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Uncharted: Big Data as a Lens on Human Culture (2013)

von Erez Aiden, Jean-Baptiste Michel

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16623164,415 (3.6)1
" "One of the most exciting developments from the world of ideas in decades, presented with panache by two frighteningly brilliant, endearingly unpretentious, and endlessly creative young scientists." - Steven Pinker, author of The Better Angels of Our Nature Our society has gone from writing snippets of information by hand to generating a vast flood of 1s and 0s that record almost every aspect of our lives: who we know, what we do, where we go, what we buy, and who we love. This year, the world will generate 5 zettabytes of data. (That's a five with twenty-one zeros after it.) Big data is revolutionizing the sciences, transforming the humanities, and renegotiating the boundary between industry and the ivory tower. What is emerging is a new way of understanding our world, our past, and possibly, our future. In Uncharted, Erez Aiden and Jean-Baptiste Michel tell the story of how they tapped into this sea of information to create a new kind of telescope: a tool that, instead of uncovering the motions of distant stars, charts trends in human history across the centuries. By teaming up with Google, they were able to analyze the text of millions of books. The result was a new field of research and a scientific tool, the Google Ngram Viewer, so groundbreaking that its public release made the front page of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Boston Globe, and so addictive that Mother Jones called it "the greatest timewaster in the history of the internet." Using this scope, Aiden and Michel-and millions of users worldwide-are beginning to see answers to a dizzying array of once intractable questions. How quickly does technology spread? Do we talk less about God today? When did people start "having sex" instead of "making love"? At what age do the most famous people become famous? How fast does grammar change? Which writers had their works most effectively censored by the Nazis? When did the spelling "donut" start replacing the venerable "doughnut"? Can we predict the future of human history? Who is better known-Bill Clinton or the rutabaga? All over the world, new scopes are popping up, using big data to quantify the human experience at the grandest scales possible. Yet dangers lurk in this ocean of 1s and 0s-threats to privacy and the specter of ubiquitous government surveillance. Aiden and Michel take readers on a voyage through these uncharted waters"--… (mehr)
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Chapter 2 p 26
  pollycallahan | Jul 1, 2023 |
very interesting story of the creation of the n-gram viewer ( )
  a2slbailey | Dec 29, 2021 |
This book promotes an interesting program which Aiden and Michel helped to develop (the Google Ngram Viewer) and a term they invented (Culturomics - the use of huge amounts of digital information to track changes in language, culture and history), yet I feel they are only touching the surface with the technology they helped to create.

The Ngram Viewer and the use of Culturomics can be useful (software engineer Jeremy Ginsberg observed by researching googling records for a region that a flu epidemic can be quickly identified and can provide an early warning system for that region), yet the examples they give from their own research provide a reaffirmation of something we already know (the words unemployment and inflation are used more during economic depressions) or of something we could care little to know other than as an interesting tidbit ('doughnut' was overtaken by 'donut' soon after the business Dunkin' Donuts began). They state that "digital historical records are making it possible to quantify our human collective as never before" and that their culturomics is a "microscope to measure human culture"...yet the book lacks the deep thinking to reach a worthwhile goal, only interesting "potato chips for intellectuals" as stated in William Grimes NYT review ‘Uncharted,’ by Erez Aiden and Jean-Baptiste Michel. For now, it is mostly increasing awareness of trivial matters. But there is always the future to look forward to...and much more data.

Quote from page 10: 'As we experience all that contemporary life has to offer, as we live out more and more of our lives on the Internet, we've begun to leave an increasingly exhaustive trail of digital bread crumbs: a personal historical record of astonishing breadth and depth.'
How much of a trail?
page 11: One bit ( binary digit) is like one yes/no question where 1 is yes 0 is no. "...the average person's data footprint... is a little less than one terabyte' or 'about 8 trillion yes-or-no questions. 'Humanity produces five zettabytes each year : 40,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (forty sextillion) bits.'

