Archive for the 'CMMNA400' Category

Reflections from DiGRA…

September 7, 2009

…that are class-discussion related.

Hmm, let’s see.

***

We will soon be discussing “scholarly” publications and comparing those to non-scholarly (e. g., more popular and widely read) publications.  One of the (supposedly) primary advantages of scholary publications has been that these are vetted through a formal “peer review” process intended to insure and validate their quality and significance.

We will discuss more details about this peer review process in class.  However, let me make a couple of comments regarding current challenges to this process originating in new media forms.

These two challenges revolve around, first, the definition of “peer” in “peer review,” and, second, what we might call the tenacity or momentum of non-peer-reviewed online publications.

1.  What’s an “expert”?

Peer review is commonly based on a limited number of (three, for instance) expert opinions actively solicited for that purpose.

Wikipedia article reviews, on the other hand, are based on a much larger number of voluntary participants/editors who may or may not be experts on the topic(s) of the articles they review and edit.

While Wikipedia has recently moved to more tightly limit and “expertize” those who edit articles, the extreme version of a Wikipedia-like editing process remains in contrast to the principles of peer review.  Let’s avoid nuances for the moment and contrast these two processes simply as the “expert” vs. the “hive-mind.”

The traditional belief is, of course, that the expert is the better source of review — not the massive, anonymous hive-mind of the (occasionally unwashed) crowd.  But was that preference simply based on the relative inability to access the collective hive-mind through old media forms?  With newer, more connected, more immediate, and more responsive media, the hive-mind of the crowd becomes increasingly accessible — and proves surprisingly accurate when compared to the accuracy of the experts.  See, for instance, here.

2.  The persuasiveness of the popular.

The tenets and beliefs of popular culture are frequently at odds with more objective realities.  Our notion of the comparative characteristics and values of human “races,” for instance, has been more often colored (figuratively and literally) by superficial skin tones than by any fundamental differences among human genotypes.  For this (and other) reasons, “scholarly” discussion has commonly been kept separate — and, as occasion warrants, protected — from discussion in non-scholarly contexts.

In new media contexts, however, the barriers separating scholarly (isolated and “elite”) belief/knowledge and non-scholarly (widespread and “popular”) belief/knowledge have become less distinct and more permeable.

An extended example (probably overly protracted, but it is on my mind based on the recent DiGRA conference):

Take a brief look at this description of game player types.  That description traces a discussion of game player types that begins with a 1980 publication by Glen Bacow.

In 1990, I did a statistical analysis (Q-study) of game player motivations — see my research archives page — that summarized game player motivations as 1) playing to seek a challenge, 2) playing to socialize, and 3) playing to escape.  While I did not reference Bacow in that article, I did reference the most pertinent scholarly studies of the time, including Thomas Malone’s important work on player motivation and “fun” — from 1981.

Some time later — 1996 — there was the publication of the now well known (as a result of widespread promulgation through web-based sources — e. g., see here) “Bartle player types.”

Subsequently, it seems — due to the popularity of the “Bartle types” configuration (formally similar to “What Sort of… Are You?” online quizzes) — that more sophisticated statistical analyses of game player motivations have found reference to these “Bartle types” obligatory…

…without any corresponding obligation to acknowledge or reference earlier work on the topic.  And this pattern of referential obligation continues — as the recent DiGRA conference demonstrated — despite, curiously, much of the newer research invalidating much of Bartle’s derivations.

Circumstances like this one, particularly involving scholarly research investigating new media topics — such as computer games — demonstrates the extent to which scholarly research must now interact with and, in that interaction, potentially become guided and structured by that which is popular and widespread, regardless of the means by which that widespread popularity has been obtained.

The ability of the web to promulgate persuasive ideas of the popular, regardless of their origin or validity, can be both a boon — if the ideas are original and valid — or a disaster — if those ideas are based on rumor, innuendo, and/or the banal.  This has always been a problem for journalists to deal with and overcome; it is increasingly a problem for scholars and scholarly publications to deal with and (hopefully) overcome as well.

RE: Wikipedia assignment [CMMNA100]

March 30, 2009

From today’s TechCrunch:

Microsoft To Shutter Encarta, Read All About It On Wikipedia

by Jason Kincaid on March 30, 2009

***

Note especially this:

For a full history of Encarta, be sure to check out its comprehensive Wikipedia entry, which has already been updated to reflect Encarta’s shutdown. Encarta’s entry on itself doesn’t mention anything about its demise, and actually seems to have less information than the Wikipedia article.

***

Also, I was little surprised that almost everyone mentioned accuracy as an important criterion to use in evaluating Wikipedia.  But no one thought to check the accuracy of alternative sources of information — as did this article.

New ‘Mass Comments’ post.

March 13, 2009

The blog thing again.

March 6, 2009

The SMC now has a blog thing going.

February 27, 2009

Quizzes posted.

