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Respecting the Data

Originally posted at the MIT Center for Civic Media blog.

I was lucky enough to attend Eyeo Festival this year thanks to the Ford Foundation. There were many thought provoking and inspiring talks as well as conversations over Minneapolitan cuisine. One of the recurring themes I picked up on was how to respect data when doing data visualization, illustration, or art. This came up in different ways and under different names among speakers whom I saw talk. Furthermore there was tension and contradiction across the talks about the type of and level of respect due to data.

Data Isn’t Neutral

The festival’s first day of talks started with a first-rate presentation entitled “Multiple Dimensions” by Laura Kurgan and Jen Lowe from Spatial Information Design Lab at Columbia. They argued a not unfamiliar concept to us at the Center for Civic Media: data is neither neutral nor static. In fact, data comprises multiple, relevant dimensions. They used the metaphor of Processing‘s particles, which are defined by position, velocity, and acceleration, as well as having interactions with other particles. You need to ask: What are the kinds of particles of data you are working with? What are the particle systems you are working with? And what kind of particle are you?

Kurgan and Lowe described the cycle of SIDL’s work as: Data -> Design -> Policy -> Built Environment -> People -> Data. You can start anywhere along this cycle and follow it around, but you should remember that these areas affect each other. They offered some examples of new projects that illustrated their points. Port to Port, sponsored by Thomson Reuters, is an attempt to map global shipping routes for oil. The end goal for Thomson Reuters is predictive analytics for ship trajectories relevant to futures markets. The problem is defined by shipping’s unregulated nature: 30% of ships’ logs are estimated to be wrong and many ships turn off their GPS beacons when they get into international waters. Unlike strictly regulated air traffic, it’s not possible to construct the same flight patterns from existing data.

Furthermore, the SIDL team is interested in telling stories at different scales, i.e. not just the global picture of shipping paths between ports but also the story of an individual ship, where it goes and perhaps why. This means combining Big Data with Ethnography. They point to recent work by Heather Ford and Kate Crawford as inspiration.

Data Doesn’t Explain Itself

Ben Fry, co-creator of Processing (a Media Lab alum!) and founder of the Boston-based data visualization consultancy Fathom, talked about his shop’s process for working through a data visualization project and presented their latest work Connected China, a tool for exploring the connections between China’s powerful elite (also for Thomson Reuters).

Fry argued that working with data requires that design, development, writing, and narrative all be done in house. He suggests that Fathom’s projects like Connected China are unlike most data visualization projects, which are based on easy to get and easy to visualize (e.g. clean) data. The team started by familiarizing themselves with the domain, reading Richard MacGregor’s book The Party: The Secret World of China’s Communist Rulers. They worked with Reuters journalists and domain experts to map out the connections between the rulers in terms of multiple dimensions that are in many cases opaque to Western or outside audiences.

The raw data for the social network view was incomprehensible at the start. They created many intermediate visualizations and iterated over thresholds for the degrees of connection necessary to achieve the appropriate clarity and weightings for the patterns in the network. They had the basic data structure done in the first six weeks but it took many months to complete the final project, writing the entire HTML5 and JavaScript app from scratch.

Drawing Before Data

The Festival’s second day of talks brought Giorgia Lupi to the stage to present her gorgeous work with Accurat. Her talk “Data I Paint With” discussed the stories, composition, and inspiration that goes into her attempts to make “beautiful compositions with data.” She made sure to point out that one of Accurat’s partners was a sociologist, who was in charge of wrangling the data and connected statistics.

Her own process is summed up as “before I think, I draw.” For her, drawing is the practice of externalization, finding representations to understand and to abstract. This translates to the spreads they create for Corriere della Sera‘s weekly cultural magazine: visualizations of data designed to offer interactivity on the page in terms of multiple layers of appreciation and exploration. She offers the example of visualizing Nobel Prize winners in terms of musical notation (see below). In this case, her background in music study compelled her to visualize data using this metaphor and style. And rather than having it extend from the data first, she looked for data that would match her vision for renderizing a visualization this way, and found the Nobel winners! She implored us “don’t tell Tufte.”

In another case, her shop visualized the lives of ten abstract painters. Data collection involved going out to Wikipedia and picking out pieces of data about ten painters they liked rather than using a kind of “scientific process.” Another “don’t tell Tufte” moment. Lupi’s work is beautiful, but data is clearly used as inspiration for her compositions/stories. Respecting the data is a secondary goal, and I was left curious about how her sociologist partner feels about their work, and describes it to others.

