Migration Maps in the News Media: Cross-Cultural Contrasts in Cartographic Surveillance

Cartography is one of the oldest forms of media. With cartography and media, meaning, ideology, and power are habitually arbitrated across and through space and time. Media has an underlying mapping impulse – a proclivity to comprehend itself and be rendered comprehensible through metaphors of topologies, networks, and flows that lead to the constant evacuation of spaces in order to produce places of communication. In this book ViSmedia associate Paul Adams has written the first chapter were he share his research on Media’s Mapping Impulse.

Adams, Paul. 2020. “Migration Maps with the News”. Journalism Studies 19 (4): 527-547. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/1461670X.2017.1375387

Read More
2017hedvig idås2020
Keeping Reporters Safe: The Ethics of Drone Journalism in a Humanitarian Crisis

Chapter by Turo Uskali and Epp Lauk. Drones have been used for news reporting since 2011. This chapter analyzes several cases of drone journalism in crisis reporting and refers to ethical guidelines for good drone reporting in humanitarian crisis reporting.

Uskali, Turo and Epp Lauk. 2017. “Keeping Reporters Safe: The Ethics of Drone Journalism in Humantarian Crisis”. In Andersen, Robin and Purnaka L. de Silvia (eds) The Routledge Companion To Media and Humanitarian Action. Abingdon, Routledge Handbooks Online. DOI: 10.4324/9781315538129.ch39

Read More
Innovating Virtual Reality Experiences For Journalism: The Design Thinking Approach

Conference paper by Heli Väätäjä, Otto Kauhanen, Turo Uskali, Esa Sirkkunen, Chelsea Kelling, Markku Turunen, Vesa Lindqvist. It presents a history of VR and explores VR storytelling for journalism.

Väätäjä, Heli., Otto Kauhanen, Turo Uskali, Esa Sirkkunen, Chelsea Kelling, Markku Turunen and Vesa Lindqvist. 2017. “Innovating Virtual Reality Experiences For Journalism”. The Design Thinking Approach

Read More
Assisting Immersive Virtual Reality Development With User Experience Design Approach

Conference paper by Otto Kauhanen, Heli Väätäjä, Markku Turunen, Tuuli Keskinen, Esa Sirkkunen, Turo Uskali, Vesa Lindqvist, Chelsea Kelling, Jussi Karhu. The paper explores how to a biography as a VR experience.

Kauhanen, Otto., Heli Väätäjä, Markku Turunen, Tuuli Keskinen, Esa Sirkkunen, Turo Uskali, Vesa Lindqvist, Chelsea Kelling and Jussi Karhu. 2017. “Assisting immersive virtual reality development with user experience design approach” Academic Mindtrek: 127-136. DOI: 10.1145/3131085.3131126.

Read More
Ethical Issues in Big Data

In 2014, a paper with the title “Experimental evidence of Massive-Scale Emotional Contagion Through Social Networks” was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Engineering (Kramer, Guillory, and Hancock 2014). The paper reported on research that had been done using 689,003 Facebook users. Seeking to determine whether the emotional content of users’ postings would be affected by the extent of positive or negative newsfeed the users received, the study involved three groups: one group had their newsfeed filtered for negative content; another group had their newsfeed filtered for positive content; and a third group had their newsfeed randomly filtered. Comparing the postings of the three groups, the researchers concluded that “moods are contagious.” Users who saw more positive newsfeed wrote more positive posts and users who saw more negative content wrote more negative posts. The study contradicted a concern and common belief that when users see a lot of positive content from their friends, it makes them depressed.

Johnson, Deborah G. 2018. “Ethical Issues in Big Data”. In: Pitt, Joseph C. and Ashley Shew. Spaces for the Future. A Companion to Philosophy of Technology. New York, Routledge. DOI: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203735657

Read More
2017Maja Vedå
Using Baselines for Algorithm Audits

Study by Jennifer A. Stark and Nicholas Diakopoulos. They investigate bias in Google’s image selection for the main search results pages of presidential candidates’ main search results page. The paper indicates that bias may have been introduced by the Google image selection algorithm.

Stark, Jennifer A. and Nicholas Diakopoulos. 2017. “Using Baselines for Algorithm Audits”. European Conference on Data and Computional Journalism.

Read More
Journalism in Virtual Reality: Opportunities and Future Research Challenges

Conference paper by Esa Sirkkunen, Heli Väätäjä, Turo Uskali, Parisa Pour Rezai. It looks at what kinds f real-life journalistic VR experiments there have been made so far. Then it analyzes the research literature on journalistic VR.

Sirkkunen, Esa., Hela Väätäjä, Turo Uskali, and Parisa Pour Rezaei. 2016. “Journalism in virtual reality : opportunities and future research challenges”. Academic MindTrek'16 : Proceedings of the 20th International Academic MindTrek Conference : 297-303. New York: Association for Computing Machinery (ACM). DOI: 10.1145/2994310.2994353

Read More
Enabling Accountability of Algorithmic Media: Transparency as a Constructive and Critical Lens

As the news media adopts algorithmic components into the production of news information, it raises the question of how to maintain an accountable media system. Nicholas Diakopoulos explores algorithmic transparancy.

