All Stories

  1. The influence of international branch campuses on regional university research networks: the case of Greater Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
  2. Disentangling a secret web of online scholarly interactions involving the research of top scholars in the field of communication: International Communication Association (ICA) Fellows
  3. Publication, Collaboration, Citation Performance, and Triple Helix Innovation Gene of Artificial Intelligence Research in the Communication Field: Comparing Asia to the Rest of the World
  4. ICA fellows’ networking patterns in terms of collaboration, citation, and bibliographic coupling and the relevance of co-ethnicity
  5. Hidden Gems from the Communication of Innovations and Network Literature
  6. Setting the Public Sentiment: Examining the Relationship between Social Media and News Sentiments
  7. Decoding the Relationship of Artificial Intelligence, Advertising, and Generative Models
  8. The filter bubble generated by artificial intelligence algorithms and the network dynamics of collective polarization on YouTube: the case of South Korea
  9. Measuring Innovation and Collaboration System using Big Data: A Case Study about Ho Chi Minh City
  10. Toward the consolidation of a multi-metric-based journal ranking and categorization system for computer science subject areas
  11. Information Circulation Among Spanish-Speaking and Caribbean Communities Related to COVID-19: Social Media–Based Multidimensional Analysis
  12. Global COVID-19 Policy Engagement With Scientific Research Information: Altmetric Data Study
  13. Co-authorship among the Fellows of the International Communication Association
  14. Meet with European advisory editors
  15. Factors driving national eco‐innovation: New routes to sustainable development
  16. Discourse about higher education on Twitter in early phases of COVID-19: A crisis management social network analysis
  17. Comparing news and non-news sites in Web3 domain
  18. When there is no knowledge, the publishers and journals stop
  19. What are the Consequences of the Social and Cultural Exchanges between the Two Koreas? Insights from an Experimental Study on the Effect of Superordinate Korean Identity
  20. Profiling the most highly cited scholars from China: Who they are. To what extent they are interdisciplinary
  21. How can we go beyond the "Triple Helix" innovation model and measure more complex "Helices"?
  22. Use of Triangulation in Comparing the Blockchain Knowledge Structure between China and South Korea: Scientometric Network, Topic Modeling, and Prediction Technique
  23. Use of North Korea-Related YouTube Videos in South Korea: A Case Study of VideoMug
  24. Systemic Gendering in Facebook Group Participation
  25. Development of a COVID-19 Web Information Transmission Structure Based on a Quadruple Helix Model: Webometric Network Approach Using Bing
  26. Discussion, news information, and research sharing on social media at the onset of Covid-19
  27. “Editorial: Big Data and Network Analysis in National Innovation Systems (NIS)”
  28. COVID-19 in the Twitterverse, from epidemic to pandemic: information-sharing behavior and Twitter as an information carrier
  29. The effects of infotainment on public reaction to North Korea using hybrid text mining: Content analysis, machine learning-based sentiment analysis, and co-word analysis
  30. Global-level relationships of international student mobility and research mentions on social media
  31. A webometric network analysis of electronic word of mouth (eWOM) characteristics and machine learning approach to consumer comments during a crisis
  32. Using Digital Technology to Address Confirmability and Scalability in Thematic Analysis of Participant-Provided Data
  33. A Scientometric Study of Digital Literacy, ICT Literacy, Information Literacy, and Media Literacy
  34. Pattern and trend of scientific knowledge production in North Korea by a semantic network analysis of papers in journal titled technological innovation
  35. Conversations and Medical News Frames on Twitter: Infodemiological Study on COVID-19 in South Korea
  36. Research trends on big data domain using text mining algorithms
  37. A new era of Quality & Quantity: International Journal of Methodology - Collaborate or Fall Behind
  38. Invisible college within triple helix and social network studies in the age of big data
  39. How Are Twitter Activities Related to Top Cryptocurrencies' Performance? Evidence from Social Media Network and Sentiment Analysis
  40. Investigating the applications of artificial intelligence in cyber security
  41. Analytical framework for evaluating digital diplomacy using network analysis and topic modeling: Comparing South Korea and Japan
  42. Structural characteristics of institutional collaboration in North Korea analyzed through domestic publications
  43. Diffusion of cryptocurrencies: web traffic and social network attributes as indicators of cryptocurrency performance
  44. Dynamic capabilities of a smart city: An innovative approach to discovering urban problems and solutions
  45. Towards the operationalization of controversial news: a study of online news articles and reader comments during the 2017 presidential election in South Korea
  46. Research evaluation of Asian countries using altmetrics: comparing South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, and China
  47. Global mapping of scientific information exchange using altmetric data
