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Guilty Planet

Seeking reason amidst the irrational madness of destroying one's only home.

The Guilty Planet Blog

Jacquet_Berlin.jpgJennifer Jacquet is a postdoctoral research fellow working with Dr. Daniel Pauly and the Sea Around Us Project at the UBC Fisheries Centre. As a kid, she read 50 Simple Things Kids Can Do to Save the Earth and would come to discover that while those 50 things were indeed simple, saving the Earth was not.

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July 30-August 1, 2010: Attending Sci Foo Camp hosted by Nature, O'Reilly and Google at the Googleplex, Mountain View, CA.

June 19, 2010: Presenting at the Human Behavior and Evolution Society Annual Meeting at the University of Oregon in Eugene.

May 2010: Counting fish: A typology for fisheries catch data published in The Journal of Integrative Environmental Sciences.

May 3-7, 2010: Workshop: Incorporating Appropriate Ecological Baselines into Management of Ocean Resources at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.

April 24, 2010: Q&A following a screening of The End of the Line at the Food Film Festival in Portland, Oregon.

March 12, 2010: Presenting at the World Affairs Conference of Northern California in San Francisco.

February 21, 2010: Co-organizing and presenting on the panel Preserving the Global Commons Through Conservation and Cooperation at the AAAS meeting in San Diego.

January-March 2010: Visiting lecturer at the Scripps Insitution of Oceanography, UCSD. Co-teaching Topics in Marine Conservation with Jeremy Jackson.

November 2009: Conserving Wild Fish in a Sea of Market-Based Efforts published online at Oryx

August 14, 2009: Dan Ax at Avukado Productions makes the following short video for Guilty Planet:

July 30, 2009: Successfully defended Ph.D. dissertation Fish as Food in an Age of Globalization at the University of British Columbia.

June 2009: Published at Conservation Biology: What Can Conservationists Learn from Investor Behavior?

May 27, 2009: Talk titled "Historical Renaming and Mislabeling of Fish" given the Oceans Past II conference in Vancouver, B.C.

May 24, 2009: Talk at the International Marine Conservation Congress in Washington, D.C.

March 24, 2009: Dave Beck and I showcase our jellyfish burger in Scientific American's photo gallery:

beck_jacquet_jellyburger.jpg


March 24, 2009: Talk at the Student Conference for Conservation Science at Cambridge University, UK.

March 14, 2009: Talk at the Kettle's Yard Problemathon for Cambridge's Science Festival.

March 3, 2009: Talk titled "Guilt v. Shame in Market Based Efforts to Save Our Fish" at the Max Planck Institute in Ploen, Germany.

February 27, 2009: Talk at Fauna & Flora International.

January-March 2009: Visiting researcher with Bill Sutherland's lab in the Conservation Science Group at the University of Cambridge.

November 2008: A new study In hot soup: sharks captured in Ecuador's waters published in Environmental Sciences.

November 2008:

« A New Focus on Ocean Conservation? | Main | If You Go Green, It Should Show »

Visualizing Data

Category: Stylized Substance
Posted on: August 20, 2009 1:53 AM, by Jennifer L. Jacquet

A friend wanted me to see this public service announcement, which is an excellent visual display of quantitative information and a good way to provoke guilt:


When he sent me the link, he routed me through this awesome blog called Information Aesthetics that has been around since 2004 (where have I been?!). It's an excellent compilation of some stylized substance that I have just begun to explore. One of the first gems I came across was a link to the Personas exhibit currently on display at the MIT Museum.

Personas uses sophisticated natural language processing and the Internet to create a data portrait of one's aggregated online identity. In short, Personas shows you how the Internet sees you.

You just put in your name and then this fun, narcissistic, and kind of creepy program searches the web, aggregates key words, and weights them to produce a sort of Google profile. Here's mine:

Personas.jpg

It's not entirely legible reprinted here or accurate (military?), although the large light blue 'education' chunk certainly makes sense. Try your own!

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Comments

1

Personas also (as the creators comment) shows how easy it is for a computerised search to give completely inaccurate results because the computer can't distinguish between people with the same name. My name (common first and last names) gives a bar that bears no resemblance to my interests (or writings); I'm tempted to suspect that it doesn't closely resemble any single individual with the same name....

Posted by: Chrisj | August 20, 2009 10:55 AM

2

Australia produces some really good awareness campaign commercials.

One of my favourites is this one, relating to speeding whilst driving.

Posted by: Stephen Moore | August 20, 2009 1:00 PM

3

Chrisj, I agree that inaccuracy is an issue for the reason you mention. In addition, I have a fairly unique name but Personas generates different a different profile for each search but I think the strength is in the concept rather than execution...

Posted by: Jennifer L. Jacquet | August 20, 2009 1:23 PM

4

[(Persona Results - What you think they should be) * 100 ] / the commonness of your name = your internet presence

Posted by: jim | August 20, 2009 3:41 PM

5

Me and a lab mate tried our names twice. And each time the display came up different. For me, I thought the first time definitely reflected me pretty well, but the second time it was not me at all.

Posted by: Mark F. | August 21, 2009 1:13 PM

6

I share a not too common name with a more than one person with significant internet presence. The result I got was an interesting admixture of these with perhaps a bit of me. Using a name as identifier is silly.

Posted by: BlindRobin | August 23, 2009 7:19 AM

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