Researching and developing non-traditional analytic methods and communications tools for journalism.

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Co-directors:
  • Steve Doig - Tempe
  • Tom Johnson - Santa Fe
  • Steve Ross - Boston
    Fellows:
  • Patrick Mattimore - San Francisco & Geneva, Switzerland
  • John R. Sadd - Boston & Santa Fe
  • George T. Duncan - Pittsburgh, PA & Santa Fe

    Recent IAJ publications,
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    Year Archive
  • View Article  Spatial analysis of news sources

    Some researchers in the Computer Science department (nary a journalists to be found) are doing some interesting work trying to determine the degree to which people in different regions talk about different things.  The assumption is, obviously, that newspapers are a good proxy for what people are talking about.  Still, some smart people are wrestling with interesting ways to understand journalism.  Be sure to check out the published paper at http://www.algorithm.cs.sunysb.edu/mehler/mypapers/heatmap.pdf

    spatial analysis of news sources

    21 December 2006

    spatialnewsanalysis.jpg
    a large-scale news paper analysis system that is able to create "entity datamaps", a spatial visualization of the interest in a given named entity. the aim of this system is to identify entities which display regional biases, by estimating the frequency of reference of an entity in any given city.

    entities likely to be geographically-biased include United States cities & local sports teams. entities likely to have little bias include foreign cities, country names, & national political figures. The text is acquired from about 800 US online newspaper sources.

    see also mood news & what's up & news attention & vanishing point & newsquakes.

    [link: sunysb.edu (pdf)]



    View Article  Here's what it takes to get the job done
    Friend Matt Waite, of the St. Petersburg Times, has an interesting post on his personal blog wherein he lists the 19 different software programs he used to prepare the latest installment of his ongoing work on the disappearance of wetlands in Florida.  (Who could ever imagine such a thing?)

    We wonder how many journalism educators could identify these programs and what they are used for?

    The online version of "Vanishing Wetlands" (Craig Pittman is the lead byline on this episode.) is rich with details and interactive features, including a fine mash-up of Google Maps to show the location of some land in so-called "mitigation banks."  Best of all, for the analytic journalism crowd, is the explication of the story's methodology.  It's in some sort of embedded code that delivers the text in a pop-up.  Look to the upper right of the homepage for a hot button.

    By the way, these guys have been working this story for three years.  Now THAT's the kind of dedication that produces insight and context.

    And there's another good angle on this effort at "Working backward on the last wetlands story."



     
    View Article  Lake Arrowhead Conference on Human Complex Systems
    A number of friends and associates, for whom we have the greatest respect, say this is one of the best, most enriching conferences in the U.S.  It is not cheap, but there are vacation condos to be found in the area that would help to make this affordable.

    The IAJ plans to be there.  Hope to see you there.


    4th Lake Arrowhead Conference on Human Complex Systems
    conference syllabus

    We are back with our 4th UCLA Lake Arrowhead Conference on Human Complex Systems. from Wednesday April 25, 2007 through Sunday April 29, 2007.

    We look forward to another cross-disciplinary gathering of social scientists who employ cutting-edge agent-based computational modeling and related computational ideas and methods in their research and teaching. As in past years, dozens of presenters from numerous disciplines are presenting. We are also hosting evening panels, a live simulation, and opportunities for networking and relaxation amid gorgeous surroundings.

    Advancing Agent Modeling in the Social Sciences
    The conference is a forum for sharing the most recent advances -- in theory, methodology and application - in the area of agent modeling throughout the social sciences (e.g., Anthropology, Communication Studies, Economics, Geography, History, Political Science, Sociology, Urban Planning). We also welcome social scientists in professional schools (e.g., Business, Education, International Relations, Public Health, Public Policy, Social Welfare) and in the public and private sectors. Researchers and theorists in Psychology, Media Studies and social aspects of Cognitive Science, Artificial Intelligence, Robotics and related disciplines also welcome!

    For a paper presentation, authors present for 20 minutes and receive an additional 10 minutes for Q&A. We also welcome 90-120 minute symposium proposals consisting of 3-4 individual papers on a related topic of inquiry. Finally, we are open to someone wishing to organize an evening panel discussion on a �hot topic� in agent modeling.




    View Article  Imaging the City: Call for Papers
    We're not wild about using "image" as a verb, but the conference looks promising and certainly appropriate for those journalists who understand that we have to learn to tell stories with more than just words and pictures.  Yup, "HCI" is where it's at, or where it's going to be at.

    Imaging the City:

    Call for Participation:

    Recent technological developments mark the city as a central and perhaps special space for human-computer interaction research and practice. Visions of ubiquitous computing, the resonance of the ‘urban probe’, and the proliferation of interactive mapping services speak to the significance of the urban landscape to studies of Human-Computer Interaction. But such visions and technologies require, produce and reproduce images of urban space that influence what these systems, and our interactions with them, are and might be. Developing and employing technologies for the urban environment requires visualization techniques that both reflect and challenge how we image, and consequently imagine, the city.

