Top Banner
Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism Dietmar Offenhuber, PhD Northeastern University @dietoff offenhuber.net | northeastern.edu/visualization
59

Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Apr 12, 2017

Download

Data & Analytics

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Dietmar Offenhuber, PhD Northeastern University @dietoff offenhuber.net | northeastern.edu/visualization

Page 2: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Seeing as Thinking

"My contention is that the cognitive operations called thinking are not the privilege of mental processes above and beyond perception but the essential ingredients of perception itself. I am referring to such operations as active exploration, selection, grasping of essentials, simplification, abstraction, analysis and synthesis, completion, correction, comparison, problem solving, as well as combining, separating, putting in context.

There is no basic difference in this respect between what happens when a person looks at the world directly and when he sits with his eyes closed and ‘thinks’."

Rudolf Arnheim, Visual Thinking, 1969

Page 3: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

.. he describes his new theory of how the neocortex (the thinking part of the brain) works: as a self-organizing hierarchical system of

pattern recognizers

Page 4: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

“A decade-old toasted cheese sandwich said to bear an image of the Virgin Mary has sold on the eBay auction website for $28,000.”

BBC news, Nov. 23, 2004

Page 5: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Gizmodo - iPhoto Discovers Face in Delicious Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough

Page 6: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Riegler, Alexander. 2007. “Superstition in the Machine.” In Anticipatory Behavior in Adaptive Learning

Systems, edited by Martin V. Butz, Olivier Sigaud, Giovanni Pezzulo, and Gianluca Baldassarre,

4520:57–72. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer.

“Under normal conditions, humans construct information

rather than process it. […] When it fails, cognition

switches to pattern processing.

There is a close relationship between pattern discovery

and superstition, since humans and animals alike excel at

finding structures where there are none.” — Alexander Riegler

Page 7: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 8: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Gregor Aisch, 2011

Page 9: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Accountability Technologies

collecting data

coordinating volunteers

spreading the message

Guttenplag activity, visualization: User8, reproduced in:

Offenhuber, Dietmar, and Katja Schechtner, eds. 2013. Accountability Technologies - Tools for Asking Hard Questions. Vienna: Ambra V.

Page 10: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

1. Sticky vs. non-sticky data considering the context of data generation

2. Indexicality and evidencevisualization beyond symbolic conventions

3. System legibilityhow representations mediate governance of systems

Page 11: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Sticky vs. non-sticky data

considering the context of data generation

Page 12: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Masaki Fujihata, Impressing Velocity, ICC, Tokyo 1992

Page 13: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

wegzeit series (2000-2002)

interactive software Sonar 2002, Barcelona, ES ISEA 2002, Nagoya, JP Transmediale 2003, Berlin, DE vectors online journal 2005

Page 14: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

The meaning is in the context

Drucker, Johanna. 2011. “Humanities Approaches to Graphical Display.” Digital Humanities Quarterly 5 (1).

Page 15: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Sorting Out CitiesDietmar Offenhuber & Ars Electronica Futurelab Miraikan Museum Tokyo, 2014

Page 16: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Video by YouTube users: Shunichi Kitamura, barmaglot0

Page 17: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Cities occupy 3% of the earth’s land surface. If all urban areas would be combined in one large city, it would be slightly larger than the size of Europe, or about half the size of Brazil.

Data: MODIS 500-m map of global urban extent — Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment (SAGE), University of Wisconsin-Madison

Page 18: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

53% of the global population lives in cities; more than half of the global population lives in Southeast Asia.

Data: Center for International Earth Science Information Network - CIESIN - Columbia University. 2014. Gridded Population of the World, Version 4 (GPWv4)

Page 19: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Grey Water Footprint www.waterfootprint.org

Population Density www.fao.org

Wage Density (Sweden). (Charlotta Mellander, Kevin Stolarick, Zara

Matheson, José Lobo)

Page 20: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

NASA black marble dataset

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Features/NightLights/

Page 21: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

“even after factoring out country and year fixed effects the simple correlation

between the standard deviation and mean of lights is 0.88.”

Henderson, J. Vernon, Adam Storeygard, and David N. Weil. 2009. Measuring Economic Growth from Outer Space. Working Paper 15199. National Bureau of Economic Research.

Page 22: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Sticky data: user-generated data resists the transcendence of context

Page 23: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 24: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Categorizations and design

Peter Morville (2014)

Page 25: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

trashsidewalk

street

left

pick

earlypicked

pickupdays

bags

Topic 11

illegaldumping

streetparking

sign

light

sidewalk

parked

faded

side

Topic 6

abandonedbridge

bikelane

stickers

remove

sidewalk

street

paintcar

Topic 22

watersignstreet

tire

bentparking

sidewalk

park

fountain

cars

Topic 7

deadtree

trash

sidewalk

streettrees

gangpark

front

ice

Topic 20

streetparkingcar

parkedsidewalklight

parkbrokenside

blocking

Topic 12

Latent topics within the general “Other” category

Page 26: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Opacitythrough

transparency

Page 27: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 28: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Urban Entropy (2015), Dietmar Offenhuber, Ars Electronica Center

Page 29: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Indexicality and evidence

visualization beyond the symbolic convention

Page 30: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Peircean Semiology revisited

iconic

symbolic

indexical

Peirce, Charles Sanders, Nathan Houser, and Christian J. W. Kloesel. 1998. The Essential Peirce: Selected Philosophical Writings, 1893-1913. Indiana University Press.

