Cliff Lampe

Cliff Lampe
Born Clifford Lampe
Holland, Michigan, USA
Residence Chelsea, Michigan, USA
Nationality American
Citizenship United States
Alma mater
Known for
Awards
  • Vice President for Publications for ACM SIGCHI
  • Steering Committee Chair for CSCW
Scientific career
Fields
Institutions
Thesis Ratings Use in an Online Discussion System: The Slashdot Case (2006)
Doctoral advisor Paul Resnick
Doctoral students Xuan Zhao, Youyang Hou, Lindsay Blackwell, Elizabeth Whittaker, Harmanpreet Kaur

Clifford Lampe is an Associate Professor in the School of Information at the University of Michigan. He is best known for his research in the fields of human-computer interaction, social computing, and computer supported cooperative work. Since 2015 he has been Vice President for Publications with an ACM SIGCHI. He is currently Chair of the Steering Committee for the CSCW community. Lampe made foundational contributions in the areas of social networking sites, social capital, and online communities, work that has been cited over 20,000 times according to Google Scholar.

Education

Cliff Lampe was born in Michigan and attended Kalamazoo College for his undergraduate studies. He received a Ph.D. at the University of Michigan in 2006 in the School of Information where he was advised by Paul Resnick. His thesis examined the effects of comment ratings on site participation on the website Slashdot.[1] After graduating from the University of Michigan, Lampe became an assistant professor at Michigan State University in the College of Communication Arts and Sciences.

Research, teaching, and service

Lampe currently advises graduate and undergraduate students in the areas of online harassment, incivility online, and civic engagement online. He has developed a citizen interaction course that partners students with local communities to design technologies that support community needs. Lampe received a grant from the National Science Foundation in 2009 to pursue his work on "the role of social network sites in facilitating collaborative processes". He received a grant from the University of Michigan Third Century Initiative in 2013 to support his Citizen Interaction project.

He is a frequent consultant, speaker, and guest lecturer on topics related to social media and online behavior. He is regularly cited in the press on topics like fake news, privacy, and trolling. He was the technical program chair for the 2016 ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems.

Awards

In 2014, Lampe received the Joan Durrance Community Engagement Award for his Citizen Interaction Design program.

In 2013, Lampe (with Eytan Adar and Paul Resnick) received a Google Award for his "MTogether: A Living Lab For Social Media Research" project.

Selected works

  • 2007. "The benefits of Facebook "friends:" Social capital and college students' use of online social network sites". (with Nicole Ellison and Charles Steinfeld)
  • 2008. "Social capital, self-esteem, and use of online social network sites: A longitudinal analysis". (with Charles Steinfeld and Nicole Ellison)
  • 2004. "Slash (dot) and burn: distributed moderation in a large online conversation space". (with Paul Resnick)

References

  1. 1 2 Lampe, Cliff (2006). Emile: clifflampe.org (PhD thesis). University of Michigan.
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