2024: 163 Special Issue: The computational turn in social sciences. Editors: Yannis Skarpelos, Kostas Karpouzis, Martha Michailidou

Published: 2024-07-26

Computational Social Science (CSS) has emerged as a fast-developing scientific field. Its growth has been driven by the increasing availability of computational power, coordinated digitization, annotation and interoperability efforts, and large-scale data on social activities. computing, data sciences and the social sciences created a loop, opening new fields of inquiry and forming new methodologies, making way for innovative approaches, and potentially leading to fresh discoveries. The papers in this special issue cover a wide range of phenomena using computational methods, such as social media, simulation, creative and cultural industries, as well as infrastructures for CSS. They apply CSS methods including social network analysis, virtual encounter simulations, sentiment and emotion analysis, and corpus linguistics, to case studies ranging from Covid-19 pandemic to electoral behavior, to political charisma, to cultural affinities and value orientation to border regions, to esports networks, to museums, to national and international infrastructures, thus providing a spectrum of possibilities (and limitations) for social scientists.

Introduction

Yannis Skarpelos, Kostas Karpouzis, Martha Michailidou

An algorithm measuring the charisma of Greek journalists

Valia Kaimaki , Dimitris Ampeliotis, Aggeliki Sgora , Agisilaos Konidaris , Spyros Polykalas

Configuring, optimizing and enhancing Dataverse: The case of SoDaNet Repositories

Apostolos Linardis, Dimitra Kondyli, Konstantinos Alexandris , Konstantinos Papagiannopoulos , Konstantinos – Symeon Nisiotis , Nikolaos Mastoris , Nicolas Klironomos