• Title/Summary/Keyword: 행위자 네트워크

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Exploring the Potential of Actor-Network Theory (ANT) in Science Education Research through the Analysis of Educational Studies Applying ANT (행위자-네트워크 이론의 교육 분야 적용 연구 분석을 통한 과학교육 연구 기여 가능성 탐색)

  • Ha, Yoon-Hee;Lim, Sung-Eun;Kim, Chan-Jong
    • Journal of The Korean Association For Science Education
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    • v.42 no.3
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    • pp.341-356
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    • 2022
  • This study aims to derive the implications of actor-network theory in science education research. To this end, previous studies applying the actor-network theory were analyzed. The study results show that educational research using actor-network theory can be divided into three main approaches. First, ANT was used as an epistemological perspective to construct an educational method or perspective, Second, ANT was used as an ontological perspective to recognize non-human agency, Third, ANT was used as a methodology for educational research. Based on the results, the possibility of contributing to science education research is discussed. As a new theoretical point of view, we hope that actor-network theory will be meaningful in science education practice and empirical research.

The Network Changes and Adjustments in the Sunchang Fermented Soy Industry (순창 장류산업 네트워크의 변화와 조정)

  • Lee, Kyung Jin
    • Journal of the Economic Geographical Society of Korea
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    • v.16 no.1
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    • pp.17-36
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    • 2013
  • The purpose of this study examines interaction between region and industries through industrial networks of the regional resource-based industry. To achieve this goal, the fermented soy products industry in Sunchang is selected as a case study. This study traces the process of adjustment of firm-activity networks. And then, it scrutinizes the coevolution process between region and industry. It shows that the fermented soy products industry in Sunchang is embedded in the region and it strengthens regional development potentials for the local/regional economy.

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A Study on the Interactions between the Actors of the 3D Broadcasting Standardization Process (3DTV방송기술 표준화과정의 참여자간 상호작용 : 행위자 네트워크 이론기반 사례연구)

  • Song, Kyung Hee;Kwak, Kyu Tae;Park, Soo Kyung;Lee, Bong Gyou
    • Journal of Internet Computing and Services
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.109-127
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    • 2014
  • This study is devised out of the recognition that the existing standardization-related research has not sufficiently examined the overall social environment where a standard is actually made and diffused and the roles of the actors and the changes in them in the complex social system where multiple stakeholders exist. Against this backdrop, this study purports to reconstruct the dynamic process of developing and standardizing an innovative technology through a socio-technical approach involved by multiple stakeholders with different interests in the context of a socio-technical institutional environment. The specific goals to achieve the purpose include first, inspecting the characteristics of the interactions between the human actors and between the human and non-human actors in the socio-technical network surrounding a standardization process. Second, the study aimed to observe the activities of the focal actor who led the standardization process and its changing role. To that end, it analyzed the dynamic features of the process of standardizing a HD 3DTV broadcasting technology that took place in South Korea based on the actor network theory. As for the analysis method, the researchers personally took part in the actor network involving the new technology to analyze the dynamic characteristics of the network, applying the qualitative research method of survey and in-depth interviews and exploring the overall dynamics of environment, behavior and technology observed over the course of the entire standardization process.

The Networks of the Korean Clean Development Mechanism(CDM) Industry: Agents and Linkages (한국 청정개발체제 산업 네크워크: 행위자와 연계)

  • Lee, Jin-Hyung
    • Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
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    • v.49 no.6
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    • pp.865-883
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    • 2014
  • This study investigated the carbon offset project activities as the activities of producing commodities by a case study on the Korean Clean Development Mechanism(CDM) industry. This study draw the networks of Korean CDM industry by extracting major agents and surrounding agents and by analyzing the characteristics of the linkages. The project participants owning the CDM projects hires CDM consultancies and designated operational entities(DOEs). The technical knowledge for carbon emission reduction made links between project participants and the CDM project operational knowledge made links between project participants and CDM consultancies. Links between project participants and DOEs are affected by social and geographical proximities. The value of the knowledge for CDM industrial activities determined the role of agents and type of linkages. The agents with the irreplaceable knowledge could be a project conducting firms. The agents without it became outsourcing contractors.

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Why is Science Reporting Easy to Lead to Failure ?: ANT Analysis of Reporting on ETRI Scientist Hyun-Tak Kim (과학 보도는 왜 실패하기 쉬운가: ETRI 김현탁 박사팀 보도에 대한 ANT 분석)

  • Lee, Choong-Hwan
    • Journal of Science and Technology Studies
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.145-183
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    • 2012
  • Science reporting is easier to lead to failure than other news reporting because it needs higher professionalism. According to Actor-Network Theory(ANT), not only research results(artifacts) of scientists but also science articles are hybrid networks. Namely, they are connected by human actors(scientist, reporter, etc.) and nonhuman actors(press releases etc.). When the process of science reporting is examined on the view of ANT, it is the process that scientists' results translate the media via press releases as intermediaries and expand their network to the public. This study aims at making an ANT analysis of how research results of Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute(ETRI) scientist Hyun-Tak Kim were reported by lots of media, focusing on the rhetoric of ETRI's press release. It can reveal the reason for the science reporting's failure and hint at the better science journalism.

