Charts can be social artifacts that communicate more than just data
Researchers find that design elements of data visualizations influence viewers’ assumptions about the source of the information and its trustworthiness.
Researchers find that design elements of data visualizations influence viewers’ assumptions about the source of the information and its trustworthiness.
By enabling users to easily create social apps that serve communities’ needs, the Graffiti framework aims to promote healthier online interactions.
Associate Professor Julian Shun develops high-performance algorithms and frameworks for large-scale graph processing.
AI agents could soon become indistinguishable from humans online. Could “personhood credentials” protect people against digital imposters?
The Trustnet browser extension lets individuals assess the accuracy of any content on any website.
A communication system whose users reveal only a few verified aspects of their identity can empower less confident participants to speak up, researchers report.
A new method to measure homophily in large group interactions offers insights into how groups might interact in the future.
MIT PhD candidate Elizabeth Parker-Magyar finds close workplace networks among educators drive their activism even outside of democracies.
Associate Professor Dean Eckles studies how our social networks affect our behavior and shape our lives.
An experimental platform that puts moderation in the hands of its users shows that people do evaluate posts effectively and share their assessments with others.
PhD student Paige Bollen finds urban street networks that encourage encounters among strangers link to lower ethnic tensions and anti-immigrant hostility.
A new model shows that the more polarized and hyperconnected a social network is, the more likely misinformation will spread.
Researchers share progress applying network science to disinformation tracing, Covid-19 modeling, and machine learning.
Lincoln Laboratory connects counter–human trafficking community in pursuit of technology to help investigate cases.
Social media users share charts and graphs — often with the same underlying data — to advocate opposing approaches to the pandemic.