Connected Life 2015 was a day-long student-run conference held at the Oxford Internet Institute (1 St Giles), and Balliol College, University of Oxford on Thursday, 4th June. Dedicated to sparking exchange between disciplines and showcasing emerging internet research, it brought together participants from across the humanities, social sciences, and physical sciences. Collaborations were fostered within and beyond Oxford in pursuit of an enhanced understanding of the internet and its multifaceted effects.
Keynote Speaker
Daniele Quercia
For the 2015 Connected Life conference we hosted Daniele Quercia as the keynote speaker. To hear our specially recorded interview with Daniele, please see here.
Daniele Quercia is a computer scientist, has been named one of Fortune magazine’s 2014 Data All-Stars, and spoke about “happy maps” at TED.
He is interested in the relationship between online and offline worlds, and his work has been focused on the area of urban informatics. He was a Research Scientist at Yahoo Labs, a Horizon senior researcher at The Computer Laboratory of the University of Cambridge, and a Postdoctoral Associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Daniele Quercia is a computer scientist, has been named one of Fortune magazine’s 2014 Data All-Stars, and spoke about “happy maps” at TED.
He is interested in the relationship between online and offline worlds, and his work has been focused on the area of urban informatics. He was a Research Scientist at Yahoo Labs, a Horizon senior researcher at The Computer Laboratory of the University of Cambridge, and a Postdoctoral Associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Welcome and Keynote Address (Daniele Quercia) Lecture Room 23
10.30am
Break and Refreshments Lecture Room 23
10.45am
MORNING PANELS + SYMPOSIUM I
1. SYMPOSIUM: Class and Power Online Dining Room
Moderator: Taha Yasseri, Oxford Internet Institute
Taha Yasseri has interests in analysis of Big Data to understand human dynamics, government-society interactions, mass collaboration, and opinion dynamics.
Max Weber and Internet Use
Grant Blank, Oxford Internet Institute
Grant (Ph.D. University of Chicago) is the Survey Research Fellow at the Oxford Internet Institute. His special interests are the cultural and social impact of computers and the Internet, the digital divide, statistical and qualitative methods, and cultural sociology. He manages the Oxford Internet Survey. He can be reached at grant.blank[at]oii.ox.ac.uk; see also http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/people/blank/.
Darja Groselj, Oxford Internet Institute
Darja is a DPhil student at the Oxford Internet Institute. Her research interests are located at the intersection of social inequalities and technology, with a special interest in how online engagement is shaped by various material and motivational factors.
A Social Milieu Approach to the Online Participation Divides in Germany
Christoph Lutz, University of St. Gallen
Christoph is a PhD student in media and communication at the University of St. Gallen (Switzerland). His dissertation focuses on online participation and his other research interests include social media in science and public administration, online privacy and trust, and digital serendipity. He has published in leading Internet journals, such as Information, Communication and Society and First Monday.
Peer Popularity and Social Control in a Digital Age
Jessica Heal, University of Manchester
Jessica is a part-time PhD student at the University of Manchester interested in peer popularity, social media, education, and Foucault. She also works full-time as a qualitative researcher at Teach First, where she explores effective teaching and other organisational questions.
2. PANEL: Digital Rebellion Lecture Room 23
Connectivity, Mobility, and Dissent: A Comparative Study of Social Media Networks During the 2014 Hong Kong Protests
Colin Agur, Yale University
Colin is a Bartlett Fellow for Access to Knowledge at the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. His research focuses on the development and consequences of mobile phone networks in India, China, and other developing countries. He received his PhD from Columbia University.
Nick Frisch, Yale University
Nick is a Resident Fellow at Yale Law School’s Information Society Project and a doctoral student in Asian studies at Yale. He has reported on transparency and culture across Asia, and was a Visiting Fellow at Hong Kong University’s Journalism and Media Studies Centre. His work has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and Hong Kong’s Ming Pao.
Survival of the Fittest? The Changing Roles of Non-Governmental Organisations, Citizens, and Engagement in a Climate of Digital Activism
Anna Hushlak, University of Oxford
For Anna, home is a mix of Canada, Mexico, South Africa, Honduras, and the UK. Her work overseas has led to an interest in how we can use technology to protect the environment and to share its stories. Currently, Anna is a second-year DPhil at Oxford University’s Centre for the Environment, exploring how charities are using digital tools for environmental activism.
Russian Digital Protest: Online Memes as the Means of Carnivalesque Resistance in Social Networks
Anastasia Denisova, University of Westminster
Anastasia is a Doctoral Researcher in Social Media at the University of Westminster. She worked as a journalist for over a decade (news reporter, editor, digital consultant for UNICEF) before starting her academic career. She is now exploring the potential and creative language of political protest in Russian social networks.
