social networks

By Amirah Mahomed, 29 August, 2018
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Abstract (in English)

This speech is a response to the website, #Idéo2017, which collects, stores and analysis tweets on a variety of topics, such as, political events, social events, cultural events. Given that people consume most of their content on social media every day, it is of value to appreciate this content and the readers' reactions to this content. 

This site works in a way in which they are able to collect the data (tweets), store it so it is search, as well as display their findings in pCharts and graphics. They have designed their search tool as a hybrid system, combining the responses of the tweets of a real-time search to a synthesis of several tweets by aggregation of the information via facets and linguistic calculations of clustering or word clouds.

This platform gives elements of answer to the question of the sharing of meaning, through the constitution of corpus: by the aggregation and the automatic indexing of flows, the developed interface allows the uses of analysis the data, either through the lexicon used (words, associations of words, words and their derivatives, etc.), or according to the authors of the tweets issued.

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Abstract (in original language)

Cet article présente la plateforme #Idéo2017 (http://ideo2017.ensea.fr/plateforme/), qui répond au besoin sociétal d’une meilleure compréhension des événements sociaux, politiques, culturels. Les réseaux sociaux font de plus en plus partie du quotidien, notamment en ce qui concerne la « consommation » de l’information (Mercier, 2014). Le service de microblogging Twitter peut être considéré comme un indicateur pour connaître les réactions de ses utilisateurs sur des sujets sociaux (Longhi et Saigh, 2016 à sur la réforme du statut des intermittents), politiques (Longhi, 2014 ; Conover et al., 2011), économiques, etc. Par conséquent, on peut utiliser ces données textuelles pour extraire les émotions, les sentiments, les opinions, des utilisateurs (Kristen et Dan, 2016). Si des travaux universitaires ou industriels existent, les résultats sont difficilement accessibles pour les citoyens intéressés par ce thème. Il existe en parallèle certaines analyses présentées actuellement aux citoyens, mais elles sont déjà agrégées par les médias, médiées par des spécialistes, ou présentent des méthodologies et traitements relativement simples. La méthodologie de la plateforme #Idéo2017 est la suivante: - récupération des tweets sera faite via l’API Twitter puis stockage dans une base de données NoSql MongoDB; - utilisation d'Elasticsearch pour stocker les données (Kononenko et al., 2014) : cela permet d’améliorer le temps de réponse de notre outil surtout lors de l’utilisation du moteur de recherche; - pour la partie d’analyse linguistique et la visualisation des réseaux lexicaux, sémantiques, thématiques, nous utilisons certaines fonctionnalités du logiciel Iramuteq implémentées en PHP et disponibles en open source. Pour la réalisation de certaines analyses dans notre outil, nous apportons des modifications à l’implémentation d’Iramuteq; - nous utilisons également PHP Word Cloud pour un nuage de mots et pChart ainsi que Kibana pour des graphiques permettant de visualiser les interactions dans les communautés, les évolutions temporelles, etc En particulier, le moteur de recherche que nous développons a pour but de proposer à l’utilisateur des recherches intelligentes à facettes sur la totalité des tweets. Afin de nous différencier du moteur de recherche présent sur l’interface de Twitter, nous avons conçu notre outil de recherche comme un système hybride, associant les réponses des tweets d'une recherche en temps réel à une synthèse de plusieurs tweets par agrégation de l'information via les facettes et les calculs linguistiques de clustering ou de nuages de mots. Cette plateforme donne des éléments de réponse à la question du partage de sens, par le biais de la constitution de corpus: par l'agrégation et l'indexation automatique de flux, l'interface développée permet aux usages d'analyse les données, soit à travers le lexique employé (mots, associations de mots, mots et leurs dérivés, etc.), soit en fonction des auteurs des tweets émis.

 

(Source: ELO 2018 Lire et comprendre la littérature électronique I panel, speech Corpus et interfaces: comment penser le partage du sens)

Pull Quotes

Cette plateforme donne des éléments de réponse à la question du partage de sens

Description (in English)

Breathe is a prototype for a networked installation that is connected to a proposed mindfulness phone application Compos(ur)e. The application is inspired by Buddhist monk and poet Thich Nhat Hanh’s practices of incorporating mindfulness into everyday experiences, in particular the practice of turning elements of the world we encounter into ‘bells of mindfulness’.

Compos(ur)e will be a mobile phone application that enables a social network of people to create technological bells of mindfulness for one another. When a user breathes into their phone they ring a bell for themselves and send a bell to someone else in the network. The users in the network are linked anonymously; the users share an intention to transform the way they hear the bells that call out from their mobile device. This interconnection is materialised in a mobile phone installation, composed of the connections made in the application. The mobile phone application sends notifications between the application users and also to the artwork.

This work was supported by The Awesome Foundation (Sydney) and the College of Fine Arts.

