Marc Smith is a sociologist specializing in the social organization of online communities and computer mediated interaction. He founded and managed the
Community Technologies
Group at
Microsoft Research in
Redmond, Washington and led the development of social media reporting and analysis tools for
Telligent Systems.
Smith leads the
Connected Action consulting group and lives and works in
Silicon Valley, California. Smith co-founded the
Social Media Research Foundation (
http://www.smrfoundation.org/), a non-profit devoted to open tools, data, and scholarship related to social media research.
Smith is the co-editor with
Peter Kollock of Communities in
Cyberspace (Routledge), a collection of essays exploring the ways identity; interaction and social order develop in online groups. Along with
Derek Hansen and
Ben Shneiderman, he is the co-author and editor of Analyzing Social Media Networks with NodeXL:
Insights from a connected world, forthcoming from Morgan-Kaufmann in July
2010 which is a guide to mapping connections created through computer-mediated interactions.
Smith's research focuses on computer-mediated collective action: the ways group dynamics change when they take place in and through social cyberspaces. Many "groups" in cyberspace produce public goods and organize themselves in the form of a commons (for related papers see: http://www.connectedaction.net/marc-smith/). Smith's goal is to visualize these social cyberspaces, mapping and measuring their structure, dynamics and life cycles. At
Microsoft, he developed the "Netscan" web application and data mining engine that allows researchers studying Usenet newsgroups and related repositories of threaded conversations to get reports on the rates of posting, posters, crossposting, thread length and frequency distributions of activity. Smith applied this work to the development of a generalized community analysis platform for
Telligent, providing a web based system for groups of all sizes to discuss and publish their material to the web and analyze the emergent trends that result. He contributes to the open
and free NodeXL project (http://www.codeplex.com/nodexl) that adds social network analysis features to the familiar
Excel spreadsheet. A tutorial on social network analysis is evolving into a book and is freely available (http://casci.umd.edu/NodeXL_Teaching). NodeXL enables social network analysis of email, twitter, flickr, www, facebook and other network data sets.
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CSR and
Sustainability at http://www.Justmeans.com
- published: 07 Jun 2010
- views: 358