Posts Tagged ‘thesis’

Cultivating Creative China: Making and Remaking Cities, Citizens, Work and Innovation - August 28th, 2012

Moleskins and Pens

Photo courtesy of paulworthington

Congratulations to Dr. Silvia Lindtner on defending her thesis this afternoon, “Cultivating Creative China: Making and Remaking Cities, Citizens, Work and Innovation”

“What is the role of creativity in contemporary visions of change and as an aspect of innovation in economies reorienting towards knowledge production such as that of China? Chinese politicians and countercultural technology “makers” seem to agree that creativity is central to China’s development, but do they have the same in mind? How is the notion of creativity simultaneously woven into the governance of everyday urban space, ideas of selfhood and citizenship, and stories of personal and corporate innovation?
This dissertation examines what goes into making narratives of creativity across a range of domains in contemporary China, including central government investments in the so-called creative industry, regional efforts in urban renewal, and grass-roots efforts to promote open source and related forms of commons production. Based on ethnographic fieldwork, it traces how creativity is invoked and cultivated across the areas of hacking, DIY (do it yourself) making and coworking, policy and political narrative. By making, this dissertation takes serious the material and semiotic co-productions that come out of the desire to promote creativity as the way of the future, including the making of spaces, ideas of selfhood and citizenship, and stories of innovation. The lens of making allows us to see that narratives and the material manifestations of cultivating creative China are made through transnational collaborations and visions of global change rather than constituting their outcome. Approaching narratives of creativity through the lens of making challenges dichotomies such as official culture and counterculture, or netizen and citizen. It suggests pay attention to the ways in which people continuously make and remake their social position. A focus on making includes a reorientation from studying making in retrospect towards studying the moments-of-making narratives and things. This is a move from studying the ways in which people people re-imagine the world towards studying how they in so doing also make new worlds. ”

Committee:

  • Paul Dourish (Chair)
  • Melissa Mazmanian
  • Tom Boellstorff
  • Mimi Ito
  • Jeffrey Wasserstrom
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Posted: 8/28/12 11:07 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Interchange: An Analysis of Auction Mechanics for Intersections - June 18th, 2012

Moleskins and Pens

Photo courtesy of paulworthington

Congratulations to Nitin Shantharam who passed his M.S. advancement to candidacy exam with the paper:

“Interchange: An Analysis of Auction Mechanics for Intersections”

Abstract: In urban environments a large amount of effort is directed toward alleviating mo- tor vehicle congestion including the design and implementation of complex software and hardware infrastructure. We propose a conceptually simple infrastructure that has promise for increasing performance and responsiveness of intersections to dynamic traffic conditions. The proposed system uses an auction-based mechanism at intersections to alleviate traffic congestion. We discuss the reasoning and goals of implementing auction mechanics into intersections and set empirical expectations as to how such intersections should perform. Second, we compare our simulation of a traditional intersection and an auction-based intersection and propose metrics to track and evaluate such intersections. We demonstrate that auction-based intersections perform well in single and multi-grid configurations. Finally, we present our mesoscopic simulator capable of simulating real-world topographies and show that auction-based intersections show promise in more realistic systems as well.

Committee:

  1. Prof. Donald Patterson (chair)
  2. Prof. Bill Tomlinson
  3. Prof. Ramesh Jain

Get the full text of his thesis in our tech reports section.

Great Job Nitin!

Tags: , , , , , , ,
Posted: 6/18/12 10:38 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Measuring Content Quality in User Generated Content Systems - August 26th, 2011

Moleskins and Pens

Photo courtesy of paulworthington

Congratulations to Dr. Sara Javanmardi on passing her Ph.D. thesis defense titled, “Measuring Content Quality in User Generated Content Systems: Towards a Machine Learning Approach”.

Abstract: User generated content systems (UGCs) such as wikis, blogs, and shared forums allow millions of users to share information. By their very nature, these systems contain information of different quality levels. The open nature of these systems makes it difficult for users to determine the quality of the information and the reputation of its providers. In this thesis I leverage machine learning techniques to model user behavior and content quality in Wikipedia. First, I parse and mine the entire English Wikipedia history pages in order to extract detailed user edit patterns and statistics. Then I use these patterns and statistics to derive several computational models of a user’s reputation. I evaluate the reputation predictions generated by these models on Wikipedia users and show that the models can be used to efficiently predict user behavior in Wikipedia. Secondly, based on these models, I generate several new user reputation features and show that they are strong predictors for locating low quality content in Wikipedia in the form of vandalism. To improve the accuracy of my approach, I extend the feature set by adding other features such as textual features, language model features, and meta data features. I describe a method for training classifiers for vandalism detection that are more accurate than other classifiers previously developed. Because of the high turnaround in user generated content systems, it is important for vandalism detection tools to be scalable and run in real–time. Therefore, based on a MapReduce paradigm, I use feature selection to find the minimal set of features that yield consistently high levels of accuracy. Because some features are more costly to compute than others, I use cost–sensitive feature selection to reduce the total computational cost of executing our models. I show that user reputation features contribute significantly to classifier performance. Finally, I use Amazon Mechanical Turk to classify vandalism into different categories and study how well I am predicting vandalism in each category. The methods I use in this thesis are general and can be applied to numerous other user generated content systems: the features we use are appropriate for use in other domains such as Facebook and Twitter, and the machine learning approaches we use are general and can be applied to other UGCs. This work can be used in several applications; one of them being search engines in which the measuring of content quality is a must for improving the quality of its ranking search results.

Congratulations Sara!

