No one was able to point to an article that did a meta-analysis showing
(or not) a predominantly urban focus in internet research.
So Jess Collins & I changed our sentence a bit.
We did get many pointers to folks doing urban-rural comparisons or rural
focused internet research. Which was not what we were asking about, but as
they were copied to these lists, may well have been useful to some -- as
well as to us.
I do wish people would relabel their subject lines if they are responding
to a somewhat different query.
Anyway, our paper is done, and goes up on my website/publications -
Connected Lives -- by Monday. Look for "Small Town in Internet Society:
Chapleau Is No Longer an Island"
Cheers,
Barry Wellman
S.D. Clark Professor of Sociology, FRSC NetLab Director
Department of Sociology 725 Spadina Avenue, Room 388
University of Toronto Toronto Canada M5S 2J4 twitter:barrywellman
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman fax:+1-416-978-3963
Updating history: http://chass.utoronto.ca/oldnew/cybertimes.php
Well I offer these as detective work clues:
How did they find out psychologists mostly study undergraduate
students because these are the easiest subjects for university
researchers to find?
And more important why did health research focus on men and not women
in say heart attack research.
I mean these of the same order of just common knowledge. So how did
these facts of bias get established?
May be someone should research the question with a meta study of
studies of the Internet.
In Canada bringing the Internet to rural areas is the reason for some
new funding for the Canadian Internet Use Survey where one of my
bosses Larry Mckeown puts of papers on rural internet stuff.
On 21-Jul-09, at 6:19 PM, Barry Wellman wrote:
No one was able to point to an article that did a meta-analysis
showing
(or not) a predominantly urban focus in internet research.
So Jess Collins & I changed our sentence a bit.
We did get many pointers to folks doing urban-rural comparisons or
rural
focused internet research. Which was not what we were asking about,
but as
they were copied to these lists, may well have been useful to some
-- as
well as to us.
I do wish people would relabel their subject lines if they are
responding
to a somewhat different query.
Anyway, our paper is done, and goes up on my website/publications -
Connected Lives -- by Monday. Look for "Small Town in Internet
Society:
Chapleau Is No Longer an Island"
Cheers,
Barry Wellman
S.D. Clark Professor of Sociology, FRSC NetLab Director
Department of Sociology 725 Spadina Avenue, Room 388
University of Toronto Toronto Canada M5S 2J4 twitter:barrywellman
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman fax:+1-416-978-3963
Updating history: http://chass.utoronto.ca/oldnew/cybertimes.php
CITASA mailing list
CITASA@list.citasa.org
http://list.citasa.org/mailman/listinfo/citasa_list.citasa.org
Peter Timusk,
B.Math statistics (2002), B.A. legal studies (2006) Carleton University
Systems Science Graduate student, University of Ottawa.
just trying to stay linear.
Read by hundreds of lurkers every week.
Kiitos Paljon, Merci, and thank you.