The Policy and Internet Blog
Understanding public policy online
P&I Articles
Politics & Government
Economics
Ethics
Social Data Science
IPP2018 Conference
IPP2018 Programme
IPP2018 Papers
IPP2018 Call
2016 – Archive
2014 – Archive
2012 – Archive
2010 – Archive
Search
Policy & Internet Journal >
Submit your Paper >
P&I Articles
Politics & Government
Economics
Ethics
Social Data Science
IPP2018 Conference
IPP2018 Programme
IPP2018 Papers
IPP2018 Call
2016 – Archive
2014 – Archive
2012 – Archive
2010 – Archive
Home
Methods
Page 2
Methods
Latest
Latest
Featured posts
Most popular
7 days popular
By review score
Random
P-values are widely used in the social sciences, but often misunderstood: and that’s a problem.
taha yasseri
-
7 March 2016
Facts and figures or prayers and hugs: how people with different health conditions support each other online
What explains the worldwide patterns in user-generated geographical content?
What is stopping greater representation of the MENA region?
How well represented is the MENA region in Wikipedia?
Mapping the uneven geographies of information worldwide
11 June 2013
Investigating the structure and connectivity of online global protest networks
10 June 2013
How accessible are online legislative data archives to political scientists?
3 June 2013
Crowdsourcing translation during crisis situations: are ‘real voices’ being excluded from...
7 May 2013
Did Libyan crisis mapping create usable military intelligence?
14 March 2013
Experiments are the most exciting thing on the UK public policy...
28 February 2013
Uncovering the structure of online child exploitation networks
7 February 2013
Slicing digital data: methodological challenges in computational social science
30 May 2012
1
2
Page 2 of 2
Edit with Live CSS