Dubious Dataviz

The last day of the Festival included a panel entitled “Lightness & Weight, Data & Social Justice.” The first speaker on the panel was Jake Porway, founder of DataKind. He cautioned the audience to think carefully about civic data and data visualization when attempting to use it for social justice. He offered two cases. The first was World Bank data about poverty in sub-Saharan Africa (see below). He asked us “What’s wrong?” We finally realized the resolution was too low. All of South Africa is not one grade of poverty.

worldbankpoverty-500

 

Porway went on to discuss NYC’s Stop and Frisk Report data. WNYC’s visualization of the data suggests that the Stop and Frisk program is not effective at coming up with guns since they aren’t collocated with the highest rates of stops. Then Porway showed visualizations corrected for per capita, and rendered as a heat map, which told the opposite story: the program was working. Then he asked us, “Where does this data come from?” The answer is self-reporting police officers. There was no way these are all perfect, hand-written reports, and maybe, just maybe, some police wouldn’t want to report unsuccessful stops with the same enthusiasm as successful ones. The kicker was showing us the “race” column, in which police report whether the target was “White,” “Black,” or “Hispanic!” (I’ll talk more about this panel and the theme of social justice through data in a separate post.)

Data Objectivity Versus Subjectivity

After the panel, Stefanie Posavec gave a talk entitled “Subtle Data,” which attempted to carve out a categorical space for subjective interpretations of data. Upfront, Posavec addressed a pet peeve of hers: the “Data Fundamentalist” who always offers the same critique at talks like hers by taking issue with the fact that a decision was made for aesthetic rather than objective, data-driven reasons. She felt this was unfair and argued there is a gradient between the black and white of objective and subjective, and it was in this “hazy, in-between space” that she liked to work, an area she called “data illustration.”

For Posavec, data illustration is separate from data visualization or information design. She wants a more emotional experience through the data, and thinks designers like her need more space to move in how they want to. The question then becomes how to balance the objective with the subjective. She observes the objective by “respecting the data,” which to her means 1) being truthful and accurate with it, 2) always trying to show subtle insight or the ‘gist’: she explicitly doesn’t expect academic research and rigor to be gained from the work she does, but she does want the audience to get something from it, and 3) providing an explanation: she uses legends so that people can look further into the data behind an image if they want to.

To observe the subjective, Posavec adds “poetry & emotion,” by 1) using meaningful data: data that has a beautiful intrinsic connection to the message she’s trying to convey, 2) using data as a secondary design material: i.e. data is the foundation for the subjective message being built, and 3) inspiring a meaningful connection with the data. She references Santiago Ortiz‘s idea of data as an “easter egg” in data art.

Goals and Limitations of Working with Data

I agree with Posavec that data can be infused with poetry and emotion, and I think her principles can work in concert with the respect of data. What was missing for me in these later talks though was the kind of critical reflection of data, and what it means to be using data. If you take Kurgan and Lowe’s point that data is neither neutral nor static and Porway’s breakdown of all the ways data can be inherently untruthful or misleading, from its very recording to any of the many ways it can be visualized, you are left with a nearly impossible task of “respecting the data.” This needs to be acknowledged and appreciated.

Perhaps the unspoken and more appropriate form of value in the work of Lupi and Posavec is that the subjective and artistic is an opportunity to offer a bit of subjective truth in place of the sometimes decontextualized “objectivity” of data. Another Eyeo theme was the blurry lines between visualization, illustration, and art, energized by classic debates about the difference between art and design. Another point worth mentioning is that the background of the audience or creator matters too (positionality in Kurgan and Lowe’s terms). I might be best described as a computational social scientist, and so my definition of respecting the data is necessarily stricter. However, I can also appreciate the artistry and importance of creative interpretation that has filled galleries with impressionistic and abstract versions the world that some would argue are closer to truth in our “age of mechanical reproduction.”

This is brings us into the realm of politics. Whenever you use data, you engage with the language of fact and objectivity. As many have observed, fact and objectivity are not necessarily the input or output of working with data. Data is always incomplete. That’s why the best research, at least in the social sciences, combines qualitative and quantitative approaches to answering a question, looking to ethnography and domain expertise, attempting to achieve a more complete picture of the story. Many things aren’t even quantifiable, and often quantification distorts truth rather than laying it bare. In the end, perhaps it’s more apt to discuss respecting the limits of data as well as yourself.