Diakopoulos Nicholas. 2017. “Enabling Accountability of Algorithmic Media: Transparency as a Constructive and Critical Lens”. In: Cerquitelli,Tania, Daniele Quercia and Frank Pasquale (eds) Transparent Data Mining for Big and Small Data. Studies in Big Data, vol 32. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-54024-5_2

Read More
Virtual Reality Prototyping in Journalism: How to Best Collaborate With Agile Methods

In the Virjox projects, journalism scholars, human-computer interaction and computer scientists and media company developers innovate together to figure out how to create the best immersive journalism and other media products. Turo Uskali, Heli Väätäjä and Esa Sirkkunen offer insights into the project.

Uskali, Turo; Esa Sirkkunen and Heli Väätäjä. 2017. “Virtual Reality Prototyping in Journalism: How to Best Collaborate With Agile Methods” Nordicom Information 39 (1): 28-31.

Read More
The Visual Power of News Agencies

The visual power of news agencies are expanding as staff photographers are losing their jobs. In this study, Astrid Gynnild discusses the challenged ethical standards and editorial dillemmas through the example of terrorism.

Gynnild, Astrid. 2017. “The Visual Power of News Agencies” Nordicom Review, 38 Special Edition 2: 25-39. DOI: 10.1515/nor-2017-0412

Read More
Can Engineering ethics be taught?

The question isn’t whether engineers make moral decisions (they do!), but whether and how ethical decision making can be taught. Skepticism about the possibility of teaching ethics takes multiple forms. This article is based on a chapter from Deborah’s book, Engineering Ethics: Contemporary Debates.

Johnson, Deborah G. 2017. “Can Engineering Ethics Be Taught?”. The Bridge 47 (1): 59-64.

Read More
2017Maja Vedå2017
Reframing AI Discourse

Deborah G. Johnson and Mario Verdicchio. The way public understanding of AI is being shaped, often by fear, is a way that may ultimately impede its research. This knowledge leads to a confusion about the notion of ‘autonomy’.

Johnson, Deborah G. and Mario Verdicchio. 2017. “Reframing AI Discourse”. Minds & Machines 27: 575–590. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11023-017-9417-6

Read More
Drone Journalism: How to Use Remotely Piloted Camera Drones For Journalism

A report by Epp Lauk, Turo Uskali, and Heikki Kuutti that describes and analyzes the results of the research project called “DroneJournalism: Utilizing Remotely Piloted Aircrafts (RPA) in Journalistic Purposes”. It is a project that seeks to clarify problems and possibilities of utilizing camera drones for journalistic purposes. In Finnish language.

Lauk, Epp., Turo Uskali and Heikki Kuutti. 2016. “DroneJournalism: Utilizing Remotely Piloted Aircrafts (RPA) in Journalistic Purposes”.

Read More
Rethinking the Social Responsibilites of Engineers as a Form of Accountability

Although there is broad consensus that engineers have social responsibilities, what is owed in the name of social responsibility is not well understood. After briefly reviewing past attempts to understand the social responsibilities of engineers, an account that treats these responsibilities as a form of accountability is sketched. Accountability involves a relationship between an actor and a forum, a shared sense of obligation to explain and justify behavior, and shared norms regarding what needs to be explained, what counts as an adequate explanation, and what consequences might follow. Framing the social responsibilities of engineers as accountability brings to light the multiple actors involved and the activities by which social responsibilities are constituted. Among other things, the account locates the social responsibilities of engineers in the activities of engineering professional organizations, especially when they issue reports on engineering failures. The account also points to the importance of whistleblowing. The idea that social responsibility falls to individual engineers regardless of context or that social responsibility is a decontextualized moral matter is eschewed in favor of understanding engineers’ social responsibilities as constituted through social practices.

Johnson, Deborah G. 2016 “Rethinking the Social Responsibilities of Engineers as a Form of Accountability”. In: Michelfelder Diane P., Byron Newberry and Qin Zhu (eds) Philosophy and Engineering. Philosophy of Engineering and Technology 26. Springer, Cham. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-45193-0_7

Read More
Maja Vedå2016
Computational Journalism and the Emergence of News Platforms

Chapter by Nicholas Diakopoulos. Examines the shift in how news organizations are increasingly designing and creating their own tools, products, and even entire platforms through the lens of computational journalism.

Diakopoulos, Nicholas. 2016. “Computational Journalism and the Emergence of News Platforms”. In Scott Eldridge II and Bob Franklin (eds). The Routledge Companion to Digital Journalism Studies.

Read More
Drone Journalism: The Newest Global Test of Press Freedom

Chapter by Epp Lauk, Turo Uskali, Heikki Kuutti, and Helena Hirvinen. Camera drones are being used increasingly in journalism. This chapter argues that using camera drones for journalistic purposes is the newest global test for press freedom globally.

Lauk, Epp., Turo Uskali, Heikki Kuutti, and Helena Hirvinen. 2016. “Drone Journalism: The Newest Global Test of Press Freedom”. In Carlsson, Ulla (eds) Freedom of Expression and Media in Transition: Studies and Reflections in the Digital Age, pp: 117-125.

Read More
Crashing a National Media Event: The Circulation of Social Imaginaries in the Gatecrashers Riots in Finland

Chapter by Taneli Heikka, Katja Valaskivi and Turo Uskali. Investigates the Finnish Independence Day on 6 December, 2013. On this day, violence erupted and several video cameras recorded the event.

Heikka, Taneli., Turo Uskali and Katja Valaskivi. 2016. “Crashing a National Media Event : Circulation of Social Imaginaries in the Gatecrashers Riots in Finland”. In B. Mitu, & S. Poulakidakos (eds.),Media Events : A Critical Contemporary Approach. Palgrave Macmillan.

Read More
VisualsGuest User2016