This book explores the feelings, beliefs, and concerns individuals have about sharing and receiving self-made sexually explicit content. Kathryn D. Coduto considers the specific technologies individuals use when sexting, the reasons why they share this content, and the range of future technologies for sexting.
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This research invokes two theoretical perspectives—the equalization hypothesis and the SIDE model—to examine the impact of individuals' sex on group members' use of anonymous, computer-mediated collaborative technologies. Data from 127 individuals in 22 enduring task groups indicate that the strategies employed differentially by men and women correspond with inferred motivations: men are more likely to seek ways to make computer-mediated interactions more like a face-to-face interaction with women, whereas women are more likely to employ strategies that maintain the reduced social cues of computer-mediated communication and afford them greater potential influence in mixed-sex interactions. The integration of theories previously regarded as oppositional, and the empirical support of hypotheses derived from these perspectives, suggest a richer, more complex view of technological support of group work at a time when collaborative technologies are increasingly important, given shifts toward more dispersed, global, and virtual organizational work groups.
This book considers a burgeoning social phenomenon, compensated dating in Hong Kong, that facilitates direct commercial sex exchange between consenting females from their mid-teens through the late 20s and males from their early 20s to mid-adulthood. Informed by the transformation of intimacy, the breakdown of institutional constraints, the emergence of a new female sexual autonomy and the advancement of information technology, this book moves beyond stereotypes of sex work to look at the complexities of compensated dating. The phenomenon of compensated dating is distinctive from most other sex trades in that it involves intense emotional interactions and often extends beyond the commercial boundary. Given the dynamic, flexible and ambiguous nature of compensated dating, it has become more of a space for sexual explorations and less of a rigid model of commercial sex, at least in the eye of the participants. This book walks through how men become involved in compensated dating and also sheds lights on how gender relations are negotiated, with important implications on what it means to be a man and a woman in contemporary Hong Kong society. It also speaks to the broader transformations of some of the key social structures and elements, particularly gender and sexualities, in the era of late modernity.--
Sabine Collmer untersucht die Aneignungs- und Zugangsweisen von Frauen und Männern zum technischen Gerät Computer. Dabei nimmt sie Bezug auf das Konzept der sozialen Konstruiertheit der Geschlechter und die alltagswirkliche Reproduktion der Geschlechterordnung. Innerhalb der symbolischen Ordnung der Zweigeschlechtlichkeit nimmt die Computertechnik als geschlechterdifferenzierender Faktor eine herausgehobene Stellung ein. Die Ergebnisse ihrer empirischen Untersuchung zeigen, daß das auf Asymmetrie hin angelegte Gender-System seine Wirkung auch bei der Aneignung des Computers entfaltet, denn diese findet in einem sozialen Raum statt, der Jungen und Männern Technikkompetenz zuweist, Frauen und Mädchen hingegen nicht. Gleichzeitig wirken Faktoren wie Alter, Bildungsgrad und Vorkenntnisse am Computer auf den Prozeß der Aneignung von Computerwissen ein. Die Autorin zeigt, wie sich aus dieser Vorstrukturierung der sozialen Wirklichkeit Handlungsspielräume für die weiblichen und männlichen Akteure eröffnen oder verschließen
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DBLP (https://dblp.org/) is a comprehensive collection of computer science publications from major and minor journals and conference proceedings. From this dump, we remove arXiv preprints. Our dataset consists of 1.9 million publications from 1970 to 2014 that are authored by 1.1 million authors. We have added citations among publications by combining DBLP with the AMiner dataset (https://www.aminer.org/citation) via publication titles and years. There are 6.6 million citations among publications. Author names in DBLP are disambiguated. To infer the gender of authors, we have used a method that combines the results of name-based and image-based gender detection services. Since the accuracy is very low for Chinese and Korean names, we label their gender as unknown to reduce noise in our analysis.