Tags: , , , , ,
Posted: 8/26/11 5:40 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Congratulations Dr. Nguyen - May 20th, 2011

Moleskins and Pens

Photo courtesy of paulworthington

Congratulations to Dr. David H. Nguyen who just defended his Ph.D. thesis:

Title: Perceptions and Attitudes Towards Tracking and Recording Technologies in Everyday Life

Abstract: Technologies and tools for electronic tracking and recording personal data have become easier to use, less expensive, and more pervasive in recent years. These tracking and recording technologies (TRTs) often work implicitly, in the background, without explicit effort nor full understanding on the part of the users (or those being tracked and recorded). Little is understood about how individuals make decisions about adoption or rejection of such implicit TRTs. A significant challenge then is to understand the processes by which the general public perceives and responds to these technologies, balanced along with their concerns for information privacy. Using multiple methods – interviews, the day reconstruction method, and paratyping, in concurrence with the deployment of a validated survey instrument for the concern of information privacy (CFIP) – this dissertation shows that participants are simultaneously highly concerned about information privacy and not always concerned about the specific technologies they use everyday that can track and record their personal data. There are three primary contributions in this dissertation. One, I catalog in situ perceptions and attitudes towards the concern for information privacy and TRTs. Two, by showing that traditional models of information privacy, such as CFIP, can be helpful but not sufficient to analyze the perceptions and attitudes towards TRTs, I identify the issues associated with applying the CFIP model to analyze TRTs. And three, I provide recommendations for the expansion of the CFIP model for use on TRTs.

Committee:

  1. Dr. Gillian Hayes (chair)
  2. Dr. Richard Beckwith
  3. Dr. Paul Dourish
  4. Dr. Don Patterson

Great Job David!

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,
Posted: 5/20/11 10:27 pm UTC by Add Your Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Urban Aesthetics: Reframing Mobility for Ubiquitous Computing - February 13th, 2009

Celebration Balloons

Photo courtesy of flickr:eye2eye 247583501

Congratulations to Johanna Brewer on successfully defending her Ph.D. thesis “Urban Aesthetics: Reframing Mobility for Ubiquitous Computing”

Congrats Dr. Johanna!

Tags: , , ,
Posted: 2/13/09 2:30 pm UTC by Add Your Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Congratulations Sharon! (Thesis Proposal) - August 26th, 2008

Celebration Balloons

Photo courtesy of flickr:eye2eye 247583501

Congratulations to Sharon Ding on passing her thesis proposal.

Tags: , ,
Posted: 8/26/08 12:09 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Congratulations Amanda! (Thesis Proposal) - July 9th, 2008

Moleskins and Pens

Photo courtesy of paulworthington

Congratulations to Informatics graduate student Amanda Williams on successfully defending her thesis proposal.

Tags: , ,
Posted: 7/9/08 9:02 am UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Peer Support for Ph.D. Students - May 9th, 2008

Novelist

Photo courtesy of iDream_in_Infrared

“To finish a dissertation, you are expected to move toward distant goals with few concrete milestones. For many, the instinct is to go it alone. Grinding it out in isolation, however, is unlikely to produce your highest-quality work most efficiently.

But, you may ask, what choice do you have? A graduate student’s support system can be thin.
Getting time with the busy professors who ostensibly provide our main guidance is not easy. Even
if they are accessible, it makes sense to use their time efficiently. They may expect to review only
polished products and engage in only crucial conversations, rather than assist with everyday
decisions.”

More from Peer Support for Ph.D. Students

Tags: , , , ,
Posted: 5/9/08 9:53 am UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

An Ethnographic Examination of the Relationship of Gender and End-User Programming - April 24th, 2008

Congratulations to Dr. Rode on successfully defending her Ph.D. thesis, “An Ethnographic Examination of the Relationship of Gender &
End-User Programming”

My favorite quote was when Dr. Rode critiqued the approach that marketers take toward making technology more woman-friendly. She summarized their approach using the quote, “Shrink it and Pink It” Ha!

Tags: , , , ,
Posted: 4/24/08 11:05 am UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...

Landscape Denatured: Digitizing the Wild - November 14th, 2007

Moleskins and Pens

Photo courtesy of paulworthington

Informatics graduate student Eric Kabisch has just had his Masters thesis, which he wrote as part of the ACE program, listed as one of the top six rated english language theses by Leonardo (The International Society for Arts, Sciences, and Technology).
For more info on the award, see here. For more info on Eric’s thesis, see here.

” < Landscape Denatured: Digitizing the Wild > by Eric Kabisch

ABSTRACT: This paper presents motivation and documentation of four technologically enabled artworks. These artworks explore ways in which digital technologies impact society and culture, focusing particularly on the impacts of information technologies on physical and cultural geography. A framework is provided for analyzing these works of art. This framework addresses the impacts of technology as a three-part cyclical process that includes (1) sensing elements of the environment, (2) analyzing and creating narratives from the captured data, and (3) the propagation of these methods and representations back into the world.

>
SignalPlay is an interactive installation that employs wireless sensors to control a spatialized sound environment, allowing participants to explore a distributed collaborative system. Unexceptional.net is a web-based application for visualizing and sonifying network, database and player information of a multi-modal online role-playing game. Sonic Panoramas utilizes image sonification, immersive projection and camera-based machine vision to allow users to create an interactive musical experience from panoramic landscape imagery. Datascape is a periscope-like system for the visualization of geographic information. This system allows users to explore a 3D topography and musical soundtrack that are generated from geospatial information such as marketing demographics. In addressing the impacts of digital technologies on culture, these artworks employ the very technologies being investigated. Through the production and exhibition of this work, I hope to engage the public with these important issues and to help shape the ways that technological methodology embeds itself in our world and in our daily experience.”

Tags: , , , , ,
Posted: 11/14/07 3:09 pm UTC by Make the First Comment
GD Star Rating
loading...