Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Social media" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Viral Voices: Depictions of Women s Pain Experiences on Social Media Mazzocca K; Langmuir T; Manan J; Gagnon MM; Alberts NM; 40514002
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Unveiling the association between information sources and young adults attitudes and concerns during COVID-19: Results from the iCARE study Tremblay N; Lavoie KL; Bacon SL; Bélanger-Gravel A; 40043475
HKAP
3 Facebook recruitment: understanding research relations Prior to data collection Young K; Browne K; 39877298
CONCORDIA
4 "How do we do that?" An analysis of TikToks by lesbians over age 30 representing sexual identity, lived experience over time, and solidarity Jamet-Lange H; Duguay S; 38907626
CONCORDIA
5 The unsanitary other and racism during the pandemic: analysis of purity discourses on social media in India, France and United States of America during the COVID-19 pandemic Desmarais C; Roy M; Nguyen MT; Venkatesh V; Rousseau C; 36861381
CONCORDIA
6 Mediating Pain: Navigating Endometriosis on Social Media Eileen Mary Holowka 35707051
CONCORDIA
7 Can citizen pressure influence politicians' communication about climate change? Results from a field experiment Wynes S; Kotcher J; Donner SD; 34548721
CONCORDIA

 

Title:Facebook recruitment: understanding research relations Prior to data collection
Authors:Young KBrowne K
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39877298/
DOI:10.1080/13645579.2023.2278253
Publication:International journal of social research methodology
Keywords:LGBTISocial media research methodsanti-gendergenderheteroactivismonline research methodssexuality
PMID:39877298 Category: Date Added:2025-01-29
Dept Affiliation: CONCORDIA
1 School of Irish Studies, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
2 School of Geography, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.

Description:

This article considers the multiple relations that emerge from and between Facebook commenters, as well as between commenters, researchers, and the research project during recruitment. To do so, we draw on our experiences of recruiting individuals who have concerns about or are opposed to a range of recent social and legal changes in 'post-equality' contexts. Understanding research as co-created rather than 'collecting data from' participants, we consider the researcher, commenters, and Facebook technologies as active agents, and ask how the emergent relationalities between these agents shapes the social media recruitment process. We develop thinking regarding these relationalities through an in-depth exploration of our processes that reveal key methodological considerations relevant to social media recruitment in the social sciences. As the process of recruitment is mutually constructed online through multiple relationalities across researcher/project and commenter, as well as between commenters themselves, we conclude that there is a need for dynamic, iterative, and reflexive responses and engagements rather than pre-defined frameworks.





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