How attachment influences users’ willingness to donate to content creators in social media: A socio-technical systems perspective

2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (7) ◽  
pp. 837-850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinlin Wan ◽  
Yaobin Lu ◽  
Bin Wang ◽  
Ling Zhao
2016 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 267-277 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah M. Bonzo ◽  
David McLain ◽  
Mark S. Avnet

Author(s):  
Frank A. Drews ◽  
Jonathan R. Zadra

The goal of this chapter is to outline considerations that are critical for the development of effective human-technology interfaces (HTI) in anesthesiology. It first provides an introduction to the social aspects of human technology interaction (the socio-technical systems perspective). It describes some of the specific properties of monitoring natural systems (i.e., patients) and how they differ from the task of monitoring technical systems (i.e., airplanes). The chapter examines important human factors concepts that should be considered when developing an HTI (e.g., the controls for a new medical device) and describes the currently available types of interfaces in anesthesia by focusing on tasks and devices. It presents considerations of how automation impacts the practice of anesthesiology, with a detailed description of currently available automated systems, and discusses principles of user-centered design. . The chapter concludes with an outlook of how future technologies in anesthesia will pose new challenges for HTI development.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyeong Kang ◽  
Fatuma Namisango

Nonprofit organisations use social networking platforms to interact, engage, and build productive relationships with target audiences for co-created outcomes. This chapter pursues two interrelated objectives: First, it identifies key stages in the growth of organisation-community relationships on co-creative social networking platforms. Second, it discusses the multi-levelled factors influencing these relationships at the respective stages. To achieve these objectives, we make a general review of scholarship on nonprofit use of social media, social networking platforms for co-creation, and organisation-public relationships on social media. We used the ecological systems perspective to identify the internal and external environmental influences on organisational relationships in social networking platforms. This chapter presents three abstract stages of organisation-community relationships: emergence, growth, and collapse, based on existing empirical observations and theoretical perspectives. We reveal four levels of ecological-based factors that influence different stages of organisation-community relationships on co-creative social networking platforms. We indicate the potentially strong and weaker influences on organisational relationships.


2010 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 401-422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana María Munar

Web 2.0 has expanded the possibilities of digital creative production by individuals and enabled the digitalisation of private life experiences. This study analyses how social media contributes to the making of personal biographies and discusses the shift towards a culture of digital exposure. This study uses netnography and a constructive approach to examine online communities and social networks. The findings illustrate that these new technological platforms are mediating in the construction of late modern biographies, which are expanding the complexity of today’s socio-technical systems. The paper discusses the power of these technologies as agents of socio-cultural change and suggests that, besides providing individual realisation and mediated pleasure, these technologies encourage exhibitionistic and voyeuristic behaviour, elude reflexivity, and display authoritative tendencies and new possibilities for social control.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document