Enes Abanoz

Enes Abanoz is an assistant professor in the School for Communication at Ondokuz Mayıs University, Turkey, where he has been a faculty member since 2018. He had worked as an assistant professor at Woosong University, South Korea, in the 2018-2019 academic year. Enes Abanoz completed his Ph.D. at Marmara University and his undergraduate studies at Istanbul Commerce University. During his Ph.D. education, he was a visiting researcher in Digital Media, Networks & Political Communication (DiMeNet) at the University of Pennsylvania and Social Media & Political Participation (SMaPP) at New York University. His research interests lie in the area of Graph Theory, Computational Communication, and Social Media, ranging from theory to implementations.

Publications

Opportunities and Challenges for Computational Social Science Methods
Enes Abanoz. © 2022. 277 pages.
We are living in a digital era in which most of our daily activities take place online. This has created a big data phenomenon that has been subject to scientific research with...
What Is Computational Communication Research?
Enes Abanoz. © 2022. 22 pages.
Computational social science is regarded as a research method that provides an unprecedented breadth and depth of data to classify and analyze how human interaction occurs and...
The Flow of Influence From Two-Step to Network Perspectives
Enes Abanoz. © 2022. 16 pages.
The two-step flow of communication by Paul Lazarsfeld and Elihu Katz is one of the curial theories in the communication science field. The theory focused on the mass media...
Code: A Tool to Repair Gender Gap in Digital Age
Enes Abanoz. © 2021. 22 pages.
Modern societies are increasingly based on digital technologies thus the gender gap is an important social problem for creating a fair, equal, and prosperous societies in the...
The Aestheticization of Counterpower: The Iconography of New Social Movements in Network Society
Enes Abanoz. © 2021. 19 pages.
The impact of new communication technologies—especially social networks such as Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook—on democracy and mass movements has been a core subject in the area...