So why bother? Well, my personal interest in respecting the data is born out of thinking about how data visualization can be used as a tool for public awareness, social justice, and social change. In such cases, the data needs to be carefully employed to make a point and make it near unassailable. What I’ve been learning of late is that perhaps less control is more when it comes to trying to make unassailable points. Art helps. But it still requires deep knowledge and strategy. These are all things I’ll be exploring in the next post.

An Open Letter to Patriotic Microphilanthropists

Originally posted at the MIT Center for Civic Media blog.

We applaud Bill Moyers and Arnold Hiatt’s “Open Letter to Patriotic Philanthropists” in the Winter 2013 Issue of Democracy. It’s an eloquent and timely call to action for “well heeled and well connected” donors to support work that is critical to the future of our nation and our world.

Political reform funding does suffer from an imbalance in resources between lobbyists and activists, caused in part by nearsightedness favoring quantifiable deliverables and risk aversion to innovative projects. However, we feel that we are only looking at one part of the reform movement. Many of the values we care about are as much cultural issues as they are explicitly political or legal issues. We should also be funding efforts to deliver cultural change, and doing so in a way that pushes cultural change itself.

An organization we are both affiliated with, The Awesome Foundation, likes to think of its model in terms of “slow funding,” like the slow food movement standing in opposition to “fast food,” by raising public awareness about, improving access to, and encouraging the enjoyment of funds that are local and sustainably grown.

With this in mind we offer an open letter of our own, a call to action for “Patriotic Microphilanthropists.”

Reading Moyers and Hiatt’s letter we couldn’t help but wonder what a Citizens’ United world means for us less well heeled folks. Is there any way for small dollar donations to have power in American politics when the entire population of San Jose would need to give $100 just to match Sheldon Adelson’s donations in 2012?

Yes, but only if small donors break out their thinking caps along with their credit cards. The changed political landscape requires that we combine the power of people and dollars in new ways. We need to find ways to create impact that is beyond the grasp of big dollars—whether they’re from Arnie Hiatt or Sheldon Adelson. There are an infinite numbers of ways to do this in politics and we are inspired by the incredible community of progressive organizers thinking about and working on solutions.

We think one of the potential best solutions comes from The Awesome Foundation, our own whimsical collection of small-time givers that has little to do with politics. Erhardt is one of the founding trustees of the original Boston chapter, and Sam is a trustee of the NYC chapter. Every month, we go to a bar in our respective cities and meet up with 10 fellow trustees. Each trustee puts in $100 of their own money to create a $1,000 communal pot. Then we read through submitted project ideas and try to reach consensus on which idea is the most “awesome” that month. Shortly thereafter, our chosen project organizer receives the one-time $1,000 grant with no strings attached at a little party in their honor.

The Awesome Foundation may be whimsical but it has an outsized impact. Founded in the summer of 2009, there are now 60+ chapters around the world that have given a total of $375,000+ in grants to 375+ projects. The impact is multiplied by access to local knowledge and projects, a community of supporters that grows every month, and a freedom to fund risky or whacky projects that would scare off traditional funders—all thanks to the power of “It’s Our Money!”

We call on Patriotic Microphilanthropists across America to start “People PACs” in their town. You won’t need any lawyers or money managers or snake oil selling political consultants.

You’ll just need to follow five easy steps:

  1. Gather together with 10 fellow patriots
  2. Ask everyone to put in $100
  3. Give all the money you collect to the politician, organization, or fellow citizen who is doing the most inspiring or creative work in your area to make sure the people get a fair shake
  4. Publicly announce and celebrate the project or individual endorsed by your city’s People PAC—parties encouraged
  5. Repeat every month

Over the past three years, The Awesome Foundation has funded an incredible array of projects from a giant hammock in Boston to youth street theatre in Edmonton to a Temple of Doom recreation in Washington, DC. In New York City, we spun out a new “Awesome Sandy” chapter just to support more of the awesome projects submissions we received related to hurricane relief. If we all work together, People PACs can start jumpstarting people power across the country by buying banners for the next Occupy, campaign signs for the next grassroots politician, and supporting a whole range of inspired people and projects who are otherwise marginalized by the focus on big money political machinery.

We hope that “well connected and well heeled” readers answer Bill and Arnie’s call to “fund the groups that fight for political reform.” But we also hope that the less well heeled readers do not read it as a call to sit back and wait for rich folks to start signing checks.

