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DATALAB

  • Center for Digital Social Research

About DATALAB


DATALAB – Center for Digital Social Research is an interdisciplinary research center established in 2016 under the School of Communication and Culture at Aarhus University, Denmark. Led by Professor Anja Bechmann, the center conducts forefront research on algorithmic communication platforms and citizens, collectives, and populations in datafied societies. The center focuses on AI-powered platforms, associated socio-technical actors, patterns of agency and influence, and effects on communication flows. 

DATALAB hosts fundamental research projects that are theoretically based, empirically tested, and often including large-scale trace data. Our research has also contributed to informing decisions on policy and regulatory frameworks (e.g. in relation to platforms and AI). The projects at the center utilize a wide range of methods from computational social science often combining learning models with experiments, surveys, digital ethnography, and interviews.   

DATALAB researchers and projects share a vision and fundamental interest in creating novel methods and reinterpreting theories to better understand platforms and the modern techno-social fabric. Our projects provide novel knowledge on algorithmic and data-driven agency and societies with a particular sensitivity towards principles of democracy, human rights, and ethics.


Contact


Anja Bechmann

Center Director
anjabechmann@cc.au.dk
+45 5133 5138





Recent Publications


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Blond, L. & Olesen, F. (2019). Unpacking the cultural baggage of travelling robots: how socially assistive robots are integrated in practice. In C. Hasse & D. M. Søndergaard (Eds.), Designing robots, designing humans (pp. 111-131). Routledge.
Lundtofte, T. E. & Johansen, S. L. (2019). Video methods: researching sociomaterial points-of-view in children’s play practices with IoToys. In G. Mascheroni & D. Halloway (Eds.), The Internet of Toys: practices, affordances and the political economy of children’s smart play (pp. 241-263). Palgrave Macmillan. https://www.palgrave.com/gp/book/9783030108977
Ishkhanyan, B., Højen, A., Fusaroli, R., Johansson, C., Tylén, K. & Christiansen, M. H. (2019). Wait for it! Stronger influence of context on categorical perception in Danish than Norwegian. Paper presented at The 41st Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, Montreal, Canada.

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