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Academic sub-disciplines From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Computational social science is an interdisciplinary academic sub-field concerned with computational approaches to the social sciences. This means that computers are used to model, simulate, and analyze social phenomena. It has been applied in areas such as computational economics, computational sociology, computational media analysis, cliodynamics, culturomics, nonprofit studies.[1] It focuses on investigating social and behavioral relationships and interactions using data science approaches (such as machine learning or rule-based analysis), network analysis, social simulation and studies using interactive systems.[2]
This section needs to be updated. The reason given is: The definition on a rapidly emerging area is 8 years old, the list of activities seems to be out-of-date. (March 2024) |
There are two terminologies that relate to each other: social science computing (SSC) and computational social science (CSS). In literature, CSS is referred to the field of social science that uses the computational approaches in studying the social phenomena. On the other hand, SSC is the field in which computational methodologies are created to assist in explanations of social phenomena.
Computational social science revolutionizes both fundamental legs of the scientific method: empirical research, especially through big data, by analyzing the digital footprint left behind through social online activities; and scientific theory, especially through computer simulation model building through social simulation.[3][4] It is a multi-disciplinary and integrated approach to social survey focusing on information processing by means of advanced information technology. The computational tasks include the analysis of social networks, social geographic systems,[5] social media content and traditional media content.
Computational social science work increasingly relies on the greater availability of large databases, currently constructed and maintained by a number of interdisciplinary projects, including:
The analysis of vast quantities of historical newspaper[14] and book content[15] have been pioneered in 2017, while other studies on similar data[16] showed how periodic structures can be automatically discovered in historical newspapers. A similar analysis was performed on social media, again revealing strongly periodic structures.[17]
As an interdisciplinary area, scholars come from many different established fields. However, there seems to be a shared ethos among them that the field ought to integrate knowledge across traditional scholarly boundaries.[18][19] However, Nelimarkka[20] proposes that five distinct archetypal approaches to computational social science:
Overall, computational social science is a diverse academic enterprise. There are some scholarly works, particularly from computer science which seem to hold the discipline together, but beyond that there are more diverse communities.[21]
Computational social science articles are published across several journals, such as New Media & Society, Social Science Computer Review, PNAS, Political Communication, EPJ Data Science, PLOS One, Sociological Methods & Research and Science.[22]
However, there are some venues focused only in computational social sciences:
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