Each student will select a data visualization-related person or group to thoroughly research and report on for the rest of the class. You will become an expert in this subject and explore some of the main ideas and concepts behind the research topic you've selected.
Some questions to think about:
- What is the style/use/purpose of your subject?
- What does this subject do well? What do they do poorly? What do you like/dislike?
- How does this subject connect to other readings and discussions within the course?
You should bring supporting materials that will help the rest of the class understand and contextualize your subject in the form of images, quotes, videos, gifs, maps, code, etc. Create a PDF presentation (resolution 1280 × 720px) and commit the file to the presentations
directory of the git repo before your assigned week. Name your file using the scheme firstname_researchSubject.pdf
.
Link videos or websites directly from the .pdf and be prepared to present on your subject for about 20 minutes. Prepare follow-up questions for the class. You will be evaluated on how you describe the main concepts to your peer students in adequate detail, how you connect the topic to other readings and discussions we've had in class, your supporting materials and the quality of your questions for the class within the given time frame.
Look over the potential topics listed below (or propose one of your own devising), then sign up for a topic and time-slot using this google doc.
James Bridle · Art, data, AI, activism
Kate Crawford · AI, data, criticism
Ray Dalio · Finance, visualization
Forensic Architecture · Evidence, Architecture, Activism
Google Arts and Culture · Art, culture, institution, open data
Google Jigsaw · Politics, internet, freedom of speech
Tahir Hemphill · Hip hop, lyrics, community
Mark Lombardi · Artist, networks, politics
Lev Manovich · Digital humanities, archives
Cathy O’Neil · AI, data, criticism
Alex Rosenblat · AI, data, criticism
Hans Rosling / Gapminder · Finance, Globalisation
Taryn Simon · Artist, archives, photography, image culture
Jer Thorp · Archives, libraries
Washington Post graphics dept. · Politics, journalism, News