Science Indiana University, Bloomington. Content Analysis. Systematic analysis of the manifest content of communication What people do, rather than what they say they do

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Content Analysis for New Media: Rethinking the Paradigm

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  1. Content Analysis for New Media: Rethinking the Paradigm Susan C. Herring School of Library and Information Science Indiana University, Bloomington

  2. Content Analysis • Systematic analysis of the manifest content of communication • What people do, rather than what they say they do • Product-focused • Naturally-occurring data • Data may be from historical sources • Traditionally mass communication, publicly available • Primarily quantitative

  3. Content Analysis (cont.) • Advantages • External & internal validity • Unobtrusive • Low cost • Limitations • Doesn’t get at intentions, internal states • Can be decontextualized • Can be reductionist

  4. Discourse Analysis • Analysis of patterns of meaning and structure in units of language larger than the sentence • What people do, rather than what they say they do • Product-focused • Naturally-occurring data • Data may be from historical sources • Public and private communication, including conversation • May be qualitative (interpretive) or quantitative

  5. New Media • The World Wide Web • Personal home pages, blogs, wikis, etc. • Computer-Mediated Communication (CMC) • Email, discussion boards, chat, Instant Messaging, SMS, 3-D virtual worlds, etc. • Convergent Media • Social network sites, MMOGs, YouTube, iTV SMS, etc.

  6. “New” Characteristics of New Media Communication • Multimodal • Hyperlinked • Textual conversation (“typed speech”) • ALSO: persistent, plentiful, large scale, dynamically changing, etc.

  7. A conservative approach • New media CA research should seek to reproduce the methods of traditional CA research (McMillan, 2000) • The 5 Steps of CA (cf. Krippendorf, 1980) • The researcher formulates a research question and/or hypotheses based on previous theory • The researcher selects a (random) sample • Categories are defined for coding • Coders are trained, code the content, and the reliability of their coding is checked • The data collected during the coding process are analyzed and interpreted.

  8. Why use established methods? • Availability • No need to reinvent the wheel • Reliability • “tried and true” • Sophistication • Refined through successive applications • Interpretability • Enable comparison with previous research • Associated theoretical frameworks • Guide assumptions, research questions

  9. Problems with conservative approach • Not fully representative of CA • Not adhered to in all “classical” research (cf. Bauer, 2000) • Inadequate to explain some new media content • E.g., linking, multimodality, textual conversation • Difficult to apply strictly to new media content • E.g., problems with random sampling • Assumes comparability of old and new media • E.g., units of analysis • Assumes research questions are the same for old and new media • But exploratory studies need not be framed through existing theory

  10. A liberal approach • New media CA research should adapt and expand the methods of traditional CA research • Adapt traditional concepts and practices • Innovate new techniques • Integrate other paradigms

  11. Other paradigms: Computer-Mediated Discourse Analysis • A set of empirical micro-methods for analyzing online communication • Adapts linguistic (especially discourse analysis) methods • Patterns resulting from analysis may be quantified and visually represented • Typically applied to text-based CMC (Herring, 2004) “Language-focused content analysis” (Herring, 2004)

  12. Other paradigms: Social Network Analysis • A sociological approach to analyzing relationships and ties between social actors • Quantitative, based on graph theory • Patterns resulting from analysis are often visually represented • Used to analyze patterns of interaction and linking on the Web (Foot, et al., 2003; Kleinberg, 1999; Wellman, 2001) A form of content analysis?

  13. Depends on definition of “content” • Thematic meanings present in text or images • Various types of information "contained" in new media documents, including themes, structures, features, links and exchanges

  14. Need to adapt and innovate • Units of analysis • Web • Page (Crowston & Williams, 2000) • Homepage (Bates & Lu, 1997) • Site (Warnick, 1998) • Sphere (Schneider & Foot, 2004) • CMC • Message (cf. turn; Condon & Cech, 2001) • Session (cf. conversation) • Data collection • Problems with random sampling • Web • CMC • Coding categories • Pre-defined vs. emergent • Ethical prescriptions • Etc.