That's why it's called big data. The total data footprint is doubling each year! Data records make it possible to reliably transform and manipulate information, so it is clear that this will be a territory that will probably remain mostly uncharted for a long time, or maybe just become a massive wasteland that only a few will care to bother visiting.

This book's concluding chapter focuses on similar future developments (life logging and mind-machine interfaces) that Smarter Than You Think by Clive Thompson covers in more depth and breadth. I would recommend simply checking out their TED talk What we learned from 5 million books ...its a brief account of what is covered in Uncharted, and that is really all the information that is needed . Read Clive Thompson's Smarter Than You Think to gain a deeper insight into the uncharted territory of technology. And read David Egger's The Circle for a fun and insightful fictional look into the future of life logging. ( )
  DouglasDuff | Jul 11, 2019 |
This is computational linguistics on steroids. Although some may be put off by their "chatty" style, I found it refreshing. And their clarity of exposition on a difficult and unfamiliar topic (for most people) is exemplary. Highly recommended for everyone, to understand how Big Data is affecting our lives. ( )
  KirkLowery | Apr 20, 2016 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Engaging introduction to the use of electronic data to draw conclusions about social change. The authors' findings gleaned from analysis of word frequencies from digitized book sources form the core of the book. They are convincing in their argument that access to vast new sources of data, monitored and stored by entities such as Google and Facebook, has led to new means of evaluating cultural change, and will drive future research in this area. The book maintains a humorous tone, and explores the topic in a readable fashion. Nice job!
  stellarexplorer | May 4, 2014 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Erez AidenHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Michel, Jean-BaptisteHauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
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For Aba, who always believed I could count—Erez Aiden
To my family —Jean-Baptiste Michel
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Die Informationen stammen von der englischen "Wissenswertes"-Seite. Ändern, um den Eintrag der eigenen Sprache anzupassen.
Imagine if we had a robot that could read every book on every shelf of every library, all over the world.
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" "One of the most exciting developments from the world of ideas in decades, presented with panache by two frighteningly brilliant, endearingly unpretentious, and endlessly creative young scientists." - Steven Pinker, author of The Better Angels of Our Nature Our society has gone from writing snippets of information by hand to generating a vast flood of 1s and 0s that record almost every aspect of our lives: who we know, what we do, where we go, what we buy, and who we love. This year, the world will generate 5 zettabytes of data. (That's a five with twenty-one zeros after it.) Big data is revolutionizing the sciences, transforming the humanities, and renegotiating the boundary between industry and the ivory tower. What is emerging is a new way of understanding our world, our past, and possibly, our future. In Uncharted, Erez Aiden and Jean-Baptiste Michel tell the story of how they tapped into this sea of information to create a new kind of telescope: a tool that, instead of uncovering the motions of distant stars, charts trends in human history across the centuries. By teaming up with Google, they were able to analyze the text of millions of books. The result was a new field of research and a scientific tool, the Google Ngram Viewer, so groundbreaking that its public release made the front page of The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Boston Globe, and so addictive that Mother Jones called it "the greatest timewaster in the history of the internet." Using this scope, Aiden and Michel-and millions of users worldwide-are beginning to see answers to a dizzying array of once intractable questions. How quickly does technology spread? Do we talk less about God today? When did people start "having sex" instead of "making love"? At what age do the most famous people become famous? How fast does grammar change? Which writers had their works most effectively censored by the Nazis? When did the spelling "donut" start replacing the venerable "doughnut"? Can we predict the future of human history? Who is better known-Bill Clinton or the rutabaga? All over the world, new scopes are popping up, using big data to quantify the human experience at the grandest scales possible. Yet dangers lurk in this ocean of 1s and 0s-threats to privacy and the specter of ubiquitous government surveillance. Aiden and Michel take readers on a voyage through these uncharted waters"--

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Erez Aidens Buch Uncharted: Big Data as a Lens on Human Culture wurde im Frührezensenten-Programm LibraryThing Early Reviewers angeboten.

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