Society for the Social Study of Mobile Communications


The Society for the Social Study of Mobile Communication (SSSMC) is intended to facilitate the international advancement of cross-disciplinary mobile communication studies. It is intended to serve as a resource and to support a network of scholarly research as to the social consequences of mobile communication.




Saturday, May 5, 2018

CFP: #ScreentimeBU Graduate Student Conference

Call for Abstracts – #ScreentimeBU Graduate Student Conference

#NoFilter: Unmasking digital engagements and real world influence

Deadline to Submit Abstracts
May 24, 2018

Conference Date
June 21, 2018
11am - 6pm

The graduate students of Boston University’s Division of Emerging Media Studies are calling for abstracts for their fourth annual conference on emerging media. #ScreentimeBU is a graduate conference that provides a platform for students to showcase their research and to network with peers in emerging media studies.

This year’s #ScreentimeBU aims to remove the misleading cover of media “hypes” and explore the civic, social, and psychological implications of today’s media landscape. This conference is an opportunity to bridge diverse perspectives on the roles of users and technology in new media and to lay the groundwork for future research in the field.

Emerging media studies is an inherently interdisciplinary field, and as such we welcome abstracts from a variety of disciplines on a range of topics centered around our conference theme: Authenticity in digital communication, online engagement and offline effects. Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Social media movements
  • Social media bots
  • Algorithm bias
  • Political communication
  • Media in health communication and toxic news
  • Online relationships, communities, and social networks
  • Media communication transparency
  • Big data analysis and machine learning
  • Media psychology
  • Self-presentation on social media and digital privacy concerns
  • Video games, virtual reality, and augmented reality
  • Media literacy, online actions, and offline consequences
  • Human-computer interaction
  • Computer mediated communication
  • Wearable devices and mobile communication


The conference is free of charge for both attendees and speakers. For additional information about the conference and previous years’ conferences, please visit http://sites.bu.edu/demsconference/

Deadline for Abstracts: May 24. Please submit abstracts of no more than 300 words to demsconf@bu.edu. Include your name and institutional affiliation (department/university), program and year of study, research focus/interests, and contact information (email and phone number) with all submissions. Abstracts will be peer reviewed, and applicants will be notified of their acceptance on a rolling basis no later than May 29.

Thanks again – hope to see you there!




#ScreentimeBU Abstract Team
Division of Emerging Media Studies
College of Communication
Boston University

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

OII hiring two Senior Researchers



Senior Research Fellow (two posts)


Grade 9: £46,336 - £53,691 per annum (discretionary range up to £58,655)
Vacancy Reference No.: 132751
Posted Date: 
Closing Date: 

Face-Off: Facial Recognition Technologies and Humanity in an Era of Big Data.

 
Please join us on April 18th from 9:30am - 3:20pm for Boston University's international symposium Face-Off: Facial Recognition Technologies and Humanity in an Era of Big Data.  Speakers and panels are as follows:

Panel 1: Understanding Facial Recognition

How Does the Face Recognition Technology Work?
Margrit Betke, Boston University

The Biology of Facial Recognition
Mark Frank, University at Buffalo


Panel 2: Ethical Concerns and Practical Benefits

The Risks and Benefits of Facial Recognition? A New Direction Needed
Vanessa Nurock, Epidapo CNRS-UCLA & Université Paris 8

The Ethical Significance of the Face and AI Facial Recognition
Laura Specker Sullivan, Harvard Medical School’s Center for Bioethics

An Industry Perspective on Facial Recognition Technology
Derek Christensen, Accenture


Panel 3: Historical and Contemporary Uses and Abuses

Alphonse Bertillon: Issues in the “Scientific” Identification of Persons by Means of Facial Features at the Turn of the 20th Century
Pierre Piazza, Cergy-Pontoise University

The Perpetual Line-Up: Unregulated Police Face Recognition in America
Clare Garvie and Alvaro Bedoya, the Center on Privacy and Technology at Georgetown
LawJonathan Frankle, Massachusetts Institute of Technology


Panel 4: Applications and Perceptions

Emotion, Classification, and Race in Facial Recognition Systems
Luke Stark, Dartmouth College

Public Perceptions and Concerns: A View from Chile
Daniel Halpern, Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

Putting a Face to a Name in Clinical Settings: Recognizing Faces in
Manifestation and Outcomes of Clinician Anonymity
Lora Appel, OpenLab University Health Network, TorontoYork University,
Toronto

For additional details and registration information, please visit the event
website <https://www.mellonphilemerge.com/events/face-off>.  Be sure to
click Read More for full details.  Space is limited, so please be sure to
register!

Contact Sarah Krongard at krongard@bu.edu with any questions.