Page 31: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

iconic

symbolic

indexical0

50

100

April May June July

0

50

100

April June

?

Page 32: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 33: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 34: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Kamel Makhloufi “function”, 2010 https://www.flickr.com/photos/melkaone/5121285002/

Page 35: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Wilks, Kiesl, Moser, 2007, Garden of Eden, Ars Electronica 2007

Page 36: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

West Elevatornear Dunkin Donutsdescends to commuter rail

North Elevatornear northern entrancedescends to Northeastern entrance

East Elevatorcentral breezewaydescends to bus station

uppe

r bre

ezew

ayin

side

ele

vato

rlo

wer

pla

tfor

m

Sonic VertiscapesSkye Morét with Sam Auinger, Bruce Odland & Katrin Emlercoding assistance from Armin AkhavanSonic Commons Workshop 2015Northeastern University + Harvard GSD

Constraints for generative code. The soundscapes below represent a 15 sec. recording of each space.

frequency = step size

intensity (dB) = diameter

At Boston’s Ruggles Station I examined the sonic identity of spaces, listening closely to soundscapes and their patterns and signatures.

While transiting normal pedestrian paths, I identified clear vertical sonic thresholds. Elevators function as temporary aural escapes—passages from one soundscape to the next. Below, I examine their sonic identity with generative code, allowing decibel and frequency levels to determine the visual scape. For us to transition, as a society, toward a multi-sensual approach to design, we must understand how our actions and use of space manifest themselves within the sonic commons.

Skye Moret

Page 37: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Lorenzo Scarpelli, Xiaxin Chen, Sound Identity 2015

Page 38: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Lorenzo Scarpelli, Xiaxin Chen. Sound Identity. 2015

Page 39: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Design principles of indexical visualization: framing, not mapping a phenomenon

Offenhuber, Dietmar, and Orkan Telhan. 2015. “Indexical Visualization – the Data-Less Information Display.” In Ubiquitous Computing, Complexity and Culture, edited by Ulrik Ekman, Jay David Bolter, and Lily Diaz. New York: Crc Press.

Page 40: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

infrastructure legibility and governance

how representations mediate governance of systems

Page 41: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Folk theories

Kempton, Willett. 1986. “Two Theories of Home Heat Control.” Cognitive Science 10 (1): 75–90.

Page 42: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Trash Track - Senseable City Lab 2009. Image: Christophe Chung

Page 43: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Trash Track - Senseable City Lab 2009. image: Dietmar Offenhuber

Page 44: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Paths of 2 Printer Cartridges

Page 45: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Items reported from this facility between Oct. 22 and Nov. 8. some objects for several days. Most items came through the AW recycling center.

Page 46: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 47: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

IMPROSTRUCTURE

Dietmar Offenhuber (NU), Katja Schechtner (ADB), Julia Nebrija (Manila)

Page 48: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Photos & video: Konstantin Jagsch

Page 49: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 50: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 51: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Black market of electricity - Paco, Manila

Page 52: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Ad-hoc repairs, lighting hybrids (K. Jagsch)

Page 53: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 54: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 55: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism
Page 56: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Infrastructure Semiotics

Bgy. 849 entrance, Paco Manila

Page 57: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

The representation of infrastructure shapes its governance.

Offenhuber, Dietmar. (in press). Waste Is Information - Infrastructure, Representation, and Accountability in the Digital Age. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

Page 58: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism

Paradigm 1 Paradigm 2 Paradigm 3

Metaphor of interaction

Interaction as man-machine coupling

Interaction as information communication

Interaction as phenomenologically situated

Central goal for interaction

Optimizing fit between man and machine

Optimizing accuracy and efficiency of information transfer

Support for situated action in the world

Typical questions of interest

How can we fix specific problems that arise in interaction?

What mismatches come up in communication between computers and people?

What existing situated activities in the world should we support?

How can we accurately model what people do?

How do users appropriate technologies, and how can we support those appropriations?

How can we improve the efficiency of computer use?

How can we support interaction without constraining it too strongly by what a computer can do or understand?

What are the politics and values at the site of interaction, and how can we support those in design?

Harrison, Steve, Deborah Tatar, and Phoebe Sengers. 2007. “The Three Paradigms of HCI.” In Alt. Chi. Session at the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems San Jose, California, USA, 1–18.

The third paradigm of HCI

Page 59: Sticky Data and Superstitious Patterns: Visualization beyond Cognitivism