HCII PhD Thesis Defense: Dan Tasse
Speaker
Dan Tasse
HCII PhD candidate
When
-
Where
Newell-Simon Hall 3305
Description
"How Geotagged Social Media Can Inform Modern Travelers"
Thesis committee:
Jason I. Hong (Chair), HCII
Jodi Forlizzi, HCII
Niki Kittur, HCII
Judd Antin, Airbnb
Thesis Document:
Abstract:
Modern tourists travel in new ways. The rising class of so-called "Creative tourists" prefer to explore everyday life instead of simply ticking off a list of sights to see. However, travel guides all currently represent places as simply a collection of sights.
At the same time, public geotagged social media data is opening a new world of ways to investigate another place. In this thesis, I describe efforts to bring these trends together, by developing neighborhood guides for travelers, based on social media. I first investigate why people geotag and where this public geotagged data comes from. Then, after developing a model of what tourists want through a series of interviews and surveys, I develop a prototype social-media-based neighborhood guide for travelers. By an iterative user study and quantitative investigation into photo sources, I find that this data can give users an ideal glimpse into a new city.
Implications are widespread: I show not only how social media can be used to help people travel, but also develop a perspective on what social media tells, and does not tell, about cities and neighborhoods. I show that social media provides an idealized qualitative image into a city, while perhaps not reflecting the objective, quantitative reality. This matches tourists' needs ideally, providing an exciting new opportunity for a new generation of tourism tools.
Host
Queenie Kravitz