11.30.2006

Deja vu economy

Regarding Michael H Goldhaber’s recent review of Richard A Lanham's (UCLA) "The Economics of Attention: Style and Substance in the Age of Information," Rick Thomas writes:

"Goldhaber is annoyingly focused on the provenance of the attention economy idea, which he assigns to himself as of 1985 - annoying, because as far as I can tell he has never acknowledged this 1971 quote:

"What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients. Hence a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention, and a need to allocate that attention efficiently among the overabundance of information sources that might consume it."

Herbert A. Simon

Has Goldhaber really taken the idea past Simon's basic insight? In 20 years? … What he describes is already pursued in myriad scientific, political, business, and discourse practices.

Simon's observation is in economic terms and so launched the idea of attention economy. But the analogy of scarce attention to scarce goods and service adds no theoretical value, because, as Goldhaber acknowledges, attention fails to be like money in several critical ways - it is not measurable, not uniform, not fungible, not storable. The metaphor of attention as value is little more than an extension of the idiom "to pay attention" or "to spend time."

We obviously allocate attention without forging it into a currency. In fact attention is already implicit in any definition of economy through the mass of individual decisions. No "attention economy" will emerge as a replacement for *the* economy, because attention and money are inextricably related. Take away the material constraints … and attention wouldn't be scarce and there would be no pressure to efficiently allocate it. …

I hope there will be new science to explain and guide human collaboration, but it won't need the "attention" tag."

RT

Ken's response: Perhaps, but I'm not sure that either Lanham or Goldhaber are exactly proposing that an "attention economy" will displace the money economy. My understanding of the core of the discussion (informed by my training as a political economist, but also by earlier study of cognitive science) is that individually and collectively, we humans have perceptual and cognitive processing limits (as Simon pointed out).

What this means in practice is that we (must) make choices about what we focus on, and what we ignore. I suspect this is true to some degree for all cognate species, regardless of their level of technological or linguistic sophistication. But since Guttenburg, human society has accreted more and more cultural products – we have long since passed the point where one individual can know “all that is written.” An “economics of attention” derives added value by helping us sort through the oceans of cultural products (of any media) for desirable content. This is what really gives the Dewey decimal system and Yahoo! their core value.

While the story may not exactly be new, I think most would agree that as the Internet grows, being able to tell desirable from less-desirable data is increasingly difficult for any single end user. At least that’s what my email sysop tells me.

Moreover, finding the “most valuable” data among the marginally valuable is increasingly difficult. This leads to other solutions, such as Google, Digg et al. All are services that create value by helping us to identify what is “worth our attention” from what is not.

RT again:

I do read G. as saying that the attention economy will replace the money economy. For example, these quotes:

"We are moving into a period wholly different from the past era of factory-based mass production of material items when talk of money, prices, returns on investment, laws of supply and demand, and so on all made excellent sense. We now have to think in wholly new economic
terms, for we are entering an entirely new kind of economy. The old concepts will just not have value in that new context."
"... in a pure attention economy money has no essential function, no real role to play. In the period of transition from old economy to new, however, the connection between money and attention is significant and needs examining."
Beyond that, yes, I agree that many competitive innovations will emerge to help "allocate attention" but I would want to see the next step included in the analysis - allocating the resources and creative effort that follow attention. In other words, improvements to our still crude and aggregate notions of "markets".

Ken's response: must say, I think I agree with you. It seems a bit optimistic to think that money (or the need for it) will simply evaporate.

11.29.2006

Digital universe

Part of the purpose we hope to serve (here at Augmentation) is to promote awareness of the fundamental social, political, and cognitive changes posed by the Information Revolution.

Of course, we are far from alone in our concern. The NSF has taken a leading role in developing the infrastructure needed to support the science of the 21st century. In late September, they held a meeting on "The Role of Academic Libraries in the Digital Data Universe."

By my reading, the only political scientist participating was Henry Brady (UC Berkeley); while it's wonderful to have such a prestigious representative, I think this is a conversation that must be engaged much more widely.

To get started, I recommend checking the readings under "Selective Bibliography," especially the collection of reports commissioned by the NSF over the past few years (e.g., Commission on Cyberinfrastructure for the Humanities and Social Sciences, 2004).

Addendum: It's a bit dry for the first 12 minutes or so, but check out Chris Greer's (NSF) presentation from the September meeting. Fascinating stuff.

First Monday, early edition

A nice surprise. This month's FirstMonday has an article and a book review of potential interest:

Thomas Chesney (Nottingham U) reports on An empirical examination of Wikipedia's credibility, with somewhat surprising results: "experts found Wikipedia’s articles to be more credible than the non–experts."

Also, in "How (Not) to Study the Attention Economy," Michael H Goldhaber (physicist, private consultant) critiques Richard A Lanham's (UCLA) "The Economics of Attention: Style and Substance in the Age of Information." Goldhaber is "not exactly sympathetic" to Lanham's work: "I suspect both Lanham and Liu take far too shallow a look at how academia will probably shift if the new economy comes into being." Publisher's Weekly (via Amazon) is more gentle, commending Lanham on his "clear, jargon-free and forward-thinking" writing.

Would anyone else like to comment? Send us an email.

Useful research tools

FYI - since teaching a short course on the Craft of Political Science Research last summer, I've been adding to the list of Useful Research Tools.

These include browser extensions, RSS readers, and indexing, mind mapping, online survey, and transcription software. All inexpensive or FREE.

Recent additions: Firefox extensions Endnote and Zotero.

