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                  <text>VOL 28 ISSUE 5 2023</text>
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                <text>“Sensing” productivity at home: self-tracking&#13;
technologies, gender, and labor in Turkey</text>
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                <text>self-tracking, sensors, domestic labor, productivity, home–workplace separation, neoliberal/digital capitalism, gender</text>
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                <text>This article explores how women in Turkey use sensing technologies to render visible their productivity at home in ways that contest home–&#13;
workplace boundary under neoliberal, digital capitalism. It does so by focusing on a group of lower- and middle-class women, who work from&#13;
&#13;
home as both paid laborers and unpaid caregivers. Although neoliberalism makes it harder to distinguish home and workplace, my digital ethnog-&#13;
raphy highlights that women working from home feel a home–workplace separation that renders invisible their productivity. By translating em-&#13;
bodied knowledge into quantified data, smartwatches provide women with new information that I call revelations. Women share these revela-&#13;
tions on digital platforms to render visible their productivity at home in ways that transgress the home–workplace boundary. By exploring these&#13;
&#13;
revelations as moments of “otherwise,” this article highlights both when smartwatches reproduce neoliberal mentality and become tools for&#13;
others in the public to register its exploitative consequences.</text>
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                <text>Nazlı O ̈ zkan1,*</text>
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                <text>https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmad017</text>
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                <text>PERI IRAWAN</text>
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                <text>Attitudinal and behavioral correlates of algorithmic&#13;
awareness among German and U.S. social media users</text>
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                <text>algorithmic literacy, algorithmic awareness, algorithmic attitudes, algorithmic divide, social media algorithms</text>
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                <text>With the increase in algorithms on social media, scholarship is increasingly focused on “algorithmic literacy,” or users’ understanding of&#13;
algorithms. Algorithmic literacy is multi-faceted (knowledge, attitudes, and behavior), and researchers are still uncovering how these facets are&#13;
connected. This article presents a preregistered survey of social media users from two western countries: the United States (n 1⁄4 990) and&#13;
Germany (n 1⁄4 1117). Results show key predictors of algorithmic awareness—age, education, frequency of social media use—are the same in&#13;
both countries. Nevertheless, U.S. social media users show higher algorithmic awareness and more positive attitudes toward algorithms than&#13;
German social media users, likely due to their higher overall social media usage. Results also indicate that algorithmic awareness predicts&#13;
attitudes about filtering algorithms depending on users’ defense motivations or accuracy motivations and behaviors to counteract filtering. These&#13;
patterns have implications for literacy interventions and for increasing algorithmic transparency.</text>
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                <text>Anne Oeldorf-Hirsch 1,*, German Neubaum</text>
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                <text>https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmad035</text>
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                <text>PERI IRAWAN</text>
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                <text>Communication about sensors and communication&#13;
through sensors: localizing the Internet of Things in rural&#13;
communities</text>
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                <text>Internet of Things, technology adoption, urban/rural, community, qualitative methods, smart homes/cities</text>
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                <text>Internet of Things (IoT) sensor networks are an emerging technology at the center of the datafication and optimization of far-reaching environmental&#13;
infrastructures—from “smart cities” to workplace efficiencies. However, this low-power, low-cost technology is also well suited to local deployments&#13;
in rural communities, which are often overlooked by digital development initiatives. Therefore, we used a social construction of technology approach to&#13;
&#13;
study how various U.S.-based IoT stakeholders—including designers and advocates as well as citizen stakeholders—understand and value sensor net-&#13;
work technologies. Through observational methods, in-depth interviews, and participatory design research in a rural Upstate New York municipality,&#13;
&#13;
we worked to design sensor networks with rural community members to generate data about and for community members to further local&#13;
knowledge. We found that designing rural sensor networks requires stakeholders to navigate obstacles of communication about sensors and&#13;
communication through sensors to facilitate secure, ethical, and localized sensing in rural communities.</text>
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                <text>Chelsea Butkowski 1,*, Ngai Keung Chan2&#13;
&#13;
, Talia Berniker3&#13;
&#13;
, Alfredo Rodriguez4&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Kenneth Schlather5&#13;
&#13;
, K. Max Zhang4&#13;
&#13;
, Lee Humphreys</text>
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                <text>https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmad005</text>
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                <text>PERI IRAWAN</text>
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                <text>Digital governance with smart sensors: exploring grid&#13;
administration in Zhejiang’s “Future Community”</text>
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                <text>China, smart sensors, digital governance, e-government in everyday practice, grid members</text>
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                <text>This study explored sensor-based e-government practices in eight pilot “Future Communities” in Zhejiang Province, China. Adopting the ap-&#13;
proach of “e-government in everyday practice,” it examines how grid members at the grassroots level make sense of smart sensors and their&#13;
&#13;
mediated governance through the parameters of passive response, collaborative human and nonhuman networks, and calculability. In an emerg-&#13;
ing sensing environment, grid members are exposed to contradictory governance regimes, experimenting with and performing competing sets&#13;
&#13;
of discourses and actions that are either efficient or inefficient, manual or automatic, and progressive or regressive. Neither facilitated nor emp-&#13;
tied by sensor-enabled Weberian functions, they actively improvise along with the dynamism of specific local interactions and situations.&#13;
&#13;
However, currently sensors and attendant technologies merely leave space for them to engage in ambiguities and negotiations concerning the&#13;
extent and boundaries of technical solutionism rather than opening up possibilities for empowerment to refine the forms of governance.</text>
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                <text>Yuchao Zhao</text>
