2015
DOI: 10.1002/asi.23620
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Chatting through pictures? A classification of images tweeted in one week in theUKandUSA

Abstract: Twitter is used by a substantial minority of the populations of many countries to share short messages, sometimes including images. Nevertheless, despite some research into specific images, such as selfies, and a few news stories about specific tweeted photographs, little is known about the types of images that are routinely shared. In response, this article reports a content analysis of random samples of 800 images tweeted from the UK or USA during a week at the end of 2014. Although most images were photogra… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…On Twitter, photographs are the most commonly shared type of image, typically of one or a few people. Screenshots and hybrid or layered images are also sometimes shared (randomly selected U.K. and U.S. images from a week in 2014: Thelwall, Goriunova, Vis, Faulkner, Burns, Aulich, et al, 2016). On Instagram, the most common images are selfies (24%), friends (22%), activities (15%), gadgets (11%), food (11%), pets (3%) and fashion (3%) (20 recent photos from each of 50 regular active users connected to popular accounts Hu, Manikonda, & Kambhampati, 2014).…”
Section: Social Web Image Sharingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On Twitter, photographs are the most commonly shared type of image, typically of one or a few people. Screenshots and hybrid or layered images are also sometimes shared (randomly selected U.K. and U.S. images from a week in 2014: Thelwall, Goriunova, Vis, Faulkner, Burns, Aulich, et al, 2016). On Instagram, the most common images are selfies (24%), friends (22%), activities (15%), gadgets (11%), food (11%), pets (3%) and fashion (3%) (20 recent photos from each of 50 regular active users connected to popular accounts Hu, Manikonda, & Kambhampati, 2014).…”
Section: Social Web Image Sharingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, they challenge the feasibility of cross-platform analysis and have thus far marked its limits. Social media research has continued a broader trend in social research of privileging unimodal approaches focused on text (Bruns & Burgess, 2015) over multimodal approaches acknowledging the importance of visual content (Highfield & Leaver, 2016;Thelwall et al, 2016). However, while the visual poses particular analytical challenges, we argue that images play a pivotal role within the richly multimodal nature of many platform vernaculars.…”
Section: Cross-platform Analysis: Taking the Visual Into Accountmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Twitter is widely used for image sharing (Thelwall et al, 2016) and has supported the rise of citizen journalism, aided by the fact that most Twitter users can share information virtually instantaneously on their mobile phones from wherever they happen to be (Murthy, 2011). In 2009, for example, an ordinary user's tweet was the first to broadcast an image of US Airways flight 1549 after a successful emergency landing in the Hudson River.…”
Section: Images On Twittermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…percent of the images were of famous people or related to them in some way. However, the purpose for posting an image was rarely clear (Thelwall et al, 2016).…”
Section: Images On Twittermentioning
confidence: 99%
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