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Improving the Health of Our Online Civic Culture: A Centre for Research and Doctoral Training at 天堂视频
Established in 2018 with a £300,000 award from 天堂视频’s Adventure Research Programme, the Online Civic Culture Centre (O3C) applies cutting-edge concepts and methods from social science and information science to understand the role of social media in shaping our civic culture.
Led by Professor Andrew Chadwick, it features a team of ten academic supervisors and five PhD researchrs drawn from the disciplines of communication, information science, social psychology, and sociology.
O3C enables interdisciplinary teams of researchers and PhD students to work together on issues of misinformation, disinformation, and the rise of hate speech and incivility online. It develops evidence-based knowledge to mitigate the democratically-dysfunctional aspects of social media. At the same time, it identifies and promotes the positive civic engagement benefits of social media.
Across the world, we face fundamental questions about how the routine use of social media is reshaping the civic cultures of democracies. Central to the debate is whether the features of social media that enable citizens to express themselves, exchange opinions, coordinate with others, and rapidly circulate and recirculate messages also encourage the diffusion of false information, incivility, and hatred.
We ask:
- What are the conditions for democratically-dysfunctional outcomes to occur on social media platforms?
- What are the effects of specific social media platform affordances on the civic character of life online?
- Are there recent developments that signal more positive citizenship outcomes from the growth of social media?
By answering these questions our PhD researchers and supervisory teams will create research and findings that will impact public debate and policy.
1. Understanding the Spread of Online Misinformation That Rejects Scientific Consensus: Audiences, Platforms, and Algorithms
Primary Supervisor: Professor Andrew Chadwick
Secondary Supervisors: Dr Martin Sykora, Dr Cristian Vaccari
Please quote reference number: OCC19-P1U
This project will examine the interrelationships between people's motivations for sharing information, the types of information they share (such as media sources and statements by elites of various kinds), and the affordances of video sharing platforms, particularly YouTube. The project will compile a dataset of misleading information rejecting scientific consensus on selected key issues of our time, such as, for example, climate change or health. It will undertake content analysis as well as examine audience interpretations and responses. The project will also assess the role of algorithmic power in shaping people’s exposure and responses to misinformation rejecting scientific consensus and explore how the spread and societal impact of such misinformation might be reduced.
2. What Role Do Social Media Influencers Play in Spreading Misinformation and Disinformation?
Primary Supervisor: Professor Louise Cooke
Secondary Supervisors: Dr Suzanne Elayan, Dr Simone Natale
Please quote reference number: OCC19-P2W
What drives people to behave in democratically-dysfunctional ways in the online environment, and how can we change this behaviour? This project will develop culturally-sensitive concepts for designing new algorithms to detect social media influencers who spread misinformation and disinformation on social media. Through a perspective attentive to the ethical and cultural implications of human-machine interactions on social media platforms, it will both improve understanding of the values embedded in platform algorithms and the role social media influencers play in spreading false information in online networks. The work will sit at the interdisciplinary intersection of computational text mining, applied data science, sociolinguistics, media theory, theories of artificial intelligence, and normative ethical theory.
Find out more here.
We are a group of ten academic supervisors drawn from the disciplines of communication, information science, social psychology, and sociology. Each PhD project will be multi-method and be guided by an interdisciplinary supervisory team.
- Professor Andrew Chadwick, Professor of Political Communication, O3C Director, Political Communication Research Beacon Lead
- Professor Louise Cooke Professor of Information & Knowledge Management, Centre for Information Management (CIM)
- Professor John Downey, Professor of Media and Communication
- Dr Suzanne Elayan, Research Associate, CIM
- Professor Tom Jackson, Professor of Information and Knowledge Management, CIM
- Dr Simone Natale, Lecturer in Media and Communication
- Dr Line Nyhagen, Reader in Sociology
- Dr Martin Sykora, Lecturer in Information Management, CIM
- Dr Cristian Tileag膬, Senior Lecturer in Social Psychology
- Dr Cristian Vaccari, Reader in Political Communication
- BBC.
- , Communication, Culture, and Technology program at Georgetown University, USA, an expert on online misinformation and its correction.
- , Shift Design
- , Opinium Research
- and member of the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, which is currently investigating fake news.
- at the Oxford Internet Institute, Oxford University and the leader of its Computational Propaganda project.
- , Research Director of the Centre for the Analysis of Social Media (CASM) at the Demos think tank.
- , Hope Not Hate.
- , Leiden University.
- , Director of the Social Media and Political Participation (SMaPP) Lab at New York University.
The deadline for applying has now passed.
For further details, please contact:
- Name: Deirdre Lombard, Postgraduate Administrator
- Email: spgsresearch@lboro.ac.uk
- Telephone number: +44 (0)1509 223879
The Online Civic Culture CDT is part of 天堂视频’s Adventure Research Programme, and part of , the , and the .
A 天堂视频 Doctoral College Initiative
The provides outstanding training and development opportunities for research students, coordinates a comprehensive programme of events across our 天堂视频 and London campuses, and provides funding and other resources to enhance postgraduate research. Graduate House, a central, dedicated facility for PGRs, is well-used and is home to our dedicated team who deliver training and development to around 1400 research students across our ten academic schools. Our Doctoral Researchers benefit from being well-networked and supported, by their Schools as well as the University’s professional services and many external organisations. All students receive a structured programme of support and guidance.