No! As The Awesome Foundation has proven in the philanthropic world, sustainably pooling small donations can be incredibly powerful. For too long, small donors have been relegated to bit roles in our nation’s political drama. Micah Sifry calls them the “suckers” of American politics “used and abused by campaign operatives who take their money, whisper promises of ‘you own this campaign’ in their thank-you email, and screwed by politicians who realize that these have no way to enforce their desires.” As Patriotic Microphilanthropists, we can never realize our full potential until we seize control of our own future instead of allowing ourselves to be donate-button-clicking zombies for the two major political parties.

It’s time to get money in. The irony would be far too sweet if it was cold hard cash that finally united citizens to fight back in a post-Citizen’s United America.

If you’d like to start a People PAC in your city send an email to peoplepacs@gmail.com.

Sam Novey is an entrepreneur, organizer, and general troublemaker living in New York City. He is a Dean emeritus of the New York City Awesome Foundation

Erhardt Graeff is an entrepreneur and researcher at the MIT Media Lab and MIT Center for Civic Media. He is one of the founding trustees of The Awesome Foundation, and continues to serve as a trustee of the Boston chapter.

 

MIT Media Lab Statement of Objectives

This was my application essay to the MIT Media Lab. 

Statement of Objectives

I am applying to work with Ethan Zuckerman, Cesar Hidalgo, or Mitch Resnick at the Media Lab. My goal is to create methods and tools that make visible the connections between others and ourselves to spur action, self-reflection, and better policymaking. I am particularly passionate about the intersections of education, technology, and politics, and hope to continue into the PhD program to investigate methods and tools that bring out the civic and entrepreneurial potential of youth.

While my top choice is to join the Center for Civic Media, I can imagine projects in any of the three labs that would align with my goals, allowing me to contribute to important research and grow intellectually. In Civic Media, I could gather data from interviews and social media about how youth in a small town share information, and use co-design to map out how local news could be rapidly disseminated. In Macro Connections, I could correlate geographic data for small businesses with international business news, and create a dynamic visualization showing how the economic prospects of young entrepreneurs in developing countries might suffer due to biases of markets operating in different time zones. And in Lifelong Kindergarten, I could create a collaborative problem solving game for young children that uses auditory or haptic sensors to enforce a condition for winning that requires all players to contribute their ideas and practice civil discourse.

My goals and passion for using research and technology to improve society started developing in college. I cut a unique path at RIT, from research as “co-op” experience to studying abroad in Russia and earning a second bachelor’s degree. In particular, my second-year courses in human-computer interaction and exposure to social computing through my advisor Liz Lawley had me seeking out opportunities to build something new, and to do so with a critical lens on how technology can affect individuals and communities.

A definitive moment in my education was February 18, 2004, when I presented my final project to RIT’s interdisciplinary Honors Colloquium course. My project was a performance art piece entitled I, Archive, in which I played a “living” archive accessible to “users” in the audience with backup storage on video. I gave select audience members “user manuals.” Each time a user asked a question, the context and emphasis were slightly altered producing new results from me, the archive. Subsequent sessions of question and answer were taped and re-played simultaneously to create multiple and layered archives competing for attention. In my artist’s statement, I argued that filing away objects inside of a traditional archive usually results in a preservation of the original item, but filing anything into a living archive is like handing over a newspaper article to an editor, or innumerable editors in the case of the internet.

Inspired by my performance, one of the colloquium’s professors, Amit Ray, asked me to join him on a research project looking into the changing state of authorship and authority in the “Age of Wikipedia,” which we later published. This early research opportunity whetted my appetite for creative research into social computing phenomena, and also exposed me to the educational and civic potential of the internet, and the politics and imperfections of its architecture.

I left RIT with degrees in information technology and international studies and minors in writing studies and imaging science, as well as having served as editor in chief of the student news magazine. I pursued a master’s in sociology at Cambridge, in part, because I wanted to better understand how societies transform through the chaos I perceived in my course readings in Eurasian politics, developmental economics, and art, and from what I saw happening in the journalism industry. I increasingly viewed my world as dynamic, interconnected networks of individuals, institutions, and ideas, and became absorbed in studying social capital theory. Social capital formed the heart of my master’s thesis on how broadband internet affected small town social networks, and helped me clarify and unite my passions for education, technology, and politics.

After Cambridge, I joined the Obama Campaign, eager to see technology and politics in the field and to participate in spurring civic action and building social capital at a local level. I moved to Boston in 2009 in search of similar possibilities. That May, I co-founded BetterGrads, an online mentoring organization for college-bound high schoolers, with my close friend, Kevin Adler. The following month, I helped found two other projects: The Awesome Foundation, a playful model for microphilanthropy, and the Web Ecology Project, an experimental community of social media researchers. Through the Web Ecology Project, I have been working on Twitter and big data, which culminated this year in a journal article on Twitter use during the Arab Spring that I presented at the Center for Civic Media’s “Mapping Media Ecosystems” panel.