  48. An altmetric investigation of the online visibility of South Korea-based scientific journals
  49. Two-side face of knowledge building using scientometric analysis
  50. Beyond data, innovation, social network, and convergence
  51. Global mapping of artificial intelligence in Google and Google Scholar
  52. Quintuple helix structure of Sino-Korean research collaboration in science
  53. State of the art in business analytics: themes and collaborations
  54. International trade of GMO-related agricultural products
  55. From online via offline to online: how online visibility of tourism information shapes and is shaped by offline visits
  56. Mapping a Twitter scholarly communication network: a case of the association of internet researchers’ conference
  57. The world is not flat: Evaluating the inequality in global information gatekeeping through website co-mentions
  58. YouTubers’ networking activities during the 2016 South Korea earthquake
  59. Climate Change and YouTube: Deliberation Potential in Post-video Discussions
  60. Corroborating social media echelon in cancer research
  61. Full and fractional counting in bibliometric networks
  62. Filling the gap between bureaucratic and adaptive approaches to crisis management: lessons from the Sewol Ferry sinking in South Korea
  63. Versatile networks in combining qualitative and quantitative data
  64. The unbalanced dynamics in Sino-South Korea scientific and technological collaboration: a triple helix perspective with insights from paper and patent network analysis
  65. Methods for area studies and contemporary China study
  66. Measuring international relations in social media conversations
  67. Delineating the complex use of a political podcast in South Korea by hybrid web indicators: The case of the Nakkomsu Twitter network
  68. Computational social studies in innovations, collaborations and future strategies: Investigating socio-technical interactions using biggish data
  69. Open data in Nepal: a webometric network analysis
  70. The normalization of co-authorship networks in the bibliometric evaluation: the government stimulation programs of China and Korea
  71. Evolution of the International Hyperlink Network
  72. Longitudinal dynamics of the cultural diffusion of Kpop on YouTube
  73. Triple helix dynamics of South Korea’s innovation system: a network analysis of inter-regional technological collaborations
  74. Expanding the presidential debate by tweeting: The 2012 presidential election debate in South Korea
  75. The emerging viewertariat in South Korea: The Seoul mayoral TV debate on Twitter, Facebook, and blogs
  76. Proving ground for social network analysis in the emerging research area “Internet of Things” (IoT)
  77. Theories in communication science: a structural analysis using webometrics and social network approach
  78. Networked Cultural Diffusion and Creation on YouTube: An Analysis of YouTube Memes
  79. Tracing interorganizational information networks during emergency response period: A webometric approach to the 2012 Gumi chemical spill in South Korea
  80. The Continuing Growth of Global Cooperation Networks in Research: A Conundrum for National Governments
  81. A semantic (TRIZ) network analysis of South Korea's “Open Public Data” policy
  82. Diagnosing “Collaborative Culture” of Biomedical Science in South Korea: Misoriented Knowledge, Competition, and Failing Collaboration
  83. Triple helix approaches and social network perspectives
  84. Comparing Twitter and YouTube networks in information diffusion: The case of the “Occupy Wall Street” movement
  85. The flow of international students from a macro perspective: a network analysis
  86. Faculty use and perception of mobile information and communication technology (m-ICT) for teaching practices
  87. The networked cultural diffusion of Korean wave
  88. Organic Products in Mexico and South Korea on Twitter
  89. The hybrid shift: Evidencing a student-driven restructuring of the college classroom
  90. Exploring political discussions by Korean twitter users
  91. More than entertainment: YouTube and public responses to the science of global warming and climate change
  92. Arab Spring Effects on Meanings for Islamist Web Terms and on Web Hyperlink Networks among Muslim-Majority Nations: A Naturalistic Field Experiment
  93. Can synergy in Triple Helix relations be quantified? A review of the development of the Triple Helix indicator
  94. Factors affecting citation networks in science and technology: focused on non-quality factors
  95. Citizens' social media use and homeland security information policy: Some evidences from Twitter users during the 2013 North Korea nuclear test
  96. Quantifying the Triple Helix relationship in scientific research: statistical analyses on the dividing pattern between developed and developing countries
  97. Globalization of cultural products: a webometric analysis of Kpop in Spanish-speaking countries
  98. Food policy in cyberspace: A webometric analysis of national food clusters in South Korea
  99. Interaction among Networks in the age of "Big Data": Social, Knowledge, Innovation, and Triple-Helix Networks
  100. The triple helix and international collaboration in science
  101. Networking Interest and Networked Structure
  102. Measuring web ecology by Facebook, Twitter, blogs and online news: 2012 general election in South Korea
  103. Predicting Opinion Leaders in Twitter Activism Networks
  104. International coauthorship relations in the Social Sciences Citation Index: Is internationalization leading the Network?
