The Challenge of the New Data Mark Elliot, Social Sciences University of Manchester January 2013...

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The Challenge of the New Data Mark Elliot, Social Sciences University of Manchester January 2013 [email protected]

Transcript of The Challenge of the New Data Mark Elliot, Social Sciences University of Manchester January 2013...

Page 1: The Challenge of the New Data Mark Elliot, Social Sciences University of Manchester January 2013 mark.elliot@manchester.ac.uk.

The Challenge of the New Data

Mark Elliot, Social Sciences

University of Manchester

January [email protected]

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Data, data everywhere…

• Dramatic changes in the type and scope of data available for social research

• New types of data and new controllers/archives • Social media data growth • Commercial data

• New data linkage developments – New data being linked. – New forms of Combining, enhancing, fusing, linking,

merging data• More detail

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Opportunities

• Big data and commercially owned data• Strong and enriched traditional data sources:

cohort studies, surveys combining attitude and physiological data.

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• Analysing the data layer/web 3.0 represents a significant challenge.– Accounting for the links?– Accounting for contradictions?– What does sampling mean?– It might well have more in common visual image

processing than orthodox data analysis.

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Data

Research FindingsPolicy

Analysis

Impact

Behaviour

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An Socio-ethical Turning Point?

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An Socio-ethical Turning Point?

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An Socio-ethical Turning Point?

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An Ethical Headache

• Access and ownership– charges and rights– Citizens and data ownership

• Confidentiality privacy and data protection:– lack of clarity. – Risks to third parties.

• Best practice:– New codes of practice? – New forms of consent?

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• Privacy/Disclosure remain important– All surveys on the topic indcate this

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Privacy and Disclosure

“There is a close connection between our ability to control of who has access to our information and our ability to create and maintain different sorts of social relationships with different people”; Rachels(1970)

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So Disclosure is:

• The mechanism by which we operate our privacy.– This rather than the information itself is why non-

consensual disclosure is problematic.– Non-consensual disclosure subverts the

psychologically critical process of self-disclosure.

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And privacy is....

• Critical to our the formation of our identities

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• Analysing the data layer web 3.0 represents a significant challenge.

• Retaining a functioning privacy is in the world of linked data is a challenge.

• We can do this but– It will require significant research effort and

policy will

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The Role of Identity

• Social Philosophy:– Identity is represented to others through

self disclosure; Goffman– OTOH our identity is in part formed through

our interactions with others and their representations to us; Mead

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So joining the dots....

• Privacy concerns personhood:– My/Our identity– My/Our sense of self

• To understand the meaning of privacy in a cultural context one must refer to processes of – Autonomy – Locus of Control

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Identity

PrivacyDisclosure

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• I would argue therefore– That our data and our “selves” are intrinsically

intertwined.– That what happens in the data layer will have a

transformative effect on how we think about ourselves as individuals and collectively.

– And therefore the need for a sociology of data is paramount.

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Sociologies of Data

• Our Data Our Selves: – How does data impact on how we view our selves,

our identity, our society? – How do our attitudes affect how we view data?– How do new forms of (ubiquitous) data impact on

a norms, attitudes and values? – Is informational privacy the main contact point

between our digital and socio-physical identities?

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• Our Data Our Society: – How do the control processes for data reflect and affect

existing social structures? – How are data shaped by the institutions and objectives

that produce them?– How are institutions affected by data about/within

them? – Where are the main sources of data outside the

academy?• How are they used?• How does ownership affect use?

Sociologies of Data

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• Our Data Our Research: – How do we define ‘data’ in the social sciences?

• Can social science adapt to use any form of social data? • Can a meaningful data ontology be developed?

– Where are data becoming ‘big data’? • Are these transformative, or just ‘old wine in new bottles’? • Where are data now providing new departures in the

social sciences?

– How does ubiquitous data affect the centrality of theory?

Sociologies of Data

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To Conclude:

• Analysing the Data Layer/Web 3.0 represents a challenge.

• Retaining a functioning privacy in the world of linked data is a significant challenge.

• We can do this but– It will require significant research effort and

policy will