  15. Examples of sampling challenges • Online news sites • Web pornography • Social network sites

  16. Online news sites (Kutz & Herring, 2005) • Research questions • How often does news content change? • What changes? • Sampling requirements • Representative news content • BUT: many sites, much content, content of different types • Exhaustive set of changes over a representative time period • BUT: how often is often enough?

  17. Research sites • CNN • BBC • English-language version of Aljazeera

  18. Sampling procedure • Top news stories from each site • Sampled automatically at 1-minute intervals over a 3-week period • iterative process

  19. Units of analysis • Top news story • headline • teaser article (blurb) • image and image description

  20. Resulting sample • 2,244 changes to the text (title, blurb) and images of top news stories • CNN: 369 • BBC: 257 • Aljazeera: 1,618 Classified and coded all changes; assessed inter-rater reliability

  21. Coding interface

  22. Findings • Top story changes every 6-7 hours • Associated images change every 3-4 hours on CNN and BBC; every 2 hours on Aljazeera • 51% of changes add no new information • Formatting, spelling, grammar corrections • Stylistic polish • Rhetorical/ideological rewording

  23. Web pornography (Herring & Martinson, in prep.) • Research questions • How diverse is the content of Web pornography? • How much control do consumers have over what they view? • Sampling requirements • Representative content • BUT: vast amounts • Images that consumers with varied preferences would choose to view • BUT: difficult to observe directly

  24. Research site • SexTracker (www.sextracker.com) • Largest sex portal on the Web • 5th largest advertiser on the Web • Aims to satisfy all consumer preferences

  25. Sampling procedure • Hypothetical navigational trajectories of porn consumers with varying preferences • Professional (amateur, non-amateur) • Sexual orientation (gay, lesbian, hetero) • Explicit (hardcore, softcore)

  26. Sample navigational trajectory SexTracker home Hetero Softcore 1st site on list (1st ad on 1st site) back/close to SexTracker home

  27. Resulting sample • 10 trajectories • 85 links (4-18 per trajectory) • 188 pages (83 site content + 105 ads) • 960 images (536 site content + 414 ads) + SexTracker portal (18 ads) Coded content of all images; Assessed inter-rater reliability

  28. Findings • Amateur trajectories contain mostly professional images, less diverse representations of sexual preference and fewer hardcore images than professional trajectories • Gay trajectories contain mostly male images, but lesbian trajectories contain more male images and more hardcore heterosexual images than hetero trajectories • Softcore trajectories contain more hardcore images and fewer ads than hardcore trajectories

  29. CMC on social network sites (Das & Herring, in prep.) • Research questions • To what extent do users interact textually on SNSs? • How coherent are message exchanges on SNSs? • Sampling requirements • Overall picture: who is interacting with whom, how often? • BUT: each participant is multiply connected to others; millions of users • Both “sides” of the conversation • BUT: sender and receiver’s messages not in the same place

  30. Research site • Orkut • online social network service run by Google • 8th most-visited site in the world; 2nd most-visited in India • aim is to “provide an online meeting place for people to socialize, make new acquaintances, and find others who share their interests” • users can interact via profile linking, communities, “scrapbooks”

  31. An orkut scrapbook

  32. Sample • ‘Bengali’ community, April 2007 • Coded & visualized relationships between messages using Dynamic Topic Analysis (Herring & Kurtz, 2006); 10% of sample coded together

  33. Preliminary findings • Message exchange is not very coherent • Many scraps receive no response • Scraps that respond to other scraps are often narrowly or tenuously (rather than optimally) related • Exchanges are more coherent when pseudo-synchronous

  34. An IM conversation

  35. Risks of expanding the CA paradigm • Analyses may not be comparable between old and new media, or across researchers • Exploratory approaches may sacrifice methodological precision and interpretability of research results • Innovative analyses may not initially appear representative or reproducible

  36. BUT… • Techniques tend to become systematized and best practices refined over time • New knowledge created from innovative approaches can inform future techniques, methods, theories • CA will ultimately be more powerful for having integrated innovative responses to new media phenomena

  37. Conclusion • Need to balance validity and interpretability of established methods with responsiveness to new data and research questions

  38. Questions? herring@indiana.edu

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