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Dr. Mor Naaman, Asst. Professor, SCILS, Rutgers University

"Data by the People, for the People"

Tuesday, November 18, 10:45 AM

Packard Lab Room 416

Reception after talk outside PL 416

What can we learn from social media and community-contributed collections of information on the web? The most salient attribute of social media is the creation of an environment that promotes user contributions in the form of authoring, curation, discussion and re-use of content. This activity generates large volumes of data, including some types of data that were not previously available. Even more importantly, design decisions in these applications can directly influence the users' motivations to participate, and hugely affect the resultant data. I will discuss the cycle of social media, and argue that a 'holistic' approach to social media systems, which includes design of applications and user research, can advance data mining and information retrieval systems.

Using Flickr as an example, I will describe a study in which we examine what motivates users to add tags and "geotags" to their photos. The new data enables extraction of meaningful (not to say "semantic") information from the Flickr collection. We use the extracted information, for example, to produce summaries and visualizations of the Flickr collection, making the repository more accessible and easier to search, browse and understand as it scales. In the process, the user input helps alleviate previously intractable problems in multimedia content analysis.

Bio: Mor Naaman is an assistant professor at Rutgers University School of Communication, Information and Library Studies. Prior to joining Rutgers, Mor worked as a research scientist at Yahoo! Research Berkeley, where he led a team of research engineers and interns investigating the future of media: multimedia, mobile media and social media. His domains of interests include mobile and ubiquitous computing, interactive multimedia systems, and location- and context-aware computing. Mor received a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Stanford University. His research in the Stanford Infolab also focused on digital media, and in particular the management of digital photographs, thereby allowing (and requiring!) him to take photos throughout his research career. Mor is a co-chair of ACM Multimedia 2009's Grand Challenge, served as a co-chair of the JCDL 2008 Program Committee, and is a recipient of two JCDL best paper awards. In previous careers, Mor was a professional basketball player as well as a software developer and a college radio DJ. In subsequent careers, Mor hopes to be a professional backpacker and traveler.

 

     
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