Thursday, March 1, 2018

CFP: Mobile Media & Communication

CFP: Mobile Media & Communication

Special Section: Mobile Media beyond Mobile Phones Call for papers for a special section of Mobile Media & Communication titled “Mobile Media Beyond Mobile Phones”, to be published in volume 7:3, 2019 (http://mmc.sagepub.com)

Guest Editors Jordan Frith, PhD, Associate Professor, University of North Texas, USA, frithjh@gmail.com
Didem Özkul, PhD, Lecturer, UCL Knowledge Lab, Department of Culture, Communications and Media, University College London, UK. d.ozkul@ucl.ac.uk

Overview
Smartphones have dominated the research in the field of Mobile Communication Studies (MCS), and for good reason. Smartphones have become possibly the dominant form of communication media, and have been widely adopted in many parts of the world. However, this special section of Mobile Media & Communication seeks to further broaden the field’s research to examine other types of mobile communication, whether historical, contemporary, or futuristic. Consequently, we are calling for articles examining the theme of this special section: Mobile Media beyond Mobile Phones. The goal of this special section is to expand the focus of the field through innovative research on nonsmartphone forms of mobile technologies.

Obviously, some research on non-mobile phone forms of mobile technologies exist. For example, researchers have studied the spatial and social impacts of mobile auditory media such as the Walkman and the iPod (Bull, 2001, 2007). Researchers have also examined how infrastructures of mobile communication shape practices of mobility, with studies examining how cell phone towers are embedded in the environment (Horst, 2013). Other research has looked at historical forms of mobile media, including the codex book and the kaleidoscope (Farman, 2015b). In addition, some researchers have examined how infrastructural technologies like RFID and Bluetooth Beacons have shaped mobile communication by bringing an increasing number of nonhuman actors into the equation (Frith, 2015; Rosol, 2010). However, despite the research that does exist, the field of MCS has the potential to incorporate far more actors—both human and nonhuman—into the broader scope of MCS.

The special section will ideally publish a fairly eclectic collection of articles united by the main theme: mobile communication involves more than mobile phones. Consequently, the submitted articles can come from various theoretical and methodological perspectives. In addition, the special section will accept submissions that focus on smartphone-adjacent topics as long as the focus is not specifically on people’s interactions with smartphones as mobile interfaces. For example, the infrastructure that enables mobile communication (cell towers, GPS, etc.), newer forms of smartphone infrastructure (Beacons, NFC), or the standards that shape smartphone development are all viable topics for this section. Possible topics, including but not limited to

  • The Internet of Things broadly defined
  • Historical forms of mobile communication, including but not limited to 
    • Books as mobile media 
    • Ancient forms of mobile media 
    • Mobile auditory media o Barcodes 
    • Earlier mobile gaming technologies (Gameboy, etc.)
  • Mobile phone infrastructure (GPS, cell tower, etc.)
  • Wearable technologies such as the Apple Watch, Fitbit, etc.
  • Broader mobile communication infrastructure, including but not limited t
    • RFID
    • Near-Field Communication
    • BLE Beacons
    • QR Codes 
  • Robotics as mobile communication 
  • “Generations” of mobile networks—shift to 5G 
  • Mobile phone standards as vibrant actors  
  • The role of mobile communication in artificial intelligence 
Journal Review Process and Submission Guidelines
For guidelines on preparation of manuscripts and criteria for acceptance, please follow Mobile Media & Communication Submission Guidelines (https://uk.sagepub.com/engb/eur/journal/mobile-mediacommunication#submission-guidelines).

Please submit an abstract of 700-800 words that clearly states the main argument and evidence of the paper and the primary literatures it is building upon. The abstract should also clearly articulate the submission’s contribution to mobile methods. For empirical studies still in progress, please outline the current state and the timeline. Also include the names, titles, and contact information for 2-3 suggested reviewers. Abstracts are due 15 March, 2018 to frithjh@gmail.com (with “Beyond Mobile Phones Special Issue” in the subject line), and should be accompanied by an abbreviated biography (approx. 200-300 words).

Positively reviewed abstracts (notification by 15 April, 2018) will be invited to submit full articles by 1 Oct, 2018, through http://mmc.sagepub.com. These full articles will be peer-reviewed by two to three reviewers and considered for acceptance. The special section will be published in Volume 7, Issue 3 of Mobile Media & Communication. Please note that manuscripts must conform to the guidelines for Mobile Media & Communication. Final papers should be no longer than 7,000 words, including abstract, references, figures and tables. In case of further questions, please contact the guest editors.

Timeline
CfP published: 8 Jan 2018
 Extended abstracts due: 15 March, 2018
Notification: 15 April, 2018
Full submission: 1 Oct, 2018
Final version: 15 March 2019

