Peter Organisciak

PhD Student, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois

orga...@illinois.edu

What do I do?

My research interests lie at the intersection of online systems and users. How do users self-organize within the constraints of a system and how can systems adapt to these needs. This juncture between the humanistic look at users and the technical considerations of systems design characterizes most of my research, which includes sociological looks at online crowds, the communication of data through visualization, and online communication data mining.

Degree:
Ph.D.
Advisor:
Miles Efron
Education:
MA, Humanities Computing – Library and Information Studies, University of Alberta, 2010
Honours BA, Communications and Multimedia, McMaster University, 2008

Selected Publications, Papers and Presentations

See my Curriculum Vitae!

Honors and Awards

Ian Lancashire Graduate Award (Best student paper, SDH-SEMI 2011)

Blog

Just maybe: Kickstarter, Hunch, and the self-propogation of confidence

October 8th, 2009

In recent months, there have been two large-scale crowdsourcing project launched with the involvement of well-known internet personalities. I’m referring to Hunch—heading by Caterina Fake of Flickr fame— and Kickstarter—advised by Andy Baio of Upcoming.org and Waxy.org fame. While these projects are very different, it seems only appropriate for them to share a post.

Kickstarter is a site that lets projects collect funding pledges from users. One can add a project with a funding goal and set tiered rewards for patrons. You’re not expected to pay your pledge unless the project goal is met. Hunch is a crowdsourced decision tree site. Users creating content add decision-making questions to a decision, ones that affect the outcome of the final recommendation.

Had either of these been released elsewhere, the project would not provide any particularly extraordinary impact. Indeed, the paradox of crowdsourcing is that the idea alone will not sell the project, because the difficult barrier of critical mass. Critical mass, however, is itself dependent on having sold the idea already. In other words, new crowdsourcing project can have a great idea in principle, but potential users are aware that it will be difficult to achieve in practice. Such doubt is self-propogating, because knowing that you have doubts means admitting that others may too, further removing confidence in the objective.

A site like Fake’s former creation Flickr was able to grow a community on the back of a valuable individual experience. The community was not vital to the experience of Flickr. Kickstarter and Hunch, however, have no individual experience. If there was only one user, that user would have little to do (admitting that Hunch’s employee-created content can only go so for).

With strong talent behind both of the sites, there is no shortage of cleverness in their mechanics. However, the key to their first few months lies in the trusted celebrity behind them. Like doubt, confidence is be self-propagated. Baio and Fake have an audience already in place, and seeing that audience can swing cynics from “great idea but wouldn’t work” to thinking “just maybe.”

The Life of a Book Reviewer

May 10th, 2009

“The prolonged, indiscriminate reviewing of books is a quite exceptionally thankless, irritating and exhausting job. It not only involves praising trash but constantly inventing reactions towards books about which one has no spontaneous feelings whatever. The reviewer, jaded though he may be, is professionally interested in books, and out of the thousands that appear annually, there are probably fifty or a hundred that he would enjoy writing about.

… Seeing the results, people sometimes suggest that the solution lies in getting book reviewing out of the hands of hacks. Books on specialized subjects out to be dealt with by experts, and on the other hand a good deal of reviewing, especially of novels, might well be done by amateurs. Nearly every book is capable or arousing passionate feeling, if it is only a passionate dislike, in some or other reader, whose ideas about it would surely be worth more than that of a bored professional. But, unfortunately, as every editor knows, that kind of thing is very difficult to organize.”

George Orwell, “Confessions of a Book Reviewer.” Tribune (1946)

Orwell, one would presume, would view aggregate amateur review as a boon, not a threat.

