Far and away the most interesting idea of the new government college ratings emerges toward the end of the report. It doesn't quite square the circle of competing constituencies for the rankings I worries about in my last post, but it gets close. Lots of weight is
placed on a single magic model that will predict outcomes regardless
of all the confounding factors they raise (differing pay by gender,
sex, possibly even degree composition).
As an inveterate modeler and data hound, I can see
the appeal here. The federal government has far better data than US
News and World Report, in the guise of the student loan repayment
forms; this data will enable all sorts of useful studies on the
effects of everything from home-schooling to early-marriage. I don't
know that anyone is using it yet for the sort of studies it makes
possible (do you?), but it sounds like they're
opening the vault just for these college ranking purposes.
The challenges raised to the rankings in the report are formidable. Whether you think they can work depends on how much faith you have in the model. I think it's likely to be dicey for two reasons: it's hard to define "success" based on the data we have, and there are potentially disastrous downsides to the mix of variables that will be used as inputs.
Digital Humanities: Using tools from the 1990s to answer questions from the 1960s about 19th century America.
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Federal college rankings: who are they for?
Before the holiday, the Department of Education circulated a draft prospectus
of the new college rankings they hope to release next year.
That afternoon, I wrote a somewhat dyspeptic post on the way that these
rankings, like all rankings, will inevitably be gamed. But it's
probably better to bury that off and instead point out a couple looming problems
with the system we may be working under soon. The first is that the audience for these rankings is unresolved in a very problematic way; the second is that altogether two much weight is placed on a regression model solving every objection that has been raised. Finally, I'll lay out my
"constructive" solution for salvaging something out of this, which is
that rather than use a three-tiered "excellent" - "adequate" - "needs
improvement", everyone would be better served if we switched to a
two-tiered "Good"/"Needs Improvement" system. Since this is sort of
long, I'll break it up into three posts: the first is below.
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Administrative layers
Sometimes it takes time to make a data visualization, and sometimes they just fall out of the data practically by accident. Probably the most viewed thing I've ever made, of shipping lines as spaghetti strings, is one of the latter. I'm working to build one of the former for my talk at the American Historical Association out of the Newberry Library's remarkable Atlas of Historical County Boundaries. But my second ggplot with the set, which I originally did just to make sure the shapefiles were working, was actually interesting. So I thought I'd post it. Here's the graphic: then the explanation. Click to enlarge.
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Fundamental plot arcs, seen through multidimensional analysis of thousands of TV and movie scripts
Note: a somewhat more complete and slightly less colloquial, but eminently more citeable, version of this work is in the Proceedings of the 2015 IEEE International Conference on Big Data. Plus, it was only there that I came around to calling the whole endeavor "plot arceology."
It's interesting to look, as I did at my last post, at the plot structure of typical episodes of a TV show as derived through topic models. But while it may help in understanding individual TV shows, the method also shows some promise on a more ambitious goal: understanding the general structural elements that most TV shows and movies draw from. TV and movies scripts are carefully crafted structures: I wrote earlier about how the Simpsons moves away from the school after its first few minutes, for example, and with this larger corpus even individual words frequently show a strong bias towards the front or end of scripts. These crafting shows up in the ways language is distributed through them in time.
So that's what I'm going to do here: make some general observations about the ways that scripts shift thematically. In its own, this stuff is pretty interesting--when I first started analyzing the set, I thought it might an end in itself. But it turns out that by combining those thematic scripts with the topic models, it's possible to do something I find really fascinating, and a little mysterious: you can sketch out, derived from the tens of thousands of hours of dialogue in the corpus, what you could literally call a plot "arc" through multidimensional space.
Words in screen time
First, let's lay the groundwork. Many, many individual words show strong trends towards the beginning or end of scripts. In fact, plotting movies in what I'm calling "screen time" usually has a much more recognizable signature than plotting things in the "historic time" you can explore yourself in the movie bookworm. So what I've done is cut every script there into "twelfths" of a movie or TV show; the charts here show the course of an episode or movie from the first minute at the left to the last one at the right. For example: the phrase "love you" (as in, mostly, "I love you") is most frequent towards the end of movies or TV shows: characters in movies are almost three times more likely to profess their love in the last scene of a movie than in the first.
It's interesting to look, as I did at my last post, at the plot structure of typical episodes of a TV show as derived through topic models. But while it may help in understanding individual TV shows, the method also shows some promise on a more ambitious goal: understanding the general structural elements that most TV shows and movies draw from. TV and movies scripts are carefully crafted structures: I wrote earlier about how the Simpsons moves away from the school after its first few minutes, for example, and with this larger corpus even individual words frequently show a strong bias towards the front or end of scripts. These crafting shows up in the ways language is distributed through them in time.
So that's what I'm going to do here: make some general observations about the ways that scripts shift thematically. In its own, this stuff is pretty interesting--when I first started analyzing the set, I thought it might an end in itself. But it turns out that by combining those thematic scripts with the topic models, it's possible to do something I find really fascinating, and a little mysterious: you can sketch out, derived from the tens of thousands of hours of dialogue in the corpus, what you could literally call a plot "arc" through multidimensional space.
