Skip to main navigation menu Skip to main content Skip to site footer

Research Articles

Vol. 1 No. 1 (2019): Conceptualising Digital Social Research

In Search of Meaning: Why We Still Don't Know What Digital Data Represent

DOI
https://doi.org/10.33621/jdsr.v1i1.8
Submitted
August 30, 2019
Published
2019-08-30

Abstract

In the early years, researchers greeted the internet and digital data with almost wide-eyed wonder and excitement. The opportunities provided by digital media such as websites, bulletin boards, and blogs—and later by social media platforms and mobile apps—seemed nearly endless, and researchers were suddenly awash in data. The bounty was so great that it required new methods for processing, organizing, and analysis. Yet in all the excitement, it seems that the digital research community largely lost sight of something fundamental: a sense of what all these data actually represent. In this essay, I argue that moving forward, researchers need to take a critical look into, be more open about, and develop better approaches for drawing inferences and larger meaning from digital data. I suggest that we need to more closely interrogate what these data represent in at least two senses: statistical and contextual. In the former instance I call for much greater modesty in digital social research. In the latter, I call for heuristic models that permit bolder, more robust comparisons throughout our work.