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SpeidiShow was LiveTweeting about an imaginary reality TV Show. It’s a creative social media game and a transmedia narrative that spanned Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and QuickenLoans. The project included a cast of barrel of writers including: Spencer Pratt, Heidi Montag, Cathy Podeszwa, Jean Sramek, Betsy Boyd, Skye McIlvaine-Jones, Davin Heckman, Jeff T. Johnson, Claire Donato, Ian Clarkson, Sarah-Anne Joulie, Chloe Smith. The logo was designed by Rick Valicenti, 3st, and the site was designed by Rob Wittig and Matt Olin. (Source: ELO Conference 2014)

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Description (in English)

"My Life in Three Parts" addresses the question of how personal identity is influenced by the language of the web. Our online interactions are often circumscribed by tracking software and various social networks. As a result, our identities--how we view ourselves and how others view us--are shaped and expressed, in part, by personal browsing practices and the vocabulary associated with those practices. So what do our autobiographies look like in this new world? To answer this question, "My Life in Three Parts" ignores the conventions of traditional autobiography in favor of oblique readings of iconic visual symbols, terminology, and concepts found online within the private and social web-spaces of shopping, art, and mathematics. This work uses text, images, audio, and videos to create a synthesized narrative of the self. Nothing about personal identity is clear in this work: the life behind the story is only implied.

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Description (in original language)

Du 17 avril 2010 au 13 septembre 2011, Nicolas Sordello et Lucile Haute tiennent un journal visuel sur Facebook. Chaque jour, à tour de rôle, ils postent une image carré et présentant la date du jour. L'image de la veille est supprimée. L'adresse directe de l'image du jour est publiée sur le profil et ouverte aux commentaires. Pendant une durée variable, l'image supprimée reste accessible sur les serveurs de Facebook. Sur le mur de Image Fantome, les mots restent tandis que les images disparaissent.

(Source: Authors' description from project site)

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Alexandra Saemmer and Lucile Haute performed "Conduit d'Aération” and other works in the final performance of the Digital Arena electronic literature reading series at the Bergen Public Library. This mixed media performance / narrative centers on the mystery of a body found in a ventilation shaft above a bank, and develops into a speculative web of interpersonal and political relations.

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By Audun Andreassen, 3 April, 2013
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Advancements in social/participatory media and electronic networking technologies help bring to focus the complex interplay between aesthetics and politics common to all modern community interaction. Historically speaking, few other media formats have transformed social frameworks as acutely as contemporary online networks have. On one level, the diverse communities and social aggregates derived from such technologies seem to follow many of modernity’s more radical ideological critiques of what the philosopher Robert P. Pippen identifies specifically as “bourgeois subjectivity,” re-imagining voice and identity as collective formations to be culled from the cultural and political margins of the state. Distinct, however, from these prior revisionary challenges to cultural and social production, digital “network relations,” with their emphases on convergence over conflict, performance over practice, critically re-situate the traditional modern dialectic between individual and collective modes of agency that has dominated ideologico-political argument for the past century.

My paper aims to analyze how advances in new social media technologies continue to offer a poignant critique of the bourgeois subjectivity, while at the same time challenging traditional communal/collective modes of interaction as its primary ideologico-political alternative. Pippen, one of America’s pre-eminent writers on German idealism, reminds us that philosophical debates concerning the autonomy of the modern subject from Hegel onward have always approached the concept of individual consciousness through negation, often emphasizing its role as a kind of rationalising counter-structure to the more natural diversity of sensual experience. Even today, he notes, the prevailing “tone of post-Hegelian European thought and culture” remains one of “profound suspicion” concerning the one “notion central to the self-understanding and legitimation of the bourgeois form of life: the free, rational independent, reflective, self-determining subject.” The rise of social media technologies over the last decade, inaugurating what cultural historians and information theorists alike have labelled “Web 2.0”, can be usefully read within the broader context of western culture’s ongoing argument with subjectivity as a state of being perpetually on the edge of its own dissolution. Yet rather than merely augment earlier intellectual preferences for collective models of socio-political agency, the contemporary community as electronic network, as my paper will demonstrate, reveals strikingly new paradigms of subjectivity specific to informatic culture and its uniquely integrated re-designation of society’s public and private spheres. To help frame these paradigms, as well as relate them conceptually to contemporary examples of revisionary electronic literature/writing, my paper will recall one of screen culture’s more enduring – not to mention, playful – narratives, symptomatic, I argue, of the West’s consistently apprehensive, i.e., “suspicious,” approach to modern subjectivity: the “broken mirror” sketch-routine, popular in many early Hollywood comedies onward from the silent era. In this narrative, two participants dressed identically farcically mimic each other’s gestures face-to-face, while one of them is under the illusion that a mirror is in place, reflecting her image. As the sketch progresses, the deluded participant gradually comes to realise that no reflective surface is, in fact, present; either it was broken previously or it never existed in the first place. Of course, audience members watching the performance are never unaware that the framework in front of the protagonist is actually an open portal, revealing a completely separate subjectivity or identity across the way. The humour in the sketch, however, derives not from the performer’s realisation that the mirror is missing – in other words, not from the deluded subject’s gradual enlightenment, but rather just the opposite: once aware that the mirror is missing, the subject does everything she can do to maintain the illusion that the reflection is continuous, that the person on the other side of the portal is and always has been an image of one’s own self. Similarly, the viewer facing today’s networked screens cannot but realise that the images peering back at her are not her reflection – in fact, bear almost no expressive or existential relationship to her, and instead signify a very different social relationship to the external world. Yet, in order to maintain some semblance of continuity in both the self and its apprehension of the world, it seems necessary to consider (however erroneously) the growing number of networks surrounding us as a kind of reflective surface, revealing in the narratives to follow a uniquely porous sense of social environment, never fully visible, though always present.