Words in screen time
First, let's lay the groundwork. Many, many individual words show strong trends towards the beginning or end of scripts. In fact, plotting movies in what I'm calling "screen time" usually has a much more recognizable signature than plotting things in the "historic time" you can explore yourself in the movie bookworm. So what I've done is cut every script there into "twelfths" of a movie or TV show; the charts here show the course of an episode or movie from the first minute at the left to the last one at the right. For example: the phrase "love you" (as in, mostly, "I love you") is most frequent towards the end of movies or TV shows: characters in movies are almost three times more likely to profess their love in the last scene of a movie than in the first.
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Typical TV episodes: visualizing topics in screen time
The most interesting element of the Bookworm browser for movies I wrote about in my last post here is the possibility to delve into the episodic structure of different TV shows by dividing them up by minutes. On my website, I previously wrote about story structures in the Simpsons and a topic model of movies I made using the general-purpose bookworm topic modeling extension. For a description of the corpus or of topic modeling, see those links.
Note: Part II of this series, which goes into quantifying the fundamental shared elements of plot arcs, is now up here.
In this post, I'm going to combine those two projects. What can we see by looking at the different content of TV shows? Are there elements to the ways that TV shows are laid out--common plot structures--that repeat? How thematically different is the end of a show from its beginning? I want to take a first stab at those questions by looking at a couple hundred TV shows and their structure. To do that, I:
1. Divided a corpus of 80,000 movies and TV show episodes into 3 minute chunks, and then divided each show into 12 roughly-equal parts.
2. Generated a 128-topic model where each document is one of those 3-minute chunks, which should help the topics be better geared to what's on screen at any given time.
3. For every TV show, plotted the distribution of the ten most common topics with the y-axis roughly representing percent of dialogue of the show in the topic, and the x-axis corresponding to the twelfth of the show it happened in. So dialogue in minute 55 of a 60-minute show will be in chunk 11.
First a note: these images seem not to display in some browsers. If you want to zoom and can't read the legends, right click and select "view in a new tab."
Let's start by looking at a particularly formulaic show: Law and Order.
The two most common topics in Law & Order are "court case Mr. trial lawyer" and "murder body blood case". Murder is strongest in the first twelfth, when the body is discovered; "court case" doesn't appear in any strength until almost halfway through, after which it grows until it takes up more than half the space by the last twelfth.
That's pretty good straight off: the process accurately captures the central structuring element of the show, which is the handoff from cops to lawyers at the 30 minute mark. (Or really, this suggests, more like the 25 minute mark). Most of the other topics are relatively constant. (It's interesting that the gun topic is constant, actually, but that's another matter). But a few change--we also get a decrease in the topic "people kid kids talk," capturing some element of the interview process by the cops; a different conversation topic, "talk help take problem," is more associated with the lawyers. Also, the total curve is wider at the end than at the beginning; that's because we're not looking at all the words in Law & Order, just the top ten out of 127 topics. We could infer, preliminarily, that Law and Order is more thematically coherent in the last half hour than the first one: there's a lot of thematic diversity as the detectives roam around New York, but the courtroom half is always the same.
Compare the spinoffs: SVU is almost identical to the Law & Order mothership, but Criminal Intent gets to the courtroom much later and with less intensity.
See below the fold for more. Be warned: I've put a whole bunch of images into this one.
Note: Part II of this series, which goes into quantifying the fundamental shared elements of plot arcs, is now up here.
In this post, I'm going to combine those two projects. What can we see by looking at the different content of TV shows? Are there elements to the ways that TV shows are laid out--common plot structures--that repeat? How thematically different is the end of a show from its beginning? I want to take a first stab at those questions by looking at a couple hundred TV shows and their structure. To do that, I:
1. Divided a corpus of 80,000 movies and TV show episodes into 3 minute chunks, and then divided each show into 12 roughly-equal parts.
2. Generated a 128-topic model where each document is one of those 3-minute chunks, which should help the topics be better geared to what's on screen at any given time.
3. For every TV show, plotted the distribution of the ten most common topics with the y-axis roughly representing percent of dialogue of the show in the topic, and the x-axis corresponding to the twelfth of the show it happened in. So dialogue in minute 55 of a 60-minute show will be in chunk 11.
First a note: these images seem not to display in some browsers. If you want to zoom and can't read the legends, right click and select "view in a new tab."
Let's start by looking at a particularly formulaic show: Law and Order.
The two most common topics in Law & Order are "court case Mr. trial lawyer" and "murder body blood case". Murder is strongest in the first twelfth, when the body is discovered; "court case" doesn't appear in any strength until almost halfway through, after which it grows until it takes up more than half the space by the last twelfth.
That's pretty good straight off: the process accurately captures the central structuring element of the show, which is the handoff from cops to lawyers at the 30 minute mark. (Or really, this suggests, more like the 25 minute mark). Most of the other topics are relatively constant. (It's interesting that the gun topic is constant, actually, but that's another matter). But a few change--we also get a decrease in the topic "people kid kids talk," capturing some element of the interview process by the cops; a different conversation topic, "talk help take problem," is more associated with the lawyers. Also, the total curve is wider at the end than at the beginning; that's because we're not looking at all the words in Law & Order, just the top ten out of 127 topics. We could infer, preliminarily, that Law and Order is more thematically coherent in the last half hour than the first one: there's a lot of thematic diversity as the detectives roam around New York, but the courtroom half is always the same.
Compare the spinoffs: SVU is almost identical to the Law & Order mothership, but Criminal Intent gets to the courtroom much later and with less intensity.
See below the fold for more. Be warned: I've put a whole bunch of images into this one.