  105. A webometric approach to policy analysis and management using exponential random graph models
  106. Flow of Online Content from Production to Consumption in the Context of Globalization Theory
  107. From e-government to social government: Twitter use by Korea's central government
  108. Introduction to the special issue: social media interaction between public and government in Asia-Pacific
  109. SNS use by the Korean government: a case of Me2Day
  110. Social media communication strategies of government agencies: Twitter use in Korea and the USA
  111. The Presence of Hyperlinks on Social Network Sites: A Case Study of Cyworld in Korea
  112. Social Media Use during Japan's 2011 Earthquake: How Twitter Transforms the Locus of Crisis Communication
  113. How are newspaper companies using social media to engage and connect with their audiences? characteristics and forms of Korean newspapers’ YouTube use
  114. Comparative trends in global communication networks of #Kpop tweets
  115. Transition from the Triple Helix to N-Tuple Helices? An interview with Elias G. Carayannis and David F. J. Campbell
  116. Mapping election campaigns through negative entropy: Triple and Quadruple Helix approach to South Korea’s 2012 presidential election
  117. An interview with Loet Leydesdorff: the past, present, and future of the triple helix in the age of big data
  118. Mapping Triple Helix innovation in developing and transitional economies: webometrics, scientometrics, and informetrics
  119. A routine for measuring synergy in university–industry–government relations: mutual information as a Triple-Helix and Quadruple-Helix indicator
  120. A multi-level network analysis of web-citations among the world’s universities
  121. Decomposing social and semantic networks in emerging “big data” research
  122. An exploratory approach to a Twitter-based community centered on a political goal in South Korea: Who organized it, what they shared, and how they acted
  123. Journal History and Impact Revisited
  124. Political Discourse Among Key Twitter Users: The Case Of Sejong City In South Korea
  125. Inferring international dotcom Web communities by link and content analysis
  126. E‐campaigning versus the Public Official Election Act in South Korea
  127. The e-government research domain: A triple helix network analysis of collaboration at the regional, country, and institutional levels
  128. What's congress doing on twitter?
  129. Can web ecology provide a clearer understanding of people’s information behavior during election campaigns?
  130. International collaboration in science: the global map and the network
  131. The structural relationship between politicians’ web visibility and political finance networks: A case study of South Korea’s National Assembly members
  132. Strategies affecting Twitter-based networking pattern of South Korean politicians: social network analysis and exponential random graph model
  133. Examining the international internet using multiple measures: new methods for measuring the communication base of globalized cyberspace
  134. Examining Korean political figures using co-word analysis in agreement with facial expressions in posted self-images