‘Organise Online, Succeed Offline’: An Enquiry into the Role of Social Media for Political Mobilisation in India
Amog Dhar Sharma, University of Oxford
Amogh is a final-year student in the MPhil Development Studies programme at the Oxford Department of International Development. His research focuses on the political economy of contemporary India, and how ICTs and social media are impacting the process of political mobilisation in the country.
Assemblages of Virtual Palestine: Hacktivism as Rhizomatic Resistance
Fabio Cristiano, Lund Unviersity
Fabio is a doctoral candidate and lecturer in Political Science at Lund University (Sweden). His research looks at the role hacktivism and cyberwarfare play in the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In particular, Fabio is interested in understanding what type(s) of political subjectivity are constructed through these practices, and how these can be related to debates on virtuality/reality and unity/multiplicity in political thought.
3. PANEL: Cultures and Conflicts Drawing Room
Digitisation in the Cultural Sector and the Ethics of Digital Objects
Chris Loughnane, University of Glasgow
Chris is a doctoral candidate at the University of Glasgow’s Humanities Advanced Technology and Information Institute, exploring the impact of digital technologies on the cultural sector and academia. His research is currently focussed on how we interact through different forms of environment coupling, and so partake in the emergent digital environments created by and residing upon ICT technologies.
Waging Redundant War: Cultural Pasts and Digital Futures in Contemporary American Conflict
Andrew Lanham, Yale University
Andrew completed an MSt in English and American Studies and an MLitt in English at Oxford, working on the representation of warfare in late-20th and early-21st-century American fiction. He is currently a PhD student in English at Yale studying the aesthetics and cultural politics of 20th-century American antiwar movements.
Ai Weiwei’s Leg-Gun Meme: The Viral Aesthetics of Visual Satire in Contemporary China
Ros Holmes, University of Oxford
Ros is a Junior Research Fellow in art history at Christ Church, University of Oxford. Her current research project, entitled ‘The Mediated Image’, focuses on visual culture and contemporary art in China, with a particular emphasis on its interaction with the internet. She has published in the China Journal and the Oxford Art Journal.
Digital ‘Artifacts’ of Revolution
Kira Allmann, University of Oxford
Kira is a DPhil candidate in the Faculty of Oriental Studies at the University of Oxford, where her research on the Arab Spring focuses on how digital geographies for communication, coordination, and mobilization are created in the dialectic between online and offline spaces.
12.15pm
Lunch Balliol Hall
1.15pm
AFTERNOON PANELS + SYMPOSIUM II
1. SYMPOSIUM: Cyber Governance and Government Lecture Room 23
Moderator: Helen Margetts, Oxford Internet Institute
Helen Margetts is the Director of the OII. She is a political scientist specialising in digital era government, politics and public policy, and data science and experimental methods.
Privateers and Modern-day Cyberspace
Florian Egloff, University of Oxford
Florian is a DPhil Candidate at Oxford University’s Centre for Doctoral Training in Cyber Security. In his research he problematizes the current theorization of non-state actors in cyber security and offers an alternative conceptual map based on a historical analogy to the age of privateering. Before coming to Oxford, Florian worked for the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs in the realm of international security policy. He holds a Masters of International Relations from the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva.
Public People: Personal Data in Open Government Databases
Eve Ahearn, University of Oxford
Eve is an MSc Student at the Oxford Internet Institute researching municipal open government data practices. Previously, she helped to build a database of influential people at a business development startup in New York. She is also the co-founder of the Internet School Podcast, a program that explores different angles of internet studies.
Big Data for Elections
Ria Baldevia, Hawaii Pacific University
Ria is founder and principal of Sensus Digital, a digital marketing company. She has worked on presidential and congressional coordinated campaigns from 2008-2012. She is pursuing her Master of Arts degree in Military and Diplomacy Studies at Hawaii Pacific University in Honolulu.
2. PANEL: Censorship and Surveillance Dining Room
Disguising Centrality in Social Networks
Marcin Waniek, University of Warsaw
Marcin is a PhD student at the University of Warsaw. His research interests lie in the fields of artificial intelligence and game theory, in particular multi-agent systems, social network analysis, and simulations.
Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Content Control on the Chinese Internet
Adam Knight, University of Oxford
MA voracious consumer of Chinese news and full-time sinophile, Adam has been studying China and its internet for the last four years. His research focuses on self-censorship at the user level and state-society relations. In his spare time, he runs a research and marketing agency specialising in the Chinese digital sphere.
Holly Herndon: Internet Surveillance // Home
Genevieve Costello, University of Amsterdam
Genevieve is a Cultural Analysis Research Master’s student at University of Amsterdam where she writes about art and technology. Having relocated from New York, she has an affinity for pizza, fast walking, and spending weeknights listening to AMSR radio. You can check out her nonacademic visual interests on Instagram @thesatirechap.