    This one-day workshop will explore the practices and and technologies of imaging the urban environment, bringing together an interdisciplinary array of designers, HCI experts, urban planners and technologists to investigate such issues as:
    • How do we represent the city in HCI, and how do these representations inform HCI research and practice?
    • What kinds of technological devices, services, and platforms support imaging the city now and might be created in the near future?
    • How are and might these new representations of the city and urban imaging technologies be used for social and political ends?
    • What new methods are required for developing technologies that image the city in new ways?
    • What can we learn from the urban experience to design stronger representations and interfaces within HCI research and practice?


    View Article  Resolution in the DA v. Doig spat
    A few days back we reported on a verbal dust-up betweeen ASU (and IAJ's) Prof. Steve Doig and the PIO for the Maricopa County's district attorney's office.  Seems the spokesman didn't think much of mere "student journalists" wanting to attend the DA's press conferences.  (Of course, journalists are little more than just citizens doing a special task, but that's a sub-set discussion for another day.)  In the end, changes have been made; the DA's public non-information officer has been redeployed.

    Spokesman is reassigned after dispute with ASU prof

    Jahna Berry
    The Arizona Republic
    Dec. 12, 2006 12:00 AM The spokesman who refused to allow some Arizona State University journalism students attend the Maricopa County attorney's news conferences has been reassigned. Meanwhile, the top prosecutor's staff is working on an agreement to allow the students to go to media briefings.

    The news comes two weeks after public information officer Bill FitzGerald blasted an Arizona State University professor with "inappropriate language" during an e-mail dispute over whether students could attend Andrew Thomas' news conferences.


    View Article  Put your community on the map
    The Rrove blog -- no, no, not THAT Rove (different spelling) -- delivers a round-up review of nine sites related to community mapping tools.  See http://www.rrove.com/blog/2006/12/04/9-awesome-community-mapping-websites/

    December 4th, 2006

    Disclosure: Rrove.com plays in the community mapping space. This post aims to highlight the innovations and the usefulness that others have made in this game. We haven’t added ourselves to this list – if you want to know more about Rrove, click here.

    A community mapping website, in our definition, is a service that gets its members to map and define places. Through crowd-sourcing, these sites are building a database/directory of local and nearby locations that their users can discover and visit. Why is this important? We all know that search advertising is the fastest growing industry in the Internet. Within that market, local search is the up-and-comer. In the next few years, it will be the largest segment within search!

    It’s refreshing to see how others have approached community mapping. Some have focused on map creation while others do it through mobile apps. More than that, some players have mapped the community of users to map the physical community (i.e. neighborhoods). Here’s how nine websites (all free) are doing it, what makes them awesome and how you can use their services in your Internet life.




    View Article  Ninth Crime Mapping Research Conference coming the end of March
    It was the second year of the national crime mapping conference when we realized that, hey, there's a lot of not-just-good-but-great analytic work going in the then-young profession of crime analysis.  Seven years later, it's just getting more impressive. 

    If you can only get to one national conference a year (we assume you're already going to the NICAR meetings), do this one every other year and the Special Libraries Association convention on the off year.  NOTE: NO NO NO registration fee!

    Registration for the Ninth Crime Mapping Research Conference has openedThis year, there will be no conference registration fees but registration is still required.  Preliminary conference details available on the MAPS website: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/maps/pittsburgh2007/index.html

    The Ninth Crime Mapping Research Conference will take place March 28-31, 2007 at the Omni William Penn Hotel in downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

    Agenda:

    The conference will include a full compliment of workshops, panels and plenary sessions. The main plenary session is entitled GPS in a Crime Analysis Context- Practitioner Consideration, Research Needs." Panel session topics will include uses of spatial data analysis and GIS in corrections, parole, and probation, geography and crime, geographic profiling, offender travel behavior, NIBRS/incident-based data and mapping, international programs, impact of Hurricane Katrina on crime, crime analysis, spatial data analysis, policing issues, managing sex offenders, travel demand modeling, and more.  The conference also includes a map competition, and provides an excellent opportunity for researches and practitioners to network with each other.



    View Article  IAJ's Steve Doig has "words" with DA
    Sigh.  Another skirmish in the on-going battle to convince public officials that they work for the people, in the broadest of terms.

    County attorney official to get counseling for language

    Eugene Scott
    The Arizona Republic
    Dec. 1, 2006 12:00 AM

    The spokesman for the Maricopa County Attorney's Office will be counseled and possibly reprimanded for "inappropriate" language in an e-mail exchange with an Arizona State University professor.

    Bill FitzGerald, the county attorney's public information officer, and Stephen Doig, an ASU journalism professor, were discussing whether journalism students should have the right to attend the press conferences of County Attorney Andrew Thomas.

    For more see http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/1201dispute1201.html


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