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October 22, 2010 – Connecting the Dots – A Network Visualization Symposium at Harvard

By
Marc Smith
– October 17, 2010Posted in: Conference, Foundation, Harvard, Maryland, Measuring social media, Metrics, Network visualization layouts, NodeXL, Research, SMRF, Social Interaction, Social Media, Social network, Social Network Analysis, Social Theories and concepts, Talks, University, Visualization

CONNECTING THE DOTS
A Network Visualization Symposium

http://networks.iq.harvard.edu/

Date: October 22, 2010
The first CONNECTING THE DOTS symposium on network visualization organized by Michael Barnett, Jukka-Pekka Onnela, and Samuel Arbesman of The Christakis Lab at Harvard was held on October 22, 2010.

Keynote speakers:

Alessandro Vespignani, Professor of Informatics and Computing, Indiana University, Bloomington
Ben Fry, co-developer of Processing and data visualization expert

The NodeXL project will be represented by Ben Shneiderman who will speak at 2:00 PM on:

Analyzing Social Media Networks with NodeXL

NodeXL is the free and open add-in for Excel 2007/2010 that supports network
overview, discovery and exploration. Supported by Microsoft External Research
for 3+ years, this effort has produced a game-changing software tool that enables
students, researchers, and professional community managers to extract and
download networks from email, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, WWW, etc. Then they
can compute network analytic metrics, filter out less relevant features, apply
multiple layout algorithms, and produce compelling yet comprehensible displays
that reveal actionable insights about complex social processes.

Complete draft program for Connecting_the_Dots…

Program

10:15 AM Keynote I: Ben Fry (Fathom)

11:00 AM SocioPatterns
Wouter van Der Broeck, (ISI Foundation)

The SocioPatterns project developed an active-RFID based sociometric platform capable of sensing mutual proximity in a distributed, scalable fashion. This platform enables a large-scale, real-time assessment of the dynamics of person-to-person interaction network with a fine temporal and spatial granularity. The initial focus of this project was on empirical data collection in support of research on dynamic social interaction networks and infection dynamics. Various experiments also explored the potential of the platform for more service oriented applications, and artscience contexts. The SocioPattens platform has been deployed in more than a dozen settings, ranging from conferences and tradeshows, over primary schools, long-term public exhibitions, artscience projects, and domestic settings.

11:25 AM Visualizing Countrywide Traffic Dynamics
Wen Dong (MIT)

It is often a challenge to reveal the human mobility patterns in multi-gigabyte vehicle tracking data spanning a whole country and many years. We address this problem through a Markov model of how people drive in the road network, and animations of road-traffic conditions on top of Google Maps. We welcome researchers to use our visualization tool set.

12:50 PM Keynote II: Alessandro Vespignani (Indiana University)

1:35 PM Network Visualization Using Processing
Sergiy Nesterko (Harvard University)

Network, or relational data are becoming of increasing interest to researchers in different disciplines, partly because related problems are very hard to solve due to complex structure of underlying datasets. It is well known that a picture is worth a thousand words, and especially for networks related problems, visualization has become an invaluable tool in gaining intuition that helps tackle them. As an example, we consider network visualization using Processing as applied to problems in respondent-driven sampling, which is a variant of link tracing process to explore social networks of hard-to-reach populations. We emphasize the role of a compelling visualization in a successful research endeavor and briefly describe how Processing can be used to make it.

2:00 PM Analyzing Social Media Networks with NodeXL
Ben Shneiderman (Univ. of Maryland, College Park)

NodeXL is the free and open add-in for Excel 2007/2010 that supports network overview, discovery and exploration. Supported by Microsoft External Research for 3+ years, this effort has produced a game-changing software tool that enables students, researchers, and professional community managers to extract and download networks from email, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, WWW, etc. Then they can compute network analytic metrics, filter out less relevant features, apply multiple layout algorithms, and produce compelling yet comprehensible displays that reveal actionable insights about complex social processes.

2:25 PM FacetAtlas: Multifaceted Visualization for Rich-context Networks
Yu-Ru Lin (Harvard University and Northeastern University)

FacetAtlas is a multifaceted visualization technique for analyzing interconnected text documents. FacetAtlas combines search technology with advanced visual analytical tools to convey both global and local patterns simultaneously. The power of FacetAtlas is demonstrated through a case study that targets patient education in the health care domain.

