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    Jonathan Bright

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    Jonathan Bright is a Senior Research Fellow at the Oxford Internet Institute who specialises in computational approaches to the social and political sciences. He has two major research interests: exploring the ways in which new digital technologies are changing political participation; and investigating how new forms of data can enable local and national governments to make better decisions.

    Jonathan is the Principle Investigator for the Oxford Internet Institute’s Alternative News Networks research project. This project is examining how to understand the health of the UK online information ecosystem and includes the tracking of the spread of divisive and misleading content.

    Publications

    Conference papers
    • Vogl, T.M., Seidelin, C., Ganesh, B. and Bright, J. (2019) "Algorithmic Bureaucracy Managing Competence, Complexity, and Problem Solving in the Age of Artificial Intelligence", PROCEEDINGS OF THE 20TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON DIGITAL GOVERNMENT RESEARCH (DGO2019): GOVERNANCE IN THE AGE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE. dg.o 2019: 20th Annual International Conference on Digital Government Research, Dubai, United Arab Emirates, 18 – 20 June 2019. ACM. 148-153. (This is the accepted manuscript version of the article. The final version is available online from the Association for Computing Machinery at: https://doi.org/10.1145/3325112.3325240)
    • Bright, J., Camargo, C., Hale, S., McNeill, G. and Raman, S. (2018) "Estimating traffic disruption patterns with volunteer geographic information", 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED RESEARCH METHODS AND ANALYTICS (CARMA 2018). England. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. 10 (1) 252. (A previous version of this paper was presented at CARMA 2018: 2nd International Conference on Advanced Research Methods and Analytics.)
    • Hale, S., McNeill, G. and Bright, J. (2017) "Where’d it go? How geographic and force-directed layouts affect network task performance", EuroRV3 2017 - EuroVis Workshop on Reproducibility, Verification, and Validation in Visualization. EuroVis Workshop on Reproducibility, Verification, and Validation in Visualization (EuroRV3), Barcelona, Spain. Eurographics Association. 13-17.
    • Bright, J.M. and Voigt, C. (2016) "The Lightweight Smart City and Biases in Repurposed Big Data", Second International Conference on Human and Social Analytics. The Second International Conference on Human and Social Analytics. International Academy Research and Industry Association. (Copyright (c) IARIA, 2016.)
    Journal articles
    Reports
    • Gagliardone, I., Pohjonen, M., Beyene, Z., Zerai, A., Aynekulu, G., Bekalu, M., Bright, J., Moges, M.A., Seifu, M., Stremlau, N., Taflan, P., Gebrewolde, T.M. and Teferra, Z. (2016) "Mechachal: Online Debates and Elections in Ethiopia - From Hate Speech to Engagement in Social Media" In: Programme in Comparative Media Law and Policy. Programme in Comparative Media Law and Policy.
    • Bright, J., Margetts, H.Z., Wang, N. and Hale, S.A. (2015) Explaining Usage Patterns in Open Government Data: The Case of Data.Gov.UK.
    • Bright, J.M., Margetts, H., Hale, S. and Yasseri, T. (2014) "The use of social media for research and analysis: a feasibility study" In: Report of research carried out by the Oxford Internet Institute on behalf of the Department for Work and Pensions. Department for Work and Pensions.

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