  135. Mapping online social networks of Korean politicians
  136. Web visibility of scholars in media and communication journals
  137. A qualitative analysis of cross-cultural new media research: SNS use in Asia and the West
  138. The Network Structure of the Korean Blogosphere
  139. Editors' Introduction
  140. Korean and Chinese Webpage Content: Who Are Talking About What and How?
  141. Editorial: Triple Helix and innovation in Asia using scientometrics, webometrics, and informetrics
  142. e-Research applications for tracking online socio-political capital in the Asia-Pacific region
  143. Mediated relations: new methods to study online social capital
  144. How do congressional members appear on the web? Tracking the web visibility of South Korean politicians
  145. Government organizations’ innovative use of the Internet: The case of the Twitter activity of South Korea’s Ministry for Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries
  146. Using social media data to explore communication processes within South Korean online innovation communities
  147. Has globalization strengthened South Korea’s national research system? National and international dynamics of the Triple Helix of scientific co-authorship relationships in South Korea
  148. A comparison of the Daegu and Edinburgh musical industries: a triple helix approach
  149. Measuring the triple helix on the web: Longitudinal trends in the university-industry-government relationship in Korea
  150. Exploring the web visibility of world-class universities
  151. Measuring Twitter-based political participation and deliberation in the South Korean context by using social network and Triple Helix indicators
  152. Regional development in South Korea: accounting for research area in centrality and networks
  153. Structural changes in the 2003–2009 global hyperlink network
  154. Network of the core: mapping and visualizing the core of scientific domains
  155. Convenience or credibility? A study of college student online research behaviors
  156. Communication and the Evolution of SNS: Cultural Convergence Perspective
  157. Online image content analysis of political figures: an exploratory study
  158. Citations among communication journals and other disciplines: a network analysis
  159. South Korea
  160. How do social scientists use link data from search engines to understand Internet-based political and electoral communication?
  161. A socio-technical perspective on e-government issues in developing countries: a scientometrics approach
  162. Quantifying the national innovation system: inter-regional collaboration networks in South Korea
  163. Networked Politics on Cyworld: The Text and Sentiment of Korean Political Profiles
  164. Sociology of Hyperlink Networks of Web 1.0, Web 2.0, and Twitter: A Case Study of South Korea
  165. Uncovering Transnational Hyperlink Patterns and Web-Mediated Contents: A New Approach Based on Cracking.com Domain
  166. Examining academic Internet use using a combined method
  167. Longitudinal trends in networks of university–industry–government relations in South Korea: The role of programmatic incentives
  168. Textual analysis of a political message: the inaugural addresses of two Korean presidents
  169. A hyperlink and issue network analysis of the United States Senate: A rediscovery of the Web as a relational and topical medium
  170. A network analysis of interdisciplinary research relationships: the Korean government’s R&D grant program
  171. The Reconfiguration of E-Campaign Practices in Korea
  172. Mapping the e-science landscape in South Korea using the webometrics method
  173. Trends in online networking among South Korean politicians — A mixed-method approach
  174. Knowledge linkage structures in communication studies using citation analysis among communication journals
  175. Online networks of student protest: the case of the living wage campaign
  176. Developing network indicators for ideological landscapes from the political blogosphere in South Korea
  177. Korean journals in the Science Citation Index: What do they reveal about the intellectual structure of S&T in Korea?
  178. Digital media education for Korean youth
  179. The Korean Presidential Election of 2007: Five Years on from the "Internet Election"
  180. A Hyperlink Network Analysis of Citizen Blogs in South Korean Politics
  181. Configurations of Relationships in Different Media: FtF, Email, Instant Messenger, Mobile Phone, and SMS
  182. Link analysis: Hyperlink patterns and social structure on politicians’ Web sites in South Korea
  183. Web-science communication in the age of globalization
  184. Hyperlink Analyses of the World Wide Web: A Review
  185. Comparing Academic Hyperlink Structures with Journal Publishing in Korea
  186. Political Hyperlinking in South Korea: Technical Indicators of Ideology and Content
  187. The structure of international internet hyperlinks and bilateral bandwidth
  188. A comparison of the knowledge-based innovation systems in the economies of South Korea and the Netherlands using Triple Helix indicators
  189. Presence of taiwan on the world wide web in south korea: dynamics of digital and geographical presence on cyberspace
  190. 3-G wireless auctions as an economic barrier to entry: the western european experience
  191. Socio-Communicational Structure among Political Actors on the Web in South Korea
  192. Examining the Determinants of Who is Hyperlinked to Whom: A Survey of Webmasters in Korea
  193. Interorganizational Hyperlink Networks among Websites in South Korea
  194. Unveiling Korea's top website network: Hyperlinks & affiliations.