New Research Opportunities for the Social Sciences
What is digital behavioral data?
The concept of 'digital behavioral data' (DBD) encompasses digital observations of human and algorithmic behavior which are, amongst others, recorded by online platforms (like Google, Facebook, or the World Wide Web) or sensors (like smartphones, RFID sensors, satellites, or street view cameras). There are overlaps with concepts of “big data” – with digital behavioral data often sharing their characteristics – or “digital trace data” – which are the basis for measuring digital behavior. “Digital behavioral data”, however, focus on the societally relevant aspects of human and algorithmic behavior and the research perspectives derived from this.
Why do we study digital behavioral data?
Digitization has changed our lives in almost every realm: may it be communication, work, learning and teaching, shopping, traveling, finding a job, a partner, or any piece of information. We all interact in and with socio-technical systems, in which algorithms have a decisive role. Thus, digital behavioral data has become a prime source for monitoring and analyzing the structural development of societies and the behavior of humans therein. With DBD we can approach well-known social science research questions with new forms of data, we can get hold of data in spaces that are left blank by traditional quantitative methods, and, most notably, we can study in vivo the major changes in the private and the public sphere digitization is bringing about.
Why does GESIS engage in this area?
Data standards in the social sciences are high, and digital behavioral data pose quite some challenges to individual scientists who want to integrate them into their research designs. To enable and further promote the use of DBD in social science research and beyond, reliable infrastructures for collecting, pre-processing, analyzing, and providing digital behavioral data are needed. GESIS is the largest infrastructure institution for the social sciences in Europe, is dedicated to data and has a strong record of working with digital behavioral data since 2013 when the institute's Computational Social Science Department was founded. From 2022 on – and thanks to additional funding from the Leibniz Association ("special purpose grant") – we have been able to expand this engagement across departments to become a major pillar of GESIS.
Services
GESIS Consulting on DBD
Here you can get advice on computational social science methods and digital behavioral data. We will be pleased to help!
GESIS Guides to DBD
We have compiled informative overviews, introductions and examples of good practices to help you.
Services in development
We expand our portfolio with new services on digital behavioral data. Please contact us, if you have questions or wish to collaborate.
GESIS AppKit
Create studies and collect high-quality survey data via smartphone and the GESIS AppKit.
GESIS Web Data
Use our specific data offerings such as X/Twitter data sets for your own analysis.
GESIS Methods Hub
We are developing an online platform which aims at supporting social scientists in leveraging computer science methods for using DBD to address their research questions.
Since 2022 – strategic expansion "Special purpose grant Digital Behavioral Data"
Since 2022 – strategic expansion "Special purpose grant Digital Behavioral Data"
The federal and state governments are funding a new research infrastructure for digital behavioral data at GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences since January 1st, 2022.
GESIS recognized the potential of digital behavioral data for social science research early on and now is developing this area as part of a strategic expansion. Our proposal convinced both the Leibniz Association and the German Science and Humanities Council (Wissenschaftsrat), which evaluated the project as "very good" and attested it a "Europe-wide unique selling point". Since January 1, 2022, the federal and state governments have been funding the project with a strategic "special purpose grant“ and are thus making an important contribution to enabling research on and with digital behavioral data on a solid infrastructural basis.
The development of our new services is accompanied by methodical research on the quality of digital behavioral data. In addition, GESIS strengthens its expertise in the areas of data protection and ethics through targeted cooperation and is expanding the IT infrastructure. Like all GESIS research infrastructures, the new services are being developed in close cooperation with national and international partner institutions and with the involvement of users.
Digital Behavioral Data Coordination Group
Digital Behavioral Data Coordination Group
The Digital Behavioral Data Coordination Group advises GESIS on the conceptualisation, implementation and further development of services and research that are provided as part of the "Special Purpose grant Digital Behavioral Data". The group helps to enable innovative research for the relevant communities from the social sciences and applied computer science.
Coordination group members:
- Prof. Dr. Silke Adam, Institut für Kommunikations- und Medienwissenschaft, Universität Bern
- Prof. Dr. David Garcia, Social Data Science Lab, Department of Politics and Public Administration, University of Konstanz, Website
- Prof. Dr. Anita Gohdes, Centre for International Security, Hertie School, Website
- Prof. Dr. Robert Jäschke, Institut für Bibliotheks- und Informationswissenschaft, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
- Prof. Dr. Florian Keusch, Fachbereich Soziologie, Universität Mannheim, Website
- Prof. Dr. Michaela Maier, Zentrum für Hochschullehre und -didaktik Landau, Rheinland-Pfälzische Technische Universität Landau
- Prof. Dr. Preslav Nakov, Department of Natural Language Processing, Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence
- Prof. Dr. Matthias Schonlau, University of Waterloo, Ontario (Canada), Website
- Prof. Dr. Benno Stein, Digital Bauhaus Lab, Bauhaus-Universität Weimar
- Prof. Dr. Yannis Theocharis, Department of Governance, TUM School of Social Sciences and Technology, TU Munich, Website
- Prof. Dr. Nils Weidmann, Department of Politics and Public Administration, University of Konstanz
Contact persons
Scientific Coordinator for Digital Behavioral Data