11.16.2006

Graphs > tables

Kastellec, Jonathan and Eduardo Leoni. 2006. "Using Graphs Instead of Tables to Improve the Presentation of Empirical Results in Political Science"
"When political scientists present empirical results, they are much more likely to use tables rather than graphs, despite the fact that the latter greatly increases the clarity of presentation and makes it easier for a reader or listener to draw clear and correct inferences. ... We argue the extra work required in producing graphs is rewarded by greatly enhanced presentation and communication of empirical results. We illustrate their benefits by turning several published tables into graphs, including tables that present descriptive data and regression results. ... A move away from tables and towards graphs would increase the quality of the discipline's communicative output and make empirical findings more accessible to every type of audience."
(Via POLMETH)

Addendum: I read this on the flight (I'm in Sedona for Thanksgiving), and was quite impressed. The light didn't really come on until about page 17 - I was skeptical about the idea of reporting confidence intervals rather than "mere" significance - but now I'm pretty sure they're right.

Graphs can tells us far more than tables.

Scholarpedia

ResearchBuzz also notes the (recent) launch of Scholarpedia, which strives to be a peer-reviewed, scholarly version of Wikipedia.

A random comparison of the term "fuzzy sets" (SP) and (WP) suggests that the new and improved version might be just that - an improvement.

Now let's see if they can generate a critical mass even remotely akin to the original. It's a bit light on content now (especially for social scientific concepts).

Civil Rights database

ResearchBuzz is reporting on the new database of civil rights court records available through Washington University in St Louis.

Categorized for browzing, with full-text search capability, the db covers over a thousand civil rights cases.

11.15.2006

Politics in a digital age

FYI: Alan Rosenblatt also wrties a blog (Dr DigiPol) on the confluence of the Internet, technology, and politics.

Part commentary, part resource ... worth watching.

Internet Advocacy

It's owned by a public relations firm, but the Internet Advocacy Center promises comprehensive, web-based strategies for political campaigning and advocacy.

Resources include podcasts, blogs, an online library, and a forum.

11.14.2006

Online research

This is several years old, but I was recently reminded of Cybersociology Magazine (6), which focused on "Research Methodology Online."

Understanding that a lot can change in seven years (thank you, grad school), a couple of articles may still be of use to today's researchers:

The Digital Ethnographer (Mason and Dicks, Cardiff University)

Big Brother is Online: Public and Private Security in the Internet (Bernal, University of Lincolnshire)

11.13.2006

Rumor blogs

FYI: Chris Lawrence has consolidated known links to political science job market rumor mills (plus a discussion on methodology).

SimCiv

I'm not sure what to make of this, Neo. Research Councils UK are reporting that policymakers and planners may soon have access to real-time, real-world data for the United Kingdom's entire population.

The "grid computing" project e-Science seeks to integrate data currently tracked by disparate agencies, allowing researchers to cross-tabulate virtually any ("anonymous") data in the UK. Projected benefits include the ability to track (and forecast) health, employment, car ownership, et al.

Potential drawbacks, anyone?

11.12.2006

Election tech

While it is still developing as a resource, campaigntech2006.org serves as a clearinghouse for information about technologies used by candidates in the 2006 elections.

11.10.2006

CQI 07

And next May 2-5, the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign will be hosting the 3rd International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry: Qualitative Inquiry and the Politics of Evidence.

There's been a lot of heat generated over the past decade or so on the relative merits of qualitative and quantitative research. The conference organizers hope to also shed a bit more light on the issues.

CAQDAS 07

From April 18-20 of next year, the Royal Holloway, University of London (which is actually in Surrey) will host CAQDAS 07: Advances in Qualitative Computing.

For those who don't know yet, the CAQDAS Networking Project (at the University of Surrey) has long been a leader in the testing and assessment of specialized technologies for qualitative research. They offer regular workshops and courses on a variety of CAQDAS applications.

I-pol - A Portal on Internet and Politics

The i-pol website features academic resources [literature, research, data and news] about Internet and politics.

11.06.2006

Presidential rhetoric

I've seen earlier examples of this approach, but Chirag Mehta has put together the best example of tag clouds of US Presidential Speeches online.

For the uninitiated, tag clouds are word lists, weighted by some aspect of their use (e.g., most common, most recent).

Drag the slider bar to get a sense of what Presidents from Washington (1) to Bush (43) talked about in over 360 speeches, letters, and official documents.

A wink, a blink, and time

Cultural anthropologist Clifford Geertz passed on October 30th, following complications from heart surgery.
1926-2006

A preeminent scholar of traditional religious, economic and political life, Dr. Geertz was perhaps most well-known outside his discipline for the concept of "thick description," an alternative to acontextual behavioralist approaches.

In a nutshell: telling a wink from a blink requires an understanding of context.

Apology: I had hoped to post on this last week, but was unable due to a conflict between Firefox 2.0 and BlogThis.

All polls, all the time

Feel the urge to look at the last polling data for yourself? Go to Pollster.com. It's a one-stop shop for American polling data, very well executed.
There's an RSS feed and several blogs, with intelligent commentary by Mark Blementhal, Charles Franklin, and the occasional "guest pollster."

I'm impressed (and I'm generally not one for polling data).

11.02.2006

Important safety tip, Ray

Since thumb drives (i.e., USB flash drives) have become nearly ubiquitous, a new (FREE) software widget developed by the folks at Daily Cup of Tech is likely to be quite useful to most of us.

Once you've downloaded and unzipped Help! I'm Lost! onto your thumb drive and inserted your own message into the text file, it automatically loads something like the following whenever the drive is inserted into a USB port:
Handy, eh?
Lost