Words in the Wild

April 20th, 2009

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All our days are so unprofitable while they pass, that ’tis wonderful where or when we ever got anything of this which we call wisdom, poetry, virtue. We never got it on any dated calendar day. Some heavenly days must have been intercalated somewhere, like those that Hermes won with dice of the Moon, that Osiris might be born. It is said all martyrdoms looked mean when they were suffered. Every ship is a romantic object, except that we sail in. Embark, and the romance quits our vessel and hangs on every other sail in the horizon. Our life looks trivial, and we shun to record it. – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Garry and I have recently taken to collecting words for the Dictionary of Words in the Wild. Since then, I’ve found a curious side-effect in myself: I have a greater appreciation of urban beauty. I find myself noticing and  appreciating the little quirks of the city in a way that I have not before, constantly regretting not havving a camera with me, regretting my inability to share the beauty. Words in the wild are by definition a human affect on nature, but when you really start looking, you appreciate this not as a tainting of nature but as a sort of growth of it.

It seems that the act of observation has changed the nature of what I set out to observe. In trying to digitize an object, we bestow upon it a status that had never been intended. This strikes me as perhaps a broader rule. In trying to digitize history, we fret about how, if at all, can we retain the essence of the object being digitize. Yet, perhaps its not the product that matters as much as the process. In seeing the shortcomings of the copy to the orginal, we are reaching toward a greater appreciation of the original than often been intended upon it’s creation.

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Historical Reblogging

April 19th, 2009

There’s a fascinating form of online narrative that’s emerged recently. For lack of a better term, I’ve taken to calling it historical reblogging.

Historical reblogging is the gradual publishing of historical texts online over a timeline that parallels the timeline of the texts. Specifically, date-specific artifacts such as letters and journals map wonderfully to the format of blogging. We’re used to seeing such collections all at once but in historical reblogging, items are revealed gradually, adding more authenticity to the stories.

I first came by this idea when involved with the Peace and War in the 20th Century project. Though I never saved then, I saw a number of archives that were blogging soldiers’ letters home. The idea began picking up steam for other archives too, such as The Orwell Diaries, which blogs George Orwell’s diary entries from [today minus 70 years]. Even microblogging got in on the action with one-sentence journals, such as those Depression-Era farmgirl Genevieve Spencer and a 99-year-old (in 1974) Great-Gram Pratt.

One of my favourite examples is the journals of Jordan Mechner, creator of the classic video game Prince of Persia. Last year, he began gradually posting his journals from 1985-1989, offering an intimitate look into the development of his most famous game. When makes it fascinating is the familiarity with the peopple, games, and companies mentioned, but my familiarity is removed in the sense that they’re artifacts of the past (I was born in 1986). Reading these journals makes it that much more accessible. Anybody who has played Prince of Persia will feel a pang of excitement at seeing the original reference video for the protagonist’s movements, and reading about the subseqent attempts to digitize it and trace it in tiny 8-bit pixels.

Today’s blogs are yesterday’s journals. The only difference is that in the past, we only gained access to material once it had been bestowed some historical signifance, always after the fact, and always at by the will of the gatekeepers. Today, with millions blogging, history is out there, right now, being made. One day, we’ll be visiting back to the teenage blogs of the next great artist and peering in at their beginnings. We just don’t see it yet.

Toward Meaningful Computing

April 18th, 2009

Toward Meaningful Computing makes the case for Humanities Computing to work closely with the Computer Sciences, to help teach computers to understand meaning in data. However, such is view is problematic for a number of reasons. Primarily, it assumes that computers can come to understand meaning in an encompassing way. The premise, then, begins to sound like this: computer scientists have hit a wall in their quest to answer all of life’s answers through binary, and digital humanists are needed to provide the secret recipe of human-encoded meaning, so that computer scientists can go on with their job.

Does that sound troublesome to you? It certainly does to me.

A Detour from Theory

April 14th, 2009

In reading Chris Anderson’s The End of Theory, I found myself constantly swinging beyond agreement and reaction. In it, Anderson writes that as the Internet becomes  an enormous corpus of human history, modelling is becoming irrelevant. The reason for my mixed feelings is that while I disagree with the conclusion (or the extent of it), I very much understand the points Anderson makes to get there.

