Scaling up Content Analysis

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Abstract

Employing a number of different standalone programs is a prevalent approach among communication scholars who use computational methods to analyze media content. For instance, a researcher might use a specific program or a paid service to scrape some content from the Web, then use another program to process the resulting data, and finally conduct statistical analysis or produce some visualizations in yet another program. This makes it hard to build reproducible workflows, and even harder to build on the work of earlier studies. To improve this situation, we propose and discuss four criteria that a framework for automated content analysis should fulfill: scalability, free and open source, adaptability, and accessibility via multiple interfaces. We also describe how to put these considerations into practice, discuss their feasibility, and point toward future developments.

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Trilling, D., & Jonkman, J. G. F. (2018). Scaling up Content Analysis. Communication Methods and Measures, 12(2–3), 158–174. https://doi.org/10.1080/19312458.2018.1447655

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