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Final Project Proposal: An App That Winds You Down Instead of Up

We’ve become more and more fixated on the aspect of social media we find most personally pernicious: the time-sink, the way an infinite scroll can lead to two hours down the drain with nothing to show for it but that ate-too-much-movie-popcorn feeling.

Simultaneously, Alex has been dealing with some sleep issues over the past month or two (and would guess a lot of people have)! In pursuit of non-pharmacological treatment, Alex has found that creating a little bedtime routine that encompasses small accomplishments has gotten her out of the rut of scrolling through Twitter until it’s an hour past when she meant to fall asleep. Instead, almost every night, she uses Duolingo for about 20 minutes and then spends ___ minutes doing the next day’s New York Times crossword puzzle. The little jingle it plays when the puzzle is completed has started to have a Pavlovian effect, making her feel like it’s time for sleep.

Although it’s nice to see a puzzle archive, and the Duolingo is at least in theory having some kind of effect on her Spanish skills (tal vez?), Alex has been thinking a lot over the past few weeks that she should start doing some daily writing. Meanwhile, Val has been a dedicated journaler for over a decade.

With that in mind, we propose creating a simple bullet-journaling app designed to be used at bedtime, which presents users with a prompt (What did you do today? What did you see, hear, feel and think about? Who did you talk to?) and a 10-minute timer for free-writing. Similar to Duolingo and the crossword app, it could gamify regular use, with gold stars on an archive calendar or something like that — but, and this part is really important, it wouldn’t reward extended use in any particular way.

We’d like it if there were some kind of community aspect to the journaling — like LiveJournal! — but we want to keep the emphasis on short, meaningful interaction with the app instead of endless, mindless scrolling. So we propose that after a user completes her day’s entry, she can see two more: one from a friend, and one from a random user somewhere else in the world. (Of course, the option to make posts private will be available.) Then that’s it: Time for bed.

Because the idea is to create a personal archive, users can go back and read their own entries any time they like, and even export them as a text file, but they can’t read previous entries by anyone else, to keep a sense of ephemerality about the whole business.

One slight snag we’re anticipating is that maybe the sense of quiet reflection the app inspires wouldn’t outweigh the blue-light exposure, sleep-wise. If anyone has feedback to address that issue, we’re all ears.

— Alex, Val and Romy

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Proposal: Fixing Online Discussion around Data Vis

Summary

So much discussion is happening these days that is backed up with data visualization, but the problem is, misinformation and trust issues could arise due to the fact that these visualizations are not fully understood, or can’t be reproduced to more accurate versions unless the author of the vis decides to do so.  In this work, I want to explore simple and lightweight workflows to democratize the process of discussing data on the web for social and knowledge seeking purposes. I looked into existing tools that empower users to visualize data on the web but they are disconnected from where the discussion is happening (i.e. social media). I’m proposing building a solution that is a layer over online communities that discusses data visualizations to allow community members to visualize and reproduce visualizations in-situ to improve the commenting experience and enrich online discussion around data stories .

The community

Any community that has discussion around data visualizations with the goal to effectively convey information. For the sake of this assignment, I’m focusing on blogs or reddit. 

Problems to address

Centralized Discussion

Sometimes users want to take the vis somewhere else to discuss it with another type of community. Also, sometimes users want to reproduce a different version and share it to their own niche. Can we make that discussion more decentralized?

Effective utilization of the Collective effort to Improve Data stories

Members of these communities are continuously fact checking the conclusions and data used, leading them to a healthy explorative behavior in which they probe, investigate and inquire about the conclusions, the data and the visualization. How do we capture that provenance and lineage for others to leverage on? Reading the visualization story alone is not as rich and useful as reading the discussion about it. That collective knowledge is what makes these data stories more appealing and informative.

Technical challenges in reproducing work and science

Many members in these communities expressed in their comments that they would like to build a visualization similar to what the author shared. There were many questions about how, and what in regards to the process. While this could be a sign of a healthy community that wants to learn. While the instructions and the language are encouraging, the affordances are not yet inviting to novice users. And that is a problem I want to be working on in my project for this class.

Proposed Solution

For building the user experience of the tool I will use a simple template-based approach for authoring the visualizations, and a library in the background to build the visualization using D3 and D3Plus. The tool consists of two main components: Web App and a Chrome Extension for authoring the visualization. The most important part  in this project is the discussion and commenting experience, how can we include interactive visualizations in the comments that are reproduced with better data and design decisions. My hope is to create a community that discusses data visualization with data visualization not just with text.

