网络媒体对城市事件的追踪:一个社会认知视角

T. Abdelzaher
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引用次数: 2

摘要

Twitter、Instagram、YouTube等现代网络媒体使信息传播民主化,任何人都可以提供大规模传播的内容。由此产生的实时信息的全球可访问性标志着人类历史上前所未有的变化。它开启了一个信息超载的时代,与我们的认知能力共同进化所必需的时间相比,它在很短的时间内引入了全新的内容传播动态。与此同时,所提供信息的公开性质使得自动化工具不仅可以观察到正在传播的内容,还可以观察到它是如何传播的。信息的实际传播是由接受者驱动的,面对日益增加的过载,他们必须单独优先考虑消费和传播的内容。由此产生的传播模式提供了对潜在群体做出的集体认知选择的见解。自动化算法可以收集这些见解,为手头的人口提供附加价值。内容管理(或推荐)服务就是一个例子,它帮助用户从越来越多的杂乱信息中筛选,找到最相关和最有趣的项目。我们认为,管理过载的当代信息蒸馏服务可能导致重大的负面副作用,其范围可能从无意中压制相关信息到破坏现代民主的基础。本文解释了这些副作用发生的机制,并在城市事件跟踪应用的背景下探讨了可能的研究方向,以减轻这些副作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
On Urban Event Tracking from Online Media: A Social Cognition Perspective
Modern online media, such as Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube, democratized information broadcast, allowing anyone to offer content for large-scale dissemination. The resulting global accessibility of real-time information marked an unprecedented change in human history. It ushered-in an age of information overload and introduced fundamentally new content dissemination dynamics within a very short period of time compared to that necessary for our cognitive faculties to co-evolve. In the meantime, the public nature of offered information allows automated tools to observe not only what is being transmitted but also how it propagates. Actual diffusion of information is driven by recepients, who must individually prioritize what to consume and propagate in the face of mounting overload. The resulting propagation patterns offer insights into the collective cognitive choices made by the underlying population. Automated algorithms can harvest these insights to offer added value to the population at hand. One example is content curation (or recommendation) services that help users sift through increasingly larger amounts of information clutter to find the most relevant and interesting items. We argue that contemporary information distillation services that manage overload can lead to significant negative side-effects that may range from unintentional suppression of pertinent information to the undermining of the very foundations of modern democracy. This paper explains the mechanism by which these side effects occur and explores possible research directions surrounding the mitigation of such side effects, set in the context of urban event tracking applications.
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