(Source: Author's abstract for ELO_AI)

Description (in English)

"OneSmallStep: a MySpace LuvStory" is an unfolding automated jam—a conscious sampling and randomized regurgitation of MySpace.com media archeology wherein desire, fantasy and fetish form a composted feast for the withered and lonely senses in an eternally habitual loop of voyeuristic consumption, spectacular regurgitation, virtual intimacy and identity production/consumption. 

Artist Statement

We are not ourselves. We cut and paste as we are cut and pasted. We are the remix of images and sounds that never existed outside of this mediated dream. And we are happy to exist this way. "OneSmallStep: a MySpace LuvStory" is an unfolding automated jam - a conscious sampling and randomized regurgitation of MySpace.com media archeology wherein desire, fantasy and fetish form a composted feast for the withered and lonely senses in an eternally habitual loop of voyeuristic consumption, spectacular regurgitation, virtual intimacy and identity production/consumption. With each launch, "OneSmallStep" runs continuously while randomly remixing content from a database that is periodically updated.

(Source: 2008 ELO Media Art show)

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By Scott Rettberg, 8 January, 2013
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My presentation will discuss the use of information and social networking software in electronic writing with the aim of identifying and analyzing several important new directions in literary criticism in the digital era. As I argue, one of the most significant pedagogical outcomes of media convergence within the literary arts centres upon criticism’s necessary de-emphasis of traditional genre-based modes of analysis and assessment. While digital works may resemble, perhaps even aesthetically mimic, the various analogue formats upon which they are based, both the qualitative and quantitative distinctions between texts, audio and image-based forms remain conceptual, not actual. Subsequently, the primary interpretative paradigms for all forms of digital cultural production tend to emerge via spatially accrued tensions and patterns between the work and its literal location within an information network. To acquire meaning, to be, in other words, rationally interpretable, digital works depend upon some kind of placement within larger constellations of interrelated, inter-functioning data systems. New methods of literary criticism, it follows, must inevitably derive from careful consideration of such networks and their capacity to influence and authorise how texts appear as works of coherence and argument. To this end, I will exhibit several possible architectural plans for the design and construction of new media resource systems able to employ advanced semantic technologies for the interpretation and/or construction of meaning within texts. My argument will consider the possibility whether such systems are not only useful in the interpretation of digital writing, but necessary. Work and research I have recently completed towards implementing a full media lab for the Digital Humanities program at Capilano College will serve as an example of the type of critical tools and methods upon which the field of literary criticism may increasingly depend. Such systems, I suggest, not only help organise digital writing for the purpose of critical study and analysis, their very structure implies a completely new concept of literary meaning in itself, one in which a text's cultural significance and function remains essentially indeterminate, save for its relationship to different interpretative semantic networks. In this way, contexts of meaning and interpretation, regardless of the field of knowledge must, in themselves, be recast and reconsidered as dynamic, network driven structures rather than static archives of related texts.

(Source: Author's abstract, 2008 ELO Conference site)

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An audio piece about online memorials.  The voice on the recording is somewhat high-pitched and sped-up, like the exaggerated whine of a self-indulgent preteen girl. As we listen to the voice reading, we realize that it is reciting a list of comments attached to a YouTube video tribute to a young girl who has been murdered. The recording is simultaneously hilarious and disturbing, filled with talk of Angels and “virtual ashes spread across the Web.” Comments like “I miss her. She’s so beautiful in the pics. Who was she?” highlight the absurd and largely shallow nature of death as filtered by the Web, at the same time as the piece somewhat uncomfortably reminds us, even as we laugh at it, that we are part of the same circus too. Caught up in our everyday use of internet-­‐based communication technologies, we may tend to be blind to political and social ramifications that our uses of technology entail. A kind of flattening takes place when discourse transpires on the Web. Activities that we might under normal circumstances consider personal or private, such as mourning, become just another form of information. Relationships likewise become abstracted from everyday reality. Just as “facebook friends” are another class of relation than “real-­‐world friends,” so too mourning becomes another, public class of activity, such that it is possible both to sincerely grieve the passing of a girl you don’t know and to parody the fact that grief loses its power when it becomes just another class of information. 

(Source: Scott Rettberg "Words to light up a dark room: Electronic Literature")  

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Sound workduration: 6min 12sec Requirements: Latest Quicktime plug-in, headphones or speakersBrowsers: Firefox, Opera, Safari and Explorer