The use of microblogging applications (especially Twitter) is becoming increasingly commonplace in a variety of settings. Today, active conference participants can post messages on microblogging platforms to exchange information quickly and in real-time. Recent research work was based on quantitative analyses in terms of the number of tweets or active Twitter users within a specific time period. In this paper, we examine the content of the contributions and aim to analyze how useful posts are for the “listening” Internet auditorium. It can be shown that only a few microblogs are of interest for non-participants of the specific event and that meaningful usage of a microblogging application requires greater care than previously anticipated.
%0 Journal Article
%1 ebner2010getting
%A Ebner, Martin
%A Mühlburger, Herbert
%A Schaffert, Sandra
%A Schiefner, Mandy
%A Reinhardt, Wolfgang
%A Wheeler, Steve
%B Key Competencies in the Knowledge Society
%C Berlin/Heidelberg
%D 2010
%E Reynolds, Nicholas
%E Turcsányi-Szabó, Márta
%I Springer
%K conference science twitter
%P 102--113
%R 10.1007/978-3-642-15378-5_10
%T Getting Granular on Twitter: Tweets from a Conference and Their Limited Usefulness for Non-participants
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-15378-5_10
%V 324
%X The use of microblogging applications (especially Twitter) is becoming increasingly commonplace in a variety of settings. Today, active conference participants can post messages on microblogging platforms to exchange information quickly and in real-time. Recent research work was based on quantitative analyses in terms of the number of tweets or active Twitter users within a specific time period. In this paper, we examine the content of the contributions and aim to analyze how useful posts are for the “listening” Internet auditorium. It can be shown that only a few microblogs are of interest for non-participants of the specific event and that meaningful usage of a microblogging application requires greater care than previously anticipated.
%@ 978-3-642-15377-8
@article{ebner2010getting,
abstract = {The use of microblogging applications (especially Twitter) is becoming increasingly commonplace in a variety of settings. Today, active conference participants can post messages on microblogging platforms to exchange information quickly and in real-time. Recent research work was based on quantitative analyses in terms of the number of tweets or active Twitter users within a specific time period. In this paper, we examine the content of the contributions and aim to analyze how useful posts are for the “listening” Internet auditorium. It can be shown that only a few microblogs are of interest for non-participants of the specific event and that meaningful usage of a microblogging application requires greater care than previously anticipated.},
added-at = {2014-11-07T15:31:58.000+0100},
address = {Berlin/Heidelberg},
author = {Ebner, Martin and Mühlburger, Herbert and Schaffert, Sandra and Schiefner, Mandy and Reinhardt, Wolfgang and Wheeler, Steve},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/206333c3b7cc966eaadcf4df1f5600d79/jaeschke},
booktitle = {Key Competencies in the Knowledge Society},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-15378-5_10},
editor = {Reynolds, Nicholas and Turcsányi-Szabó, Márta},
interhash = {3eabaa3f0ffc90adde0786f434acabe1},
intrahash = {06333c3b7cc966eaadcf4df1f5600d79},
isbn = {978-3-642-15377-8},
keywords = {conference science twitter},
language = {English},
pages = {102--113},
publisher = {Springer},
series = {IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology},
timestamp = {2014-11-07T15:31:58.000+0100},
title = {Getting Granular on Twitter: Tweets from a Conference and Their Limited Usefulness for Non-participants},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-15378-5_10},
volume = 324,
year = 2010
}