Social media and social impact assessment: Evolving methods in a shifting context

Author:

Sherren KateORCID,Chen Yan,Mohammadi Mehrnoosh1,Zhao Qiqi2,Gone Keshava Pallavi1ORCID,Rahman HM Tuihedur3,Smit Michael1

Affiliation:

1. Dalhousie University, Canada

2. Nanjing University, China; Dalhousie University, Canada

3. University of Saskatchewan, Canada

Abstract

Among many by-products of Web 2.0 come the wide range of potential image and text datasets within social media and content sharing platforms that speak of how people live, what they do, and what they care about. These datasets are imperfect and biased in many ways, but those flaws make them complementary to data derived from conventional social science methods and thus potentially useful for triangulation in complex decision-making contexts. Yet the online environment is highly mutable, and so the datasets are less reliable than censuses or other standard data types leveraged in social impact assessment. Over the past decade, we have innovated numerous methods for deploying Instagram datasets in investigating management or development alternatives. This article synthesizes work from three Canadian decision contexts – hydroelectric dam construction or removal; dyke realignment or wetland restoration; and integrating renewable energy into vineyard landscapes – to illustrate some of the methods we have applied to social impact assessment questions using Instagram that may be transferrable to other social media platforms and contexts: thematic (manual coding, machine vision, natural language processing/sentiment analysis, statistical analysis), spatial (hotspot mapping, cultural ecosystem modeling), and visual (word clouds, saliency mapping, collage). We conclude with a set of cautions and next steps for the domain.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Parya Scholarship

China Scholarship Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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