Now Reading
Six degrees of mobilisation

Six degrees of mobilisation

20120227-NodeXL-Twitter-darpa network graph

To what extent can social networking make it easier to find people and solve real-world problems?

IN 1967 Stanley Milgram, an American social scientist, conducted an experiment in which he sent dozens of packages to random people in Omaha, Nebraska. He asked them to pass them on to acquaintances who would, in turn, pass them on to get the packages closer to their intended final recipients. His famous result was that there were, on average, six degrees of separation between any two people. In 2011 Facebook analysed the 721m users of its social-networking site and found that an average of 4.7 hops could link any two of them via mutual friends. A small world is now, it seems, even smaller.

Can this be used to solve real-world problems, by taking advantage of the talents and connections of one’s friends, and their friends? That is the aim of a new field known as social mobilisation, which treats the population as a distributed knowledge resource which can be tapped using modern technology. It could potentially be used to help locate missing children, find a stolen car or track down a suspect. Social-mobilisation researchers have been examining its potential through some unusual, Milgram-like experiments.

One of the first examples was the Red Balloon Challenge, staged in 2009 by DARPA, the research arm of the American Department of Defence. Its aim was to determine how quickly and efficiently information could be gathered using social media. The challenge was simple: competitors raced to locate ten red weather balloons that had been tethered at random locations across the United States in return for a $40,000 prize. In some ways this was similar to the way in which Ushahidi, a non-profit website, gathers information in situations such as the earthquake in Haiti and the terrorist bombings in Mumbai. The difference, however, was that the Red Balloon Challenge was not a crisis, so participants had to find another way to motivate others to report sightings of the balloons.

The winning team, led by Manuel Cebrian and Sandy Pentland of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), found all the balloons in just nine hours, using a clever incentive-based strategy to encourage participation. The first person to send the correct co-ordinates of a balloon received $2,000, but whoever recruited that person received $1,000, and the recruiter’s recruiter received $500, and so on. This scheme proved to be highly optimised for the task, says Iyad Rahwan, who later joined the MIT team.

In March this year DARPA staged a new contest, the Tag Challenge. This time the goal was to locate and photograph five people, each wearing unique T-shirts, in five named cities across two continents. All five had to be identified within 12 hours from nothing more than a mugshot. Compared with the Red Balloon Challenge this was much more difficult, says Dr Rahwan, who is now at the Masdar Institute in the United Arab Emirates. “It involves people moving, moving in crowds and the targets are much harder to spot, especially in a big city.”

Read more . . .

via The Economist
 

See Also

The Latest Streaming News: Six degrees of mobilisation updated minute-by-minute

Bookmark this page and come back often
 

Latest NEWS

 

Latest VIDEO

 

The Latest from the BLOGOSPHERE

What's Your Reaction?
Don't Like it!
0
I Like it!
0
Scroll To Top