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                <text>https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmad016</text>
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                <text>PERI IRAWAN</text>
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                <text>Digital parenting divides: the role of parental capital and&#13;
digital parenting readiness in parental digital mediation</text>
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                <text>digital divides, parental mediation, social media, personal capital, digital parenting</text>
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                <text>This study investigates digital parenting divides, or how parents’ strategies for regulating their children’s online activities differ based on their&#13;
available resources and digital parenting readiness (i.e., digital parenting self-efficacy, attitudes, and knowledge). We conducted a survey of 530&#13;
&#13;
parents that reflected the composition of the U.S. population to explore how parents’ resources and digital parenting readiness predict their digi-&#13;
tal mediation strategies. The results indicate that parents’ economic, social, and cultural resources, as well as their digital parenting readiness,&#13;
&#13;
play a significant role in how they approach digital mediation. Furthermore, digital parenting readiness has emerged as an underlying mechanism&#13;
explaining the relationship between parental resources and parental mediation strategies. The presence of digital parenting divides highlights the&#13;
need for tailored interventions to support parents in effectively using digital mediation strategies based on their family’s circumstances.</text>
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                <text>Pengfei Zhao1,*, Natalie N. Bazarova1&#13;
&#13;
, Natercia Valle2</text>
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
, Kyle Johnsen4&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Michael D. Schmidt5&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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                <text>Nalaquq (“it is found”): a knowledge co-production&#13;
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                <text>In 2007, the Yup’ik village of Quinhagak contacted archaeologists after locals found precontact artifacts on a nearby beach. This collaboration led&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
, Carl Nicolai5&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Joe Pleasant6&#13;
&#13;
, Willard Church6&#13;
&#13;
, Alice Watterson 7&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
, Richard Knecht2,9&#13;
&#13;
Charlotta Hillerdal</text>
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                <text>Negotiating the capacities and limitations of&#13;
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                <text>In-home sensor systems supported by machine learning are increasingly used to enhance communication between those living with long-term&#13;
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used to explore the development and deployment of such a system of smart care, drawing on interviews with researchers and developers,&#13;
healthcare professionals and service users, and carers. The analysis finds that labor of various forms is required to manage the production of&#13;
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processes of deriving meaning from that data in ways that participants find useful, ethical, and sustainable. The conclusion emphasizes the&#13;
usefulness of an infrastructural approach in order to recognize the heterogeneous forms of labor involved in developing ethically sensitive,&#13;
person-centered forms of remote-monitoring-enabled care.</text>
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                <text>Christine Hine 1,*, Ramin Nilforooshan2&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>Social media platforms employ algorithmic recommendations to optimize the user’s experience and incentivize particular forms of cultural pro-&#13;
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tions of this process are ambiguous and contentious. To examine the values promoted by platforms, this study focuses on YouTube reviews, a&#13;
&#13;
popular genre that crosses communities and foregrounds values. Employing content and thematic analyses of 200 videos, I find that creators&#13;
communicate value consistently: good products are aesthetic, functional, distinctive, and either pleasurable or resonant, while good reviewers&#13;
are relatable above all else. I develop the concept of value optimization to refer to communicative strategies that appeal to the perceived values&#13;
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reviewing. Finally, I discuss implications for future research on the platformization of cultural production.</text>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="93822">
                <text>Sensing technologies, digital inclusion, and disability&#13;
diversity</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
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                <text>sensory technologies, disability, cultural diversity, intersectionality, critical disability study</text>
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            <name>Description</name>
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                <text>This article focuses on uses and experiences of everyday sensory technologies by racially and ethnically diverse persons with disabilites, bringing&#13;
our research to the junction of critical technology studies, migration studies, and critical disability studies. We draw on a large-scale qualitative&#13;
project that involves new and second-generation migrants with disabilities from a socio-economically disadvantaged area in Sydney, Australia.&#13;
&#13;
Findings show the negotiated exchanges of inclusion and exclusion that disabled people from diverse racial and ethnic minority backgrounds en-&#13;
counter with sensory and other technologies. While such technologies have rightfully been criticized for their roles in the surveillance, regulation,&#13;
&#13;
exclusion, and financialization of disability and ethnically diverse groups, these negotiations show how processes of agency, awareness, and&#13;
peer support produce and in turn benefit from encounters with technology in complex ways. We argue the continued emergence of automation&#13;
warrants both critique and cautious ongoing experimentation.</text>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
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                <text>Sarah Nectoux1,*, Liam Magee1&#13;
&#13;
, Karen Soldatic1</text>
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            <name>Source</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="93826">
                <text>https://doi.org/10.1093/jcmc/zmad026</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="93827">
                <text>21 April 2023</text>
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                <text>PERI IRAWAN</text>
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                <text>PDF</text>
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            <name>Language</name>
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                <text>ENGLISH</text>
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            <name>Type</name>
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                <text>TEXT</text>
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