3. PANEL: eHealth Drawing Room
Understanding the Potential Role for Appropriate e/mHealth Solutions in the Innovation of Health System Design, Implementation, and Normalisation in Rural South Africa for Both Patients and Healthcare Professionals: A Critical Exploratory Analysis
Jocelyn Watkins, University of Warwick
Jocelyn is a native South African and final-year Health Science PhD student at Warwick Medical School. She has a Sport Science BA from Durham and an Evidence Based Social Intervention MSc from Oxford, where she has published work on South African children orphaned by HIV/AIDS and risk and protective factors for educational opportunity. Her research interests surround public health, health systems strengthening, and health policy.
Patterns of Mobile Phone and Mobile Internet Use in Rural India and China, with an Application to Healthcare Access
Marco Haenssgen, University of Oxford
Marco is a final year DPhil student at the Oxford Department of International Development. He studies the relationship between mobile phone diffusion and rural healthcare access in India and China from a social sciences perspective using qualitative and quantitative methods. His background is in general management and development studies, and he previously worked in development finance and evaluation.
Tracking Suicide-related Search Engine Queries in the United Kingdom, 2004-2013
Vishal Arora, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
Vishal is a Fulbright Scholar at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies. His work focusses on the political economy of healthcare, where he is interested in the intersection of medicine and health systems performance. He graduated magna cum laude from Harvard College with a degree in Economics and is an incoming student at Harvard Medical School.
2.30pm
Visualisation Fair Oxford Internet Institute
Refreshments Lecture Room 23
Moderator: Ralph Schroeder
Ralph Schroeder has interests in virtual environments, social aspects of e-Science, sociology of science and technology, and has written extensively about virtual reality technology. His current research is mainly related to e-science.
Philosophy Meets Internet Engineering: Examining and Aligning Ethics Reasoning
Bendert Zevenbergen, University of Oxford
Ben joined the Oxford Internet Institute in 2012 to work on the EU Internet Science project. He has worked on legal, political and policy aspects of the information society for several years. Most recently he was a policy advisor to an MEP in the European Parliament, working on Europe’s Digital Agenda. Previously Bendert worked as an ICT/IP lawyer and policy consultant in the Netherlands. Bendert holds a degree in law, specialising in Information Law.
Big Data and Causality
Stefano Canali, University College London
In 2014 Stefano graduated in philosophy of science at the University of Milan and currently he is an MSc student at the Science and Technology Studies Department of UCL. He is interested in Information and Communication Technologies, their impact on society and science. He thinks that philosophy should engage with current technological issues, helping us better understand them.
Re-inscribing Social Media’s Complaints: Nudging Users to Achieve Goals
Rotem Medzini, University of Haifa
Rotem, a JSM Graduate from Stanford Law School, holds an LL.B. and an LL.M both from the University of Haifa and both in the field of Law and Technology. In his research, Rotem focused on the issues of internet governance, information collection practices of social networks, and the effect of user interfaces on privacy.
2. PANEL: Home, School, and Work Online Dining Room
Searching for Home in the Historic Web: An Ethnosemiotic Study of London-French Blogger Habitus
Saskia Huc-Hepher, University of Westminster
Saskia is from the Department of Modern Languages and Cultures at the University of Westminster. She is a French specialist with an applied interest in language transfer and intercultural communication. Her doctoral research is “ethnosemiotic” in approach, and examines French-language representations of London’s growing French community, both in “on-land” and on-line contexts.
Inherited Infrastructures and Compromising Connections at Iceland’s Ásbrú Enterprise Park
Alix Johnson, University of California, Santa Cruz
Alix is a PhD candidate in anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her research follows the role of information technology in Icelandic economic recovery and political reform, investigating the histories, imaginaries, and materialities integral to Icelandââ¬â¢s efforts to become a global “information haven.”
Intelligence in a Connected Society
Kouross Esmaeli, New York University
Kouross is a documentary filmmaker and PhD candidate at NYU’s Department of Media, Culture, and Communication. He is currently a teaching artist in NYC high schools where he is also doing fieldwork on the politics and culture of testing in America’s public school system. public school system.
3. PANEL: Smarter Machines Drawing Room
Helping Us Fly? Machine Learning and Crowdsourcing
Mia Ridge, Open University
Mia’s PhD is titled Making Digital History: the impact of digitality on public participation and scholarly practices in historical research. Before her PhD she was Lead Web Developer for the Science Museum and completed an MSc in Human-Computer Interaction. Her edited volume Crowdsourcing our Cultural Heritage was published last year.
