Data for the paper, 'Social media data for environmental sustainability: a critical review of opportunities, threats and ethical use'

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Data for the paper, 'Social media data for environmental sustainability: a critical review of opportunities, threats and ethical use'
Authors: Ghermandi, Andrea, Langemeyer, Johannes, Van Berkel, Derek, Calcagni, Fulvia, Depietri, Yaella, Vigl, Lukas Egarter, Fox, Nathan, Havinga, Ilan, Jäger, Hieronymus, Kaiser, Nina, Karasov, Oleksandr, McPhearson, Timon, Podschun, Simone, Ruiz-Frau, Ana, Sinclair, Michael, Venohr, Markus, Wood, Spencer A.
Publisher Information: University of Haifa 2023
Document Type: Electronic Resource
Abstract: These data were collected for the paper, "Social media data for environmental sustainability: a critical review of opportunities, threats and ethical use" published in One Earth. It includes a database of studies applying social media data in environmental sustainability research, which were collected and reviewed in full by the authors. Rather than providing a comprehensive summary of all relevant literature like in a systematic review, our objective was to take stock and evaluate the previous body of work in the field in order to promote conceptual innovation from its critical examination. Building on a set of 169 studies collected in a previous systematic review of social media data applications in environmental research (Ghermandi and Sinclair 2019), the database includes additional relevant studies that were identified by snowballing previous references and adding further gray and scientific academic articles known to the authors. For studies to be included in our analysis, they had to involve the use of data from one or more social media platforms and investigate human interactions with and/or impacts on the environment. We relied on a broad definition of social media including any website or application that enables users to create and share content or to participate in social networking (e.g., blogging sites, recommendation sites, and online forums). We further strengthened the analysis by including insights from additional literature on social media that do not have a direct application to environmental sustainability (e.g., studies on biases in social media data). The final database consists of 415 studies, which were published between 2011 and 2021. Ghermandi, Andrea, and Michael Sinclair. "Passive crowdsourcing of social media in environmental research: A systematic map." Global environmental change 55 (2019): 36-47.
Index Terms: big data, environmental sustainability, passive crowdsourcing, social media, social-ecological systems, Dataset
URL: https://edepot.wur.nl/631682
https://edepot.wur.nl/631682
Availability: Open access content. Open access content
Wageningen University & Research
Note: text/html
Other Numbers: NLWUP oai:library.wur.nl:wurpubs/615125
https://research.wur.nl/en/datasets/data-for-the-paper-social-media-data-for-environmental-sustainabi
10.5281/zenodo.7517193
1394278486
Contributing Source: WUR STAFF PUBNS
From OAIster®, provided by the OCLC Cooperative.
Accession Number: edsoai.on1394278486
Database: OAIster
Description
Abstract:These data were collected for the paper, "Social media data for environmental sustainability: a critical review of opportunities, threats and ethical use" published in One Earth. It includes a database of studies applying social media data in environmental sustainability research, which were collected and reviewed in full by the authors. Rather than providing a comprehensive summary of all relevant literature like in a systematic review, our objective was to take stock and evaluate the previous body of work in the field in order to promote conceptual innovation from its critical examination. Building on a set of 169 studies collected in a previous systematic review of social media data applications in environmental research (Ghermandi and Sinclair 2019), the database includes additional relevant studies that were identified by snowballing previous references and adding further gray and scientific academic articles known to the authors. For studies to be included in our analysis, they had to involve the use of data from one or more social media platforms and investigate human interactions with and/or impacts on the environment. We relied on a broad definition of social media including any website or application that enables users to create and share content or to participate in social networking (e.g., blogging sites, recommendation sites, and online forums). We further strengthened the analysis by including insights from additional literature on social media that do not have a direct application to environmental sustainability (e.g., studies on biases in social media data). The final database consists of 415 studies, which were published between 2011 and 2021. Ghermandi, Andrea, and Michael Sinclair. "Passive crowdsourcing of social media in environmental research: A systematic map." Global environmental change 55 (2019): 36-47.