CFP: Digital Journalism

News: Mobiles, Mobilities, and their Meeting Points

Much research on digital journalism has focused on “online”, and thus has failed to distinguish between platforms and devices. This is surprising since digital journalism and news, once associated with fixed desktop computers, has become entrenched in mobility and closely connected to mobile devices. Trending research topics such as data journalism, social media, audience analytics cannot be treated as if separate from mobile devices and mobility, but should study their role, significance and peculiarities in all these topics. This special issue will address this, publishing a variety of articles on mobiles, mobilities and their meeting points in the salient case of news.
The mobile device is a “miniaturized mobility” par excellence, tailored to fit with contemporary patterns of mobility (Elliott & Urry, 2010). Within the broader realm of digital journalism, we find news produced by mobile journalists (MoJos) as well as citizens using their networked smartphone (e.g. Burum & Quinn, 2015; Westlund, 2013), news distributed via mobile networks and platforms (e.g. Villi & Matikainen, 2015), and news consumed by mobile audiences on mobile devices in diverse spaces and times of the day (e.g. Wolf & Schnauber, 2015). Newsrooms have adapted to accommodate new technologies of mobility: smartphones and related technology (smart watches and augmented-reality glasses), and novel forms of newsrooms have sprung up. Practically, what impact has this had on how reporters source newsmakers and stories, how they report on them, and how they construct news packages? What role do mobile devices have in different forms of journalism, and how is news for mobile devices brought alive and consumed in the form of text, audio and video?

Commercially, the move from print to website was long foretold; news’s move onto social media accessed via smartphones was less expected, and has resulted in news organisations struggling to maintain control over the distribution of their content. This has impacted on the advertising revenue model which has supported news production for the past century. Conceptually, too, news has moved from being fixed to fluid, a flow of updateable information rather than a regularly issued product. Changes in production are also affected by changes in how, where and when news is consumed in the niches of life (Struckmann & Karnowski, 2017) as smartphones also change news consumption. A recent U.S. based study suggests people turn to their mobile devices for news snacking (Molyneux, 2017). Are such patterns found also elsewhere in the world, and how does it correspond to number of occasions people turn to their mobile devices for news, and via other platforms and news media? If so, what effect does that have on news journalism’s presumed civic informational role?
This special issue of Digital Journalism invites scholars to explore the intersection of news and mobility as it concerns production and distribution of news the one hand, and consumption on the other. The news/mobility intersection also raises issues for scholars in how to study such a rapidly evolving target. What epistemologies and methods are best suited to understanding specific aspects of this changeable industry? Both well-argued conceptual pieces, and theoretically informed empirical contributions are welcomed using all research methods, and from scholars working in journalism studies, media, mobilities and related areas. As mobile news is a global phenomenon, we encourage submissions from scholars working in all parts of the world. We invite extended abstracts under these two broad areas, but with an emphasis on digital journalism and the news/mobility nexus:
News production and distribution
    •    Newsroom adaptation to accommodate the new news mobilities.
    •    Para-journalism and independent practitioners bypassing traditional news channels (including partisan news, misinformation, fake news, and issues of verification).
    •    Alternative newsroom approaches and shifts to reconfigure to mobile first
    •    Studies into the business of mobile media services (m-commerce, payments, advertisements) for news media
    •    Emerging narrative formats of news reporting afforded by mobile technologies.
    •    Mobile infrastructure’s impact on news production and distribution.
    •    Personalising the mobile news experience: customized content and/or delivery
    •    Mobile devices in diverse forms of citizen journalism (and relating to witnessing, emotions, authenticity, live reporting, social media)
News consumption
    •    Impact of mobile news channels on other forms of news consumption behaviour
    •    The impact of mobile news on civic engagement and political decision making.
    •    How smart phones, smart watches and augmented-reality glasses weave news consumption and sharing into everyday life
    •    New literacy skills required to navigate and interpret mobile news.
    •    New conceptualisations of news as fluid rather than fixed.
    •    New affordances of mobile news technologies
    •    Preferences for mobile news (applications, sites, notifications, social media etc.)
    •    Mobile news consumption in space and time
    •    Multi-method analyses of mobile news consumption (e.g. mixing survey, interviews or diaries with passive trace data)
Information about Submission
Proposals should include the following: an abstract of 500-750 words (not including references) as well as background information on the author(s), including an abbreviated bio that describes previous and current research that relates to the special issue theme. Please submit your proposal as one file (PDF) with your names clearly stated in the file name and the first page. Send your proposal to duffy@ntu.edu.sg  by the deadline of May 1st. The submission timeline is outlined below. Then on May 18th authors will be notified whether their abstract has been selected, and consequently if they will be encouraged to develop and submit an article for peer review. Finally, full articles will be due November 9th for full blind review, in accordance with the journal's peer-review procedure. Submissions should be between 6,500 and 7,000 words in length. Guidelines for manuscripts can be found here.
Submission timeline:
    •    Abstract submission deadline: Tuesday 1st May 2018
    •    Notification on submitted abstracts: Friday 18th May 2018
    •    Article submission deadline: Friday 9th November 2018
    •    Accepted articles will be published immediately as Online First. The entire special issue will come out in 2019.
Editorial information
    •    Guest Editor: Andrew Duffy, Nanyang Technological University
    •    Guest Editor: Nuri Kim, Nanyang Technological University
    •    Guest Editor: Rich Ling, Nanyang Technological University
    •    Guest Editor: Oscar Westlund, Oslo Metropolitan University, Volda University College, and University of Gothenburg