• ADVERTISEMENT

    Top 12 Social Technologies from MIT Media Lab and Beyond

    by J. Nathan Matias
    May 21, 2012

    During my work on Social Mirror, tablet tech for social checkups, I have been inspired by other amazing Media Lab social technologies. Here are 12 of the projects which I have found most inspiring, including one or two from other universities.

    Did I miss a project you love? Post your favorites in the comments.

    Social Empowerment through Networks

    Can social checkups empower marginalized teenagers? In 2001, Leo Burd, now a researcher at the MIT Center for Civic Media, conducted several paper-based studies at Computer Clubhouse, with positive results. Leo is now an adviser on the Social Mirror software.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Leo Bonnani’s SourceMap uses networks to optimize industries and encourage ethical sourcing. Using beautiful touchscreen displays, industry representatives pool information about their supply chains to plan economic development and highlight supply chain ethics (blog post here).

    i-854b2fcb4740bb78241909bcfb55af1d-sourcemap.jpg

    Big Data Network Research

    We’re bad at identifying the relationships that matter most to us. Nadav Aharony’s Ph.D. on Social fMRI with Alex (Sandy) Pentland quantifies the difference between our perceptions and the reality of what our relationships really are. The people we think we trust are often different from the people we actually spend time with or call on the phone. In a future with better data privacy, automated behavior-mining technology such as Funf will outperform Social Mirror, which relies on the perceptions rather than behavior.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    i-3c5f4cf9507d4ddc1771d8c2e0e65533-onecommunity.jpg

    What is the economic value of a water-cooler? Ben Waber’s Media Lab spinout company Sociometric Solutions tracks face-to-face interactions and extracts social signals from speech and body movements. Using “sociometric badges,” Ben’s company can quantify the value of social interactions towards factors like social performance. (See Alex Pentland’s HBR article “The New Science of Building Great Teams.”)

    What do our emails reveal about our relationships? In 1995, Judith Donath created the Visual Who, one of the first network analyses of social interactions online. At the lab, Judith’s Sociable Media Group created dozens of groundbreaking technologies in the social media space. Judith has moved on to Harvard’s Berkman Center, where she continues fascinating research on online communities and virtual identities.

    When to invest in plastics. Cesar Hidalgo applies network science to high-impact economic questions. Built together with Alexander Simoes, the Atlas of Economic Complexity breaks an economy into its component parts to tell governments what new industries provide the highest yield within the current capabilities of their infrastructure.

    The Power of Online Networks

    Were the revolutions tweeted? In this amazing paper and data visualization, researchers from SocialFlow, the Web Ecology Project, and Microsoft Research examine the role of Twitter in the Arab Spring. One of the project’s authors, Erhardt Graeff, joins the Center for Civic Media this fall.

    Can trust online turn into trust in person? Network scientist Lada Adamic (UMich) has carried out a fascinating study of trust among CouchSurfers. Want to learn social network analysis? This September, she’s teaching a massive online course on Social Network Analysis.

    i-a4ff7bcdb960ada0e5d8d9a6f6dff89e-couchsurfing.jpg

    How can networks boost the power of sharing? Andres Monroy-Hernandez intentionally designed for remix when creating the online learning community for MIT’s Scratch. The network of sharing within the Scratch community is amazing.

    Recommending Relationships

    Can algorithms suggest good mentor relationships? Catherine Havasi and her company Luminoso use the power of networks and natural language processing to automatically pair hundreds of entrepreneurs with experienced mentors.

    A new paradigm for social computing. Sep Kamvar, a luminary of Social Search and Social Datamining, is creating a new programming language, Dog, for social applications. Watch his amazing talk on Community Computing.

    A version of this post also appeared on the MIT Center for Civic Media’s blog.

    Tagged: atlas of economic complexity civic media couchsurfers dog luminoso media lab mit scratch social fmri social mirror sociometric solutions sourcemap visual who

    Comments are closed.

  • ADVERTISEMENT
  • ADVERTISEMENT
  • Who We Are

    MediaShift is the premier destination for insight and analysis at the intersection of media and technology. The MediaShift network includes MediaShift, EducationShift, MetricShift and Idea Lab, as well as workshops and weekend hackathons, email newsletters, a weekly podcast and a series of DigitalEd online trainings.

    About MediaShift »
    Contact us »
    Sponsor MediaShift »
    MediaShift Newsletters »

    Follow us on Social Media

    @MediaShiftorg
    @Mediatwit
    @MediaShiftPod
    Facebook.com/MediaShift