D. Neyland’s scientific contributions

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Something and nothing: On algorithmic deletion, accountability and value
  • Article

December 2018

·

16 Reads

·

7 Citations

Science & Technology Studies

D. Neyland

This paper draws on a three year ethnographic study of the development of an algorithmic surveillance system. It explores ways of understanding the doing and undoing, something and nothing of algorithmic video analytics. The paper pursues a means for engaging with something and nothing by initially drawing on treatments of calculation and qualculation to explore doing. It then seeks to broaden out qualculation by drawing in distinct provocations - blank figures and motility - to engage with forms of undoing. The paper uses the ethnographic study of the algorithmic surveillance system as a means to reflect on the analytic utility of this approach. The conclusion considers three points on something and nothing that this project generated and that could be developed further in future research. © 2018 Finnish Society for Science and Technology Studies. All rights reserved.

Citations (1)


... this, many researchers have started asking questions about algorithmic decision-making (Zarsky, 2015), accountability (Diakopoulos, 2016), or ethics (Kraemer et al., 2010;Neyland, 2018). Implicitly, or sometimes very explicitly, many of these observe that algorithms are intertwined with different normativities and that these normativities come to shape our world. ...

Reference:

How should we theorize algorithms? Five ideal types in analyzing algorithmic normativities
Something and nothing: On algorithmic deletion, accountability and value
  • Citing Article
  • December 2018

Science & Technology Studies