index

 

university of california, santa cruz / department of film & digital media

social information spaces

f i l m  &  d i g i t a l   m e d i a   1 7 1 d

   

professor: 

warren sack <wsack@ucsc.edu>

time & place: 

wednesday: 4:30pm - 7:30pm (porter college room 245)

   

description: 

social information spaces is a studio course where we will examine how networked information spaces can be understood (or redesigned to become) inhabited, socially-navigable spaces. the focus of the course will be on the social navigation of information spaces, a new set of methods and techniques now emerging from the areas of architecture, geography, conceptual art, computer-supported cooperative work (cscw) and human-computer interaction (hci). today, collaborative filtering and recommender systems are the most widely known of existing techniques for social navigation (e.g., amazon.com's book recommendation feature). we will begin by analyzing existing social information spaces, like newsgroups, chats and muds. we will then experiment with a series of design strategies for remaking "uninhabited" information spaces into socially navigable spaces. using ideas from art, architecture, film theory, anthropology, sociology and geography students will complete a series of design exercises to analyze existing physical and information spaces as well as to redesign "uninhabited" sources of information (e.g., websites, code archives, library catalogs, etc.) as "inhabitable," social information spaces.