Anderson is certainly more qualified to speak on the scientific method than I am. He was a scientist for many years, before becoming a writer for the very well-respected Nature and Science, eventually settling in as Editor-in-Chief of Wired. Yet, his argument appears to  be unnecessarily broad. The scientific method won’t die off, as there are still many uses in which it will reveal knowledge in traditional ways. However, as we reach problems that the scientific method cannot help with, the digital age’s gradual progress toward a corpus of human data may help. (A sidenote: perhaps Anderson intentionally exhaggerated his arguments to spur discussion. If this is the case, given the reactionary comments an the Wired page, it was not particularly successful.)

First reading the article, I kept thinking: Does having more data not allow you to create more relevant models? If a large corpus of data reveals something, do we need to retread the steps every time we intend to built on that knowledge? Contrary to my first reading, though, I think this is the exact point Anderson is making. If we have a large set of data (one nearly incomprehensible in scale, encompassing our present and our past), we are safer in assuming that knowledge derived from that data is sound. In other words, as our corpus of tangible human knowledge grows, it makes fallibilism (the bane of my existence) increasingly irrelevant as uncertainty decreases. If something is correct a thousand times out of a thousand, yes it could still be incorrect on that 1001st time, but it’s more reliable than if it had simply been right ten times out of ten. As we reach problems that we simply cannot test for absolute certainty, correllation will have to do. What Anderson appears to suggest is that, given the size of the data, this isn’t as bad as it sounds.

The wrong Wikipedia argument

April 5th, 2009

“Scepticism about Wikipedia’s basic viability made some sense back in 2001; there was no way to predict, even with the first rush of articles, that the rate of creation and the average quality would both remain high, but today those objections have taken on the flavor of the apocryphal farmer beholding his first giraffe and exclaiming, ‘Ain’t no such animal!’ Wikipedia’s utility for millions of users has been settled; the interesting questions are elsewhere.”
- Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody, p.117

In my work on crowdsourcing, my advisors warn me to be careful of how I speak about Wikipedia around academics, because scholars are still divided on it. Clay Shirky’s quote perfectly encapsulates the situation: if it is clear that it works and that it works well, the question shouldn’t be “does it work?” Rather, we should be asking why it works. Kevin Kelly suggests that Wikipedia is “impossible in theory, but possible in practice“: shouldn’t we be tweaking our theories then? Perhaps then, the issue is that if an expert were to praise Wikipedia as reliable, they undermine society’s need for experts. Larry Sanger, creator/co-founder or Wikipedia, says no, but it’s certainly food for thought.

A Billion eBooks

April 5th, 2009

In regards to the “billion ebooks” discussion going on at Humanist, I have that nothing to add that hasn’t already been said by Stephen Ramsay.

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The wrong Wikipedia argument

April 5th, 2009

“Scepticism about Wikipedia’s basic viability made some sense back in 2001; there was no way to predict, even with the first rush of articles, that the rate of creation and the average quality would both remain high, but today those objections have taken on the flavor of the apocryphal farmer beholding his first giraffe and exclaiming, ‘Ain’t no such animal!’ Wikipedia’s utility for millions of users has been settled; the interesting questions are elsewhere.”
- Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody, p.117

In my work on crowdsourcing, my advisors warn me to be careful of how I speak about Wikipedia around academics, because scholars are still divided on it. Clay Shirky’s quote perfectly encapsulates the situation: if it is clear that it works and that it works well, the question shouldn’t be “does it work?” Rather, we should be asking why it works. Kevin Kelly suggests that Wikipedia is “impossible in theory, but possible in practice“: shouldn’t we be tweaking our theories then? Perhaps then, the issue is that if an expert were to praise Wikipedia as reliable, they undermine society’s need for experts. Larry Sanger, creator/co-founder or Wikipedia, says no, but it’s certainly food for thought.
More »

Numbers

March 29th, 2009

Last week I wrote about the idea of trying to model the self by collecting a series of self-revelations and trying to organize them in a way where they may reveal insides that one had not previously considered.

This American Life had a whole episode earlier this year on trying to quantify things that should not be quantified. Quite appropriately, the have a series of stories of people who’ve tried experiments like I suggested and the lessons learned. Read the synopsis and listen to the episode at This American Life – Numbers. Like with every episode of the show, it’s highly recommended.


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