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Final Project Proposal: Musical Community-Building in a Time of Isolation

The current COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically altered every facet of daily life as we know it. Unemployment in the U.S. is at a record high; schools, churches, and all social gatherings have been cancelled until further notice; even going outside for a walk requires careful consideration (Will I be able to stay 6 feet away from others? Do I have something I could fashion into a mask?). Times such as these are nearly unprecedented (certainly in modern times) and understandably scary. And extreme isolation, while obviously necessary to combat the spread of COVID-19, has left many people feeling lonely, sad, and frustrated.

Certainly, now more than ever we have the technology to keep us emotionally connected while physically apart: Zoom happy hours, game nights through Jackbox and Houseparty, and Facebook and Instagram challenges have become the norm for interaction in the past few weeks. But still, it is easy for boredom and loneliness to creep in, and not all communities and interest groups are being well-served (or at least served to the best of their ability) through these platforms.

My idea for a final project comes from an experience I had last week. A group of my college friends and I have begun hosting weekly hangouts through Houseparty, where we play games, chat, and generally try to think about anything other than the current situation in which we find ourselves. Last week, I had Spotify playing on my laptop while I used Houseparty on my phone, allowing my friends to (vaguely) hear my music while we hung out. At one point, the song “Blinding Lights” by The Weeknd (a current favorite for Tik Tok videos) came on, and the whole group – all six of us – spontaneously broke into dance for the entirety of the song. It was honestly the most genuinely joyful experience I’d had since I began self-quarantining 3 weeks prior, and afterward the mood of the group was palpably lifted. This moment of connection through music had given us something positive to hold onto – a small moment with a big impact. And in times such as these, I think that these small moments are not only meaningful, but needed.

This experience got me thinking: Couldn’t some technology exist that allows moments like this to happen more often? Music is an integral part of the background of many people’s everyday: Imagine all the songs that drift through morning commutes, evenings spent cooking dinner, nights at parties or on a friend’s back porch. Entire communities that gather for the sole purpose of listening to music (concerts and festivals) will be unable to congregate until at least the fall, if not longer. Music naturally brings people together and gives new meaning to a moment. And while we’re physically isolated, I think music can do more to bring us together.

Therefore, my idea for the final project in this class is to create an extension across an existing music platform (perhaps Spotify, since it’s quite widely-used) that allows groups of people to listen to the same playlist of music synchronously, much like listening to a radio station. To my knowledge, no extension such as this currently exists, and it isn’t built into Spotify’s existing functionality (I can’t speak to other platforms like Apple or Amazon Music). While the structure of playlists would remain the same – a playlist could either be created by one person or made into a collaborative playlist to which others can contribute – this extension would allow the playlist creator to hit play and for anyone with the link to the playlist to “tune in” and hear the music at the same time. The extension could possibly also allow for the option for other listeners to have equal control of the playlist, hitting pause, queuing the next song, or skipping a song. This could create a functionally similar environment to what you might experience at a friend’s party: Their playlist is playing over their speakers, but anyone could grab their phone and change what’s playing. 

I imagine this extension being used by two main groups. The first is as I just described – groups of friends. If my friends and I used this platform during our weekly Houseparty hangouts, we could each hear the music through our respective laptops (or speakers) instead of them hearing it in the background of our video session. They could change the song instead of having to ask me to change it, and we could all feel a little more united and with perhaps a bit more normalcy – this isn’t so much different from a normal hangout, we’re just in different places. The second group could be musical communities, fan groups, followers of an artist, etc. In this case, I imagine that a “leader” in one of these communities could make a playlist and play it at designated times, and others in the community could gather to listen as that person plays their playlist. Although this may not have as much built-in interaction, it could still create a sense of unity among those in the group, as they know that others are listening to the playlist along with them. And if someone well-known or famous created and aired their playlist, I could see people from all over the world tuning in to hear their Friday Night Mix. 

I am obviously open to collaboration and input on this idea, as I know it’s not perfect. (First off, it requires that someone has Spotify or another platform to even access it.) However, I do think that this is a project that could feasibly be created and that might allow for some small amount of good in this scary time. If anyone is interested in working on this or has any suggestions, I’m absolutely open to talking and thinking more!  

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Design Workshop Brainstorm: Jess, Kelly, Anastasia, Jianyu Li

In our HMW breakout session, we contemplated the following prompt: how might we make people online play devil’s advocate on social issues?

Our simplest idea: AMA but for the other point of view

Our wildest idea: Devil’s Advocate gameshow: teams swap points of view at random intervals and the audience picks the side with the best arguments.

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Design Workshop Brainstorm: Valerie, Shivangi, Rachel, and Ian

During our group design session, we spent time thinking about the following question: how might we celebrate and protect people’s identity on social media to reduce cultural biases and stereotypes?

Our simplest idea: require from social media feeds to include a ratio of users coming from other countries or cultural backgrounds.

Our wildest idea: create a virtual reality experience that lets people experience life with an identity that’s not their own.