Group Knowledge and Social Machines
Orestis Palermos, University of Edinburgh
Orestis is currently working as a postdoctoral fellow for the AHRC-funded Extended Knowledge Project at the University of Edinburgh. His PhD, which he received from the same institution, was on the intersection of Philosophy of Mind, Cognitive Science, and Epistemology, and the primary focus of his current research is on how technology and the Web can shape our means for acquiring knowledge. Orestis also holds a BSc in Chemical Engineering from the National Technical University of Athens and he is the leader of the Group Knowledge pilot project at Edinburgh’s Eidyn Centre.
How We Learn Across Small and Big Data: Social Epistemic Cognition and Human-Information Interactions in the Online Social World
Rosanna Yuen-Yan Chan, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Rosanna is an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the Department of Information Engineering, The Chinese University of Hong Kong. She has a multidisciplinary background in information engineering, educational psychology, and learning science. Her research interests include human-information interaction, social big data, and Cryptography (which is the original research field of her PhD studies).
4.30pm
LIGHTNING TALKS Lecture Room 23
Surfing Brazilian Internet Govern@nce Wave – Critical Analysis of Brazilian Contributions to the Development of the Global Internet Governance System
João Monteiro-Neto, University of Kent
126 Characters in Search of an Author: Twitter and Thinking Out Loud on Social Media, the Case of the Indigo Children
Beth Singler, University of Cambridge
Beth is a PhD candidate at the Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge. Her research explores new religious movements and spiritual subcultures online, and employs digital sociological and anthropological methodologies. Her recent publications include ” ‘SEE MOM IT IS REAL’: The UK Census, Jediism and Social Media”, in the Journal of Religion in Europe, Brill. Follow her @BVLSingler or at cambridge.academia.edu/BethSingler.
In Pursuit of Data: Following the Data Trails
Mimi Onuoha, Royal College of Art
Mimi is an American artist and researcher using data and code to explore social issues. Her work is concerned with the physical and digital sites where cultural practices meet technological systems. She is a 2014-15 Fulbright-National Geographic Fellow and a Visiting Researcher at the Royal College of Art.
SmartCare: A Centralised Hub for Medical Apps
Niclas Palmius, University of Oxford
Nick is a second-year DPhil student at the Institute of Biomedical Engineering. His research interest is in using mobile phone based technology in healthcare applications, and he is working on developing methods of objectively measuring mental health symptom severity in bipolar patients using levels of physical activity and geographic movements measured on the patient’s phone.
Digital Immigrants in Theory, Internet Users in Practice: Towards a Situated Understanding of Ageing and Technology
Ilinca Barsan, University of Edinburgh
Ilinca was born in Romania, grew up in Germany, and has just finished her undergraduate degree in Sociology and Politics at the University of Edinburgh. She is now looking forward to joining the Oxford Internet Institute for her Masters this fall.
‘Mobile’ Youth and Binaries of Work and Leisure
Elsa Oommen, University of Warwick
Elsa is a PhD candidate at the Department of Sociology, University of Warwick. Her doctoral research project explores the dimensions of work and leisure that embody the gendered practices of youth migration to the UK under the contemporary UK immigration policy. Her research is funded by the Warwick Chancellor’s scholarship.
Using an Online Wine Community to Investigate the Roles of Quality and Hype in the Market for Wine
Alex Albright, Stanford University
Alex is a Research Fellow at Stanford Law School, working on empirical studies related to civil rights and criminal justice—in particular, her projects focus on the deterrence hypothesis and the modern American crime decline. A graduate of Williams College with a degree in Mathematics and Economics, she is passionate about applying quantitative methods to a host of fascinating real-world questions.
6pm
Drinks Reception and Award Ceremony Oxford Internet Institute
7.30pm
Closing
Organisers
Connected Life 2015 was run by MSc and DPhil students at the Oxford Internet Institute. All members of the 2015 Organising Committee are listed here.
Yin Yin Lu, Co-Lead Organiser and Programme Lead
Yin is an OII DPhil student. She is fascinated by the intersection between language and technology, as well as the emergence of social metadata. Her research focuses on the hashtag, one of the most notable sociotechnical phenomena of the 21st century.
Paige Mustain, Co-Lead Organiser and Engagement Lead
Paige’s research lies at the intersection of education, development and digital exclusion. She focuses on the political economy of information and communication technology (ICT) development initiatives in the realm of education.
Josh Cowls, Co-Lead Organiser and Operations Lead
Josh is a Research Assistant at the OII. Josh completed his MSc Social Science of the Internet in 2013 and since then has worked on a range of projects around big data, open data, digital humanities and the surveillance state.
Rebecca Fallon, Publicity Director
Rebecca is an OII MSc student interested in online community formation and identity construction.
Ellie Marshall, Media Producer
Ellie is an OII MSc student. Her research focuses on disability, online self-disclosure, and the Internet of Things.
Sophie Melville, Web Manager
Sophie is an OII MSc student interested in the intersection between gender, identity and technology.