I also started doing formal research at Harvard in 2009. Under Carolina Rossini and Yochai Benkler at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society, I studied the politics and economics of open educational resources. I then joined Project Zero, working under Carrie James and Howard Gardner on two studies: The GoodPlay Project, a study of the ethical dimensions of young people’s experiences online, and the Good Participation project, a study of how civically engaged youth become engaged and use technology. Using interviews I conducted for these studies, I am currently preparing papers on cyberbullying and civic learning for the 2012 Digital Media and Learning conference.

This is where I am today. I have enjoyed the rare opportunity to perform research I care about and to build BetterGrads and The Awesome Foundation at the same time. Over the past two years, I have continually found new connections and possibilities for innovation across these spaces. Combining rigorous study with entrepreneurial application is at the core of my professional ambition and is what I hope for at the Media Lab.

The Center for Civic Media’s research represents a direct extension of the work I have been doing with the Web Ecology Project, The Awesome Foundation, and Project Zero. Through Project Zero’s Good Participation project, I have already enjoyed the opportunity to work with Ethan Zuckerman, who is supported by the same MacArthur Foundation research network. At Civic Media, I hope to maintain my ties to the research network and continue to work on the topics discussed at our meetings, such as “media ecologies.” During a Knight Foundation-funded design workshop last summer, entitled The Moby Dick Project, I thought creatively and concretely about how media ecologies could be limited or expanded through interfaces. Now I’m eager to get to work on ways of interacting with news that might prompt self-reflection, like Civic Media’s nutritional labels project.

Macro Connections’ research would offer me an opportunity to further develop the data analysis skills I have gained with the Web Ecology Project and in the Machine Learning course offered online this fall by Stanford. The Preference Networks project is a good example of how I could employ these techniques and return to my interest in social capital. I would love to work on visualizations of networks of social capital that could influence policymakers.

Lifelong Kindergarten’s research goes to the heart of my interests in education. Lately, I have been following the lab’s work on the ethics of participation in Scratch in connection to my cyberbullying research, which looks at the differences in moral reasoning between upstanders and bystanders. I am interested in studying moral development in an environment like Scratch, and exploring the possibilities for using role-playing and interactive props to scaffold civic skills.

I look forward to a chance to interview with Ethan Zuckerman, Cesar Hidalgo, and Mitch Resnick to further discuss how my skills, interests, and passion fit into their labs.

Anyone find it odd that Fox News personalities compare themselves to Network’s Howard Beale?

Originally published at Unrhetorical.

I know I’m jumping on this rant pretty late in the game but I just watched the 1976 film Network for the first time last night.

If you haven’t seen the film, Howard Beale, the anchor of the nightly news program of a fictional fourth news network UBS, goes literally mad and takes the rest of his impoverished network with him. Hoping for greater and greater ratings / market share, the news program turns into bona fide edutainment with Howard Beale–a raving truth-spouting lunatic–at the center of the circus. Through most of the film, despite his psychosis, Beale is a character whom you can empathize with and even root for as he preaches against bullshit and encourages everyone to chant with him: “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore.”

I expected to do a search online today and find a least a few clever writers comparing Network‘s antics to the last five to ten years of Fox News’ programming. I even speculated that if I failed to find such comparisons made by any of the other major cable or network news outlets, that they would be afraid to draw the edutainment criticism to themselves. What I didn’t expect to see was Wikipedia’s “Culture References” for Network to list examples of both Bill O’Reilly and Glenn Beck voluntarily comparing themselves to Howard Beale.

Certainly, the stage antics and truth-spouting style of Fox News’ personalities are reminiscent of Howard Beale’s exhortations. But Beale was truly mad. He heard voices telling him what to say. Beale’s popularity wanes after a transformative encounter with the chairman of the large corporation that owns UBS. The chairman, furious that Beale decided to turn his attention and audience against a planned corporate buyout by an Arab firm, offers Beale his own apocalyptic sales pitch preaching money and corporate power as the only thing that matters in the world anymore, and then instructs Beale to spread the gloomy message.

In the end, Beale is a puppet. He has become so disillusioned and volatile that he is now a slave to ideological argument. I’m not sure exactly what to make of the reflexive satire of O’Reilly and Beck actually choosing Beale to be their standard-bearer.