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Location Conflicts of Landfill, Seoul Metropolitan Region: Through the Concept of Territory as an Effect of Networks (수도권매립지 입지갈등의 전개: 네트워크 효과로서의 영역 개념을 중심으로)

  • Jung, Won-Wook;Kim, Sook-Jin
    • Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
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    • v.51 no.4
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    • pp.541-558
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    • 2016
  • Landfill has been a long pending issue in the Seoul Metropolitan Region since it was created. Adopting Painter's notion of "territory-effect," this paper analyzes the network formation and change of diverse actors and territory as an effect of networked relations according to four periods from the creation of the landfill to current extension of landfill use. The results are as followed. First, the network formation and composition of major actors has been changed together with historical-geographical conditions. Second, these networks created territory as an effect and re-articulated the configuration of conflicts and solidarity of diverse actors. Third, territory created as an network-effect are different in each period, and is continuously reterritorializing. These findings suggest that territory is never complete and always in the making.

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Food-Networks and Border-Crossing of Transnational Marriage Migrant Households (초국적 결혼이주가정의 음식: 네트워크와 경계 넘기)

  • Choi, Byung-Doo
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.1-22
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    • 2017
  • This paper is to consider conceptually a formation of food-networks and border-crossing of transnational marriage migrant households on the basis of actor-network theory, and to analyze empirical data on the issues collected by interview with marriage migrant women living around Daegu, S.Korea. Some research results can be argued as follows: First, food can be seen, not as a single material object, but as a multiple and hybrid network of human and nonhuman (material and institutional) actors, in which activities of food cooking and eating are regulated by and (re)construct social relations and placeness of households. Secondly, food-networks in marriage migrant households implement relationships of micro-power (and attachment) in the process of its (re)formation, and hence the food-network, it can be argued, is a field of power in which conflicts and compromising around food cooking and eating are intersecting each others. Thirdly, food-networks in marriage migrant households in both their origin country and in the Korean home are not only affected by macro natural and social environments but also by micro placeness of the households, both of which constitute the food-networks and operate in relations with other actors in the netwroks. Finally, food-networks in marriage migrant households reflect multiple and multi-scalar spatial mobility and placeness of transnational food culture, through which they express topologically 'fluid space' and 'absent presence', in which marriage migrant women can (or cannot) conduct social and cultural border-crossing.

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The Time-Space Dimensions and Geometrical Spaces of Electronic Media Technologies (전자 미디어 기술의 시공간 차원과 기하 공간)

  • Lee Hee-Sang
    • Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
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    • v.41 no.2 s.113
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    • pp.227-243
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    • 2006
  • This paper reviews how electronic media technologies involve and produce time-space dimensions in geometrical spaces, focusing on four theoretical perspectives: van Dijk's dual structure of networks as scale extension and reduction; Latour's actor-networks as fluid and hybrid networks; Virilio's dromospherical time as global media vectors; and Castells' timeless time as non-sequential flows. In these four theoretical perspectives, we can see that electronic media technologies involve different and multiple time-space dimensions in geometrical media spaces: from the two-dimensional spaces (surfaces) of concentric circles, through the one-dimensional spaces (lines) of actor-networks to the zero-dimensional spaces (points) of dromospherical time and finally to the multi-dimensional spaces (hypertexts) of timeless time. The paper concludes by suggesting that we need to explain electronic media spaces not only in terms of geometrical media spaces but also in terms of geographical media spaces in order to understand the ways in which electronic media spaces are dis/embedded in geographical spaces.

Comparison of TERGM and SAOM : Statistical analysis of student network data (TERGM과 SAOM 비교 : 학생 네트워크 데이터의 통계적 분석)

  • Yujin Han;Jaehee Kim
    • The Korean Journal of Applied Statistics
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.1-19
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    • 2023
  • The purpose of this study was to find out what attributes are valid for the edge between students through longitudinal network analysis, and the results of TERGM (temporal exponential random graph model) and SAOM (stochastic actor-oriented model) statistical models were compared. The TERGM model interprets the research results based on the edge formation of the entire network, and the SAOM model interprets the research results on the surrounding networks formed by specific actors. The TERGM model expressed the influence of a previous time through a time term, and the SAOM model considered temporal dependence by implementing a network that evolves by an actor's opportunity as a ratio function.

The Emergence and Decline of the City Phone Project : Finding trace of failed technology (유선전화망 시대의 마지막 인공물, 시티폰의 출현과 몰락 : 실패한 기술 프로젝트의 흔적 찾기)

  • Oh, Sun-Sil
    • Journal of Science and Technology Studies
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    • v.9 no.2
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    • pp.51-78
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    • 2009
  • Usually, Technological failures have been recognized as a mundane and inevitable process of trial and error for finally achieving success, or pathological technologies clearly different from success. These approaches easily ignore that a failed technology also constructed complex technological networks with various actors for some times. Consequently, failed technologies failed not only technological realization, but also got a proper evaluation. This paper explore the emergence and decline of the city phone project (CT-2 technology), the very typical failure cases in the telecommunications industry at Korea. This story shows that the city phone project with low-price and low-technology could constructed a stable network at agreement the result from interaction between various actors, and then, changed because various actors gave technologies different meaning and desire. Finally, it suggests that collapse of its technological network was attributed to uncertain future and contingent, rather than technological limits.

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