3:35 PM Pathline: A Tool for Exploring Biological Data in the Context of Molecular Networks

Miriah Meyer (Harvard University)

Pathline is an interactive tool that visualizes the biologically interesting relationships between multiple molecular networks, the activity levels of multiple genes, and the evolutionary relatedness of multiple species. Working in close collaboration with a group of genomics scientists we designed Pathline around a representation of a linearized network that provides appropriate topological information and supports the comparison of quantitative data. We validated the efficacy of Pathline to both confirm existing knowledge and discover new scientific insights through a series of case studies.

4:00 PM Is Network Visualization Even Useful?
John Dila (Innocentive)

Our company, InnoCentive Inc. (innocentive.com) is an Open Innovation marketplace, which connects Seeker companies (that have tractable problems they have not been able to solve) with our Global Solver Community of experts, specialists, and generalists who sign up to solve tough, meaningful problems. As part of a website redesign, we wanted to update the way we graphically display data about our global Solver network. By “eating our own dog-food” we posted a challenge on our platform asking for solutions to how we can best visualize a selected data set about our global Solver population in order to drive traffic to our site and add value to customers and the business. We received 10 solutions and they are currently under evaluation. We will present our challenge process, the results of the visualization challenge, and how we plan to use them moving forward.

Tags: 2010, Harvard, NodeXL, October, SNA, Social network, Symposium, Visualization

About Marc Smith

Chief Social Scientist
[email protected]

Connected Action Group
Marc Smith on Twitter
Marc on Delicious
NodeXL

Marc Smith is a sociologist specializing in the social organization of online communities and computer mediated interaction. He founded and managed the Community Technologies Group at Microsoft Research in Redmond, Washington and led the development of social media reporting and analysis tools for Telligent Systems. Smith leads the Connected Action consulting group and lives and works in Silicon Valley, California. Smith co-founded the Social Media Research Foundation (http://www.smrfoundation.org/), a non-profit devoted to open tools, data, and scholarship related to social media research.

Smith is the co-editor with Peter Kollock of Communities in Cyberspace (Routledge), a collection of essays exploring the ways identity; interaction and social order develop in online groups. Along with Derek Hansen and Ben Shneiderman, he is the co-author and editor of Analyzing Social Media Networks with NodeXL: Insights from a connected world, forthcoming from Morgan-Kaufmann in July 2010 which is a guide to mapping connections created through computer-mediated interactions.

Smith's research focuses on computer-mediated collective action: the ways group dynamics change when they take place in and through social cyberspaces. Many "groups" in cyberspace produce public goods and organize themselves in the form of a commons (for related papers see: http://www.connectedaction.net/marc-smith/). Smith's goal is to visualize these social cyberspaces, mapping and measuring their structure, dynamics and life cycles. At Microsoft, he developed the "Netscan" web application and data mining engine that allows researchers studying Usenet newsgroups and related repositories of threaded conversations to get reports on the rates of posting, posters, crossposting, thread length and frequency distributions of activity. Smith applied this work to the development of a generalized community analysis platform for Telligent, providing a web based system for groups of all sizes to discuss and publish their material to the web and analyze the emergent trends that result. He contributes to the open and free NodeXL project (http://www.codeplex.com/nodexl) that adds social network analysis features to the familiar Excel spreadsheet. A tutorial on social network analysis is evolving into a book and is freely available (http://casci.umd.edu/NodeXL_Teaching). NodeXL enables social network analysis of email, twitter, flickr, www, facebook and other network data sets.

The Connected Action consulting group (http://www.connectedaction.net) applies social science methods in general and social network analysis techniques in particular to enterprise and internet social media usage. SNA analysis of data from message boards, blogs, wikis, friend networks, and shared file systems can reveal insights into organizations and processes. Community managers can gain actionable insights into the volumes of community content created in their social media repositories. Mobile social software applications can visualize patterns of association that are otherwise invisible.

Smith received a B.S. in International Area Studies from Drexel University in Philadelphia in 1988, an M.Phil. in social theory from Cambridge University in 1990, and a Ph.D. in Sociology from UCLA in 2001. He is an affiliate faculty at the Department of Sociology at the University of Washington and the College of Information Studies at the University of Maryland. Smith is also a Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the Media-X Program at Stanford University.

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