TY - JOUR
T1 - Locative media and data-driven computing experiments
AU - Perng, Sung Yueh
AU - Kitchin, Rob
AU - Evans, Leighton
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2016.
PY - 2016/1/5
Y1 - 2016/1/5
N2 - Over the past two decades urban social life has undergone a rapid and pervasive geocoding, becoming mediated, augmented and anticipated by location-sensitive technologies and services that generate and utilise big, personal, locative data. The production of these data has prompted the development of exploratory data-driven computing experiments that seek to find ways to extract value and insight from them. These projects often start from the data, rather than from a question or theory, and try to imagine and identify their potential utility. In this paper, we explore the desires and mechanics of data-driven computing experiments. We demonstrate how both locative media data and computing experiments are ‘staged’ to create new values and computing techniques, which in turn are used to try and derive possible futures that are ridden with unintended consequences. We argue that using computing experiments to imagine potential urban futures produces effects that often have little to do with creating new urban practices. Instead, these experiments promote Big Data science and the prospect that data produced for one purpose can be recast for another and act as alternative mechanisms of envisioning urban futures.
AB - Over the past two decades urban social life has undergone a rapid and pervasive geocoding, becoming mediated, augmented and anticipated by location-sensitive technologies and services that generate and utilise big, personal, locative data. The production of these data has prompted the development of exploratory data-driven computing experiments that seek to find ways to extract value and insight from them. These projects often start from the data, rather than from a question or theory, and try to imagine and identify their potential utility. In this paper, we explore the desires and mechanics of data-driven computing experiments. We demonstrate how both locative media data and computing experiments are ‘staged’ to create new values and computing techniques, which in turn are used to try and derive possible futures that are ridden with unintended consequences. We argue that using computing experiments to imagine potential urban futures produces effects that often have little to do with creating new urban practices. Instead, these experiments promote Big Data science and the prospect that data produced for one purpose can be recast for another and act as alternative mechanisms of envisioning urban futures.
KW - Data analytics
KW - computing experiments
KW - critical data studies
KW - location-based social network
KW - locative media
KW - staging
KW - urban future
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85014589067&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/2053951716652161
DO - 10.1177/2053951716652161
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85014589067
SN - 2053-9517
VL - 3
JO - Big Data and Society
JF - Big Data and Society
IS - 1
ER -