Making Data Useful: User-centric Approaches to Data
- Clay Shirky | New York University
We are swimming in data. Every minute, YouTube sees two days’ worth of video uploaded, Tumblr sees about 25,000 blog posts, and there are 2,000 check-ins to Foursquare. Yet most uses of data—big or small, point or range, stream or batch—are undertaken by organizations for organizations. Though we mortals have benefited from available data in services like search and mapping, most of the innovation in combinations and uses of data takes place far from where we are.
In this keynote presentation from the 2013 Microsoft Research Faculty Summit, Clay Shirky investigates how we can make that data useful to individuals, not just organizations.
发言人详细信息
Clay Shirky teaches at the Interactive Telecommunications Program at New York University, where he researches the interrelated effects of our social and technological networks. He is the author of many books including Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations and his writings have appeared in The New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Harvard Business Review and Wired.
Described by WIRED as “one of the hypernetworked nodes who secretly run the world”, Clay Shirky researches and writes about the interrelated effects of social and technological networks. Shirky teaches at the Interactive Telecommunications Program at NYU, where his current course, “Social Weather” examines the cues we use to understand group dynamics in online spaces and the possible ways of improving user interaction by designing our social software better. He consults with a variety of companies and countries on network design and communication, with a focus on the rise of decentralized technologies such as peer-to-peer, web services and wireless networks as alternatives to the wired client/server infrastructure currently characterizes the web.
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Jeff Running
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系列: Microsoft Research Faculty Summit
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Cars, Computing and the Future of Work: Specific topics of mutual interest
- Linda Boyle,
- Ed Doran,
- John Lee
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Crowd, Cloud and the Future of Work: Updates from human AI computation
- Pietro Michelucci,
- Lucy Fortson,
- Franco Pestilli
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Cars, Computing and the Future of Work: A UW & MSR Workshop: Welcome and Overview of Projects
- Linda Boyle,
- Ed Doran,
- Eric Horvitz
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Crowd, Cloud and the Future of Work: Welcome and Updates
- Besmira Nushi,
- Ece Kamar,
- Kori Inkpen
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Empowering People to Achieve More: How Useful a Concept is Productivity?
- Brendan Murphy,
- Yvonne Rogers,
- Steve Whittaker
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Keynote - The Future of Work And the Power of Data
- Johannes Gehrke
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Productivity in Software Development
- Neel Sundaresan,
- Margaret-Anne Storey,
- Prem Kumar Devanbu
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Artificial Emotional Intelligence, Social Systems, and the Future of Collaboration
- Mary Czerwinski,
- Mark Ackerman,
- Gloria Mark
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Workers of the World, Connect! Tech Innovations and Organizational Change for the Future of Work(ers)
- Mary Gray,
- Jamie Woodcock,
- Louise Hickman
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Increasing AI Programmer Productivity
- Markus Weimer,
- Sarah Bird,
- Ce Zhang
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Human-AI Collaboration for Decision-Making
- Besmira Nushi,
- Ayanna Howard,
- Jon Kleinberg
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Future of Spreadsheeting
- Ben Zorn,
- Felienne Hermans,
- Daniel Barowy
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Program Synthesis meets Notebooks
- Sumit Gulwani
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Accessible Virtual Reality
- Eyal Ofek
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Calendar.help: A Virtual Meeting Scheduling Assistant
- Pamela Bhattacharya
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Visual Studio IntelliCode
- Mark Wilson-Thomas
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Microsoft Teams: Collaborate with Any Researcher Anywhere
- Jethro Seghers
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Project Alava: Programming Webs of Microcontrollers
- James Devine,
- Teddy Seyed
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AI in PowerPoint
- Kostas Seleskerov