Results 81 to 90 of about 27,833 (210)

Image Quality Factors Influencing Selfie Preference: The Role of Skin Color

open access: yesColor Research &Application, Volume 51, Issue 1, January/February 2026.
The settings for selfie acquisition and stimulus/descriptive keywords used for selfie image quality evaluation had shown that skin color is the most important image quality factor in selfie evaluation. ABSTRACT This study investigates how image quality attributes affect selfie evaluations. Selfies were captured using five smartphone camera models under
Hyesun Han, Youngshin Kwak
wiley   +1 more source

Torsos, Selfies, and Blanks: Grindr as a Research Tool and a Field Site [PDF]

open access: yes, 2019
Torsos, Selfies, and Blanks: Grindr as a Research Tool and a Field ...
J. Millhouse, Ricardo
core  

Censorship in Cyberspace: Closing the Net on "Revenge Porn" [PDF]

open access: yes, 2014
The article reviews current privacy laws in the context of “Revenge Porn”. Given the speed at which images are published online, the article highlights the futility of breach of confidence and other civil actions in preventing publication at the outset ...
Mitchell, Justine
core  

What Twitter Profile and Posted Images Reveal About Depression and Anxiety

open access: yes, 2019
Previous work has found strong links between the choice of social media images and users' emotions, demographics and personality traits. In this study, we examine which attributes of profile and posted images are associated with depression and anxiety of
Eichstaedt, Johannes C.   +3 more
core   +1 more source

Selfie-Takers Prefer Left Cheeks: Converging Evidence from the (Extended) selfiecity Database

open access: yesFrontiers in Psychology, 2017
According to previous reports, selfie takers in widely different cultural contexts prefer poses showing the left cheek more than the right cheek. This posing bias may be interpreted as evidence for a right-hemispheric specialization for the expression of
Lev Manovich, Vera Ferrari, Nicola Bruno
doaj   +1 more source

How Polarized Have We Become? A Multimodal Classification of Trump Followers and Clinton Followers

open access: yes, 2017
Polarization in American politics has been extensively documented and analyzed for decades, and the phenomenon became all the more apparent during the 2016 presidential election, where Trump and Clinton depicted two radically different pictures of ...
B Sanders   +12 more
core   +1 more source

AI-Generated Fashion Designs: Who or What Owns the Goods? [PDF]

open access: yes, 2020
As artificial intelligence (“AI”) becomes an increasingly prevalent tool in a plethora of industries in today’s society, analyzing the potential legal implications attached to AI-generated works is becoming more popular. One of the industries impacted by
Dennis, Caen A.
core   +1 more source

Radical Pluralization: Mobilizing the Multiple Self in Democratic Engagements

open access: yes
Constellations, Volume 33, Issue 1, Page 130-141, March 2026.
Hans Asenbaum, Taina Meriluoto
wiley   +1 more source

Another Kind of Classroom [PDF]

open access: yes, 2018
The home locker room at Broadway Field is silent. Nobody is taping ankles. Nobody is listening to music. Everybody is reading. Inside a badly out-of-date dressing room in Seaside, Ore., the football team sits on wooden benches and pores over a four ...
McGuire, Travis
core   +1 more source

Selfies beyond self-representation: the (theoretical) f(r)ictions of a practice

open access: yesJournal of Aesthetics & Culture
Drawing on a wide corpus of ethnographic research projects, including on photography practices, young filmmakers and writers, and current research with young unemployed people, we argue that contemporary understandings of selfies either in relation to a “
Edgar Gómez Cruz, Helen Thornham
doaj   +1 more source

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