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124 results for "digital sociology" — page 4 of 7
ZC_3_22 — Fourth Industrial Revolution
The Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) is a framework articulated by Klaus Schwab (founder and executive chairman of the World Economic Forum) in his 2016 book The Fourth Industrial Revolution, describing a new phase of
G_1_10 — Photogrammetry and 3D Scanning in Heritage Documentation
Photogrammetry and 3D scanning technologies have transformed archaeological and heritage documentation from two-dimensional plans and photographs into millimeter-accurate, three-dimensional digital records of sites, arti
G_3_22 — Science and Technology Studies (STS)
Science and Technology Studies (STS) is an interdisciplinary field that examines how society, politics, culture, and economics shape scientific research and technological innovation — and how science and technology in tu
D_4_05 — LiDAR Archaeology: Revolutionary Remote Sensing Discoveries
LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) has transformed archaeology by enabling researchers to see through dense vegetation and map landscapes at centimeter-level resolution, revealing previously unknown structures, roads, c
H_4_17 — Algorithmic Censorship and AI Content Moderation
Algorithmic content moderation — the use of automated systems (machine learning classifiers, natural language processing, computer vision, and large language models) to detect, flag, restrict, or remove online content —
I_1_06 — SETI vs UAP: Scientific Divide
The relationship between SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) and UAP/UFO research represents one of the most striking paradigm divides in modern science. Both fields nominally address the same question — are
I_5_11 — UAP Stigma and Scientific Taboo
The stigma surrounding UAP/UFO research is one of the most well-documented examples of scientific taboo — a topic that mainstream science considers illegitimate to investigate, not because evidence has been evaluated and
U_5_04 — Comics, Graphic Novels, and Sequential Art
Sequential art — narrative through sequences of images, often combined with text — is one of humanity's oldest communication forms. Precursors: Egyptian tomb paintings with sequential narrative panels; Trajan's Column (R
U_2_06 — Cinema and Film History
Cinema — the art and technology of moving images — emerged from late 19th-century developments in photography and persistence of vision. Pioneer technologies: Eadweard Muybridge's sequential photographs of a galloping ho
U_2_05 — Photography and Visual Culture
Photography — from Greek phōs (light) + graphē (drawing) — transforms light into permanent images. Origins: the camera obscura (darkened chamber projecting inverted images through a pinhole) was known to Aristotle and us
X_2_11 — Ethnobotanical Pharmacology: Plant-Based Medicines Across Cultures
Ethnobotanical pharmacology (or ethnopharmacology) investigates the medicinal use of plants across human cultures — encompassing the traditional knowledge systems that identified, prepared, and administered plant-based m
X_5_02 — Medical Illustration and Anatomical Art
Medical illustration and anatomical art — the visual representation of the human body for scientific and educational purposes — is a discipline where art and science converge with extraordinary results. The ability to ac
X_1_05 — Herbalism and Ethnobotany: Cross-Cultural Plant Medicine
Plants have been humanity's primary pharmacy for the entirety of our species' history — from Neanderthal hearths containing medicinal chamomile and yarrow (El Sidrón, ~50,000 BP) to the modern pharmaceutical industry, wh
K_3_01 — Machine Consciousness — Can AI Be Aware?
The question of machine consciousness — whether artificial systems can be genuinely aware rather than merely simulating awareness — stands at the intersection of philosophy of mind, neuroscience, and computer science. Jo
INTERDOC_31 — Simulation Reality: Ancient and Modern Convergence
Nick Bostrom (Oxford, 2003, "Are You Living in a Computer Simulation?", Philosophical Quarterly) formalized the simulation argument as a trilemma: either (1) civilizations almost always go extinct before developing simul
ZC_5_09 — Sociology of Race and Ethnicity: Construction, Racism, and Intersectionality
The sociology of race and ethnicity studies how racial and ethnic categories are socially constructed, how racism operates as a system of power, and how racial and ethnic identities shape life chances, social institution
ZC_5_14 — Sociology of Incarceration: Mass Imprisonment, the Carceral State, and Abolition
The sociology of incarceration examines imprisonment as a social institution — analyzing its functions, history, racial and class dimensions, effects on individuals and communities, and its relationship to broader struct
ZC_5_03 — Sociology of the Body: Embodiment, Biopower, and Body Politics
The sociology of the body examines how human bodies are socially constructed, regulated, experienced, and politicized — not as "natural" biological givens but as products of cultural practices, power relations, historica
ZC_1_14 — Social Media Psychology
Social media usage is now near-universal among adolescents and young adults in developed nations (95% of US teens, Pew 2023), making its psychological effects one of the most debated topics in contemporary psychology. Th
ZC_4_09 — Visual Anthropology: Ethnographic Film and Image as Evidence
Visual anthropology — the study of human societies through visual media (photography, film, video, digital platforms) and the anthropological analysis of visual systems — occupies a unique position at the intersection of
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