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Who’s Bigger? A Quantitative Analysis of Historical Fame

A discipline of computational social science is emerging, applying large-scale text/data analysis to central problems in the humanities and social sciences. Here we study the problem of algorithmically constructing quantitative measures of historical reputation. Who is more historically significant: Beethoven or Elvis? Washington or Lincoln? Newton or Einstein?

By exploiting large-scale data from several sources, we have developed a factor analysis-based ranking method which measures the relative importance of all the people described in Wikipedia in a rigorous way. We have validated our measure against published rankings of historical figures, demonstrating that our rankings are generally better than those of human experts. Our measure gives us the power to rigorously investigate several previously difficult-to-formalize questions, such as:

  • Are the right people in the history books?
  • How well do halls of fame correctly identify the most significant individuals?
  • Are men and women treated equally in Wikipedia?

In this talk, I will discuss our methodology for ranking historical figures, with assessment results and applications. Our rankings are available for inspection at http://www.whoisbigger.com. This work is the subject of our book “Who’s Bigger? Where Historical Figures Really Rank” Cambridge University Press, 2013. (with Charles Ward)

Bio

Steven Skiena is Distinguished Teaching Professor of Computer Science at SBU. His research interests include the design of graph, string, and geometric algorithms, and their applications (particularly to biology). He is the author of five books, including “The Algorithm Design Manual” and “Calculated Bets: Computers, Gambling, and Mathematical Modeling to Win”. He is co-founder and Chief Scientist at General Sentiment (www.generalsentiment.com), a media measurement company based on his Lydia text/sentiment analysis system. Skiena received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Illinois in 1988 and is the author of over 130 technical papers. He is a former Fulbright scholar and recipient of the ONR Young Investigator Award and the IEEE Computer Science and Engineer Teaching Award. More info at http://www.cs.sunysb.edu/~skiena/.
Professor Steven Skiena

Speaker

Steven Skiena

Date

Friday, March 7, 2014

Time

1:00 - 2:00 pm

Location

Laufer Center, Room 101

Media