January 28, 2009

CMMNA400 and CMMNA100 students will find their respective quiz posted within their respective online folder (along with the class syllabus, schedule, etc.).

Also, CMMNA100 students:  I have placed the official Vivian textbook powerpoints, covering all chapters we have discussed so far, on the class blackboard site.

Inauguration day.

January 19, 2009

Inauguration day is not a news day.

The news day was when Obama was elected.

Tuesday is a ceremony day.

I do not like it when ceremony becomes news.

News has more than enough ceremony in and of itself.

However, when news becomes ceremony — as will definitely be the case on inauguration day — then news becomes easier to study as form rather than content.  And, since, even when news does have a little content (as when Obama was elected), the form of news is probably more important and influential than its content, inauguration day will be a good news study day.

Here’s some stuff for news study day.

1.  As you probably know, Obama is into the social networking thing.  Of course, maybe that’s just his campaign manager’s idea or something.  But he does at least speak the words “network neutrality” now and again.  So that’s good.

2.  On the open internet, here’s what you what you might find.

The National Post

The CNN semi-live feed (think it’s going to have bandwidth problems?)

and the CNN facebook thingy

The LA Times, summarizing the ceremony

The NY Times, plugging the mobile tv companies

and NPR, with what counter culture would look like if counter culture were basically a wine-tasting

and, finally, with NPR’s help, what counter culture would look like if counter culture were paid for by the same people who were selling the wine that was being tasted at the wine-tasting.

Final class instructions.

December 4, 2008

CMMNA100 11am rm403

1.  Due: Book review of Postman/Amusing Ourselves to Death.  Place these in my box in the cmmn office.

2.  The third exam will be held in rm 403 on Tuesday, Dec 9, 11:30-1:30.

3.  The study guide for the third exam is now posted online — in the online schedule.  This study guide is similar to what I posted online for the first exam.  The bulk of the third exam will consist of 8-10 multiple choice questions drawn from each of the following chapters:  Chapter 6 (sound recording); Chapter 7 (motion pictures); Chapter 8 (radio); Chapter 9 (television); Chapter 14 (entertainment); Chapter 15 (mass media research).  These are the chapters covered in the online study guide.

4.  As always, students can contact me by email or through my blog with questions.

CMMNA400 2pm, rm403

CMMNA400 3:30pm rm403

1.  The third exam is posted online in the online schedule.  The due date is Dec 9, Tuesday, 2pm.  I will be in my office on that date, at that time.  No late papers accepted.  Papers can be turned in early by leaving them in my box in the cmmn office.

2.  As always, students can contact me by email or through my blog with questions.

Note to self.

December 3, 2008

Spend more class time discussing the implications of IRBs as regards research ethics.

Do IRBs function to control funds or protect publics?

The Twixt example is probably not central in this regard since it seems exempt solely on the basis of game framework boundaries and/or a game company’s own mechanisms of insuring voluntary participation.  However, the issue of not identifying participants remains (e. g., should in-game names be changed regardless of player wishes?).   And these “game framework boundaries” very likely involve shades of gray.

More probing examples, however, include Black Like Me and Barbara Ehrenreich, as mentioned here…

Participant-observation may be dying at the hands of philistine IRBs, but CCTV observation of both public and semi-private spaces is constandy expanding. Homeland security agencies are assembling vast unregulated databases of identifiable and sensitive information. Journalists regularly use deception in pursuit of stories, whether of celebrity trivia or serious wrongdoing. A good example, cited in Professor Feeley’s address, is the work of Barbara Ehrenreich, whose recent books, Nickel and Dimed (2001) and Bait and Switch (2005), made the New York Times Bestsellers list for their explorations of the conditions of low-wage employment and of redundant middle-managers, respectively. However, both depend on covert research, where Ehrenreich faked CVs and references to conceal her identity as a journalist and social investigator. They are widely assigned to undergraduates in the United States and held up as examples of the sort of interesting books that social scientists ought to write-but neither could receive IRB approval. IRB regulation has become a smokescreen behind which our rivals in social investigation and commentary can proceed unchecked, while those of us whose practice is disciplined by a professional ethic and a regulative ideal of truth-telling are handicapped in our access to the public realm. By picking on a politically weak group-academics-it appears that concern is expressed for citizens’ rights, while security and corporate interests can range unchecked.

Turn off the oxygen . . .Law & Society Review,  Dec 2007 by Dingwall, Robert

See also here.

Buying and selling vs. informing

October 7, 2008

An update to our discussion in CMMNA400 today.

Like the Internet that underpins it, the Web has flourished because of its openness and its creator’s deliberate decision not to predict or prejudge how it would be used. As the Web took off, there was a debate within CERN about whether to try to profit from it. Berners-Lee argued strongly against this idea: without an open standard, he reasoned, there would end up being several incompatible forms of Internet media, backed by Microsoft, AOL and others. Making the Web royalty-free made it more attractive than any proprietary alternative. “Without that, it never would have happened,” he says.

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/Berners_Lee.html