Indiana University Researchers Get $1 Million Grant To Study Memes 126
An anonymous reader writes with news that the NSF has just awarded a group of researchers a grant to study the life cycle of memes. "Indiana University is receiving nearly $1 million in federal grant money to investigate the genesis, spread, and demise of Internet memes. The grant from the National Science Foundation awards four Indiana researchers $919,917 to for a project called Truthy that will, as the grant's abstract explains, "explore why some ideas cause viral explosions while others are quickly forgotten." (And yes, in case you're wondering, the name was inspired by Stephen Colbert's neologism "truthiness.") The government-funded research is aimed at identifying which memes are organic and which ones are mere astroturf. "While the vast majority of memes arise in a perfectly organic manner, driven by the complex mechanisms of life on the Web, some are engineered by the shady machinery of high-profile congressional campaigns," Truthy's About page explains."
I know some good memes they can study (Score:3)
Up the road at Purdue University there are always quite a lot of memes about Indiana University. They're all really negative, so that might affect the study results.
Let me help them (Score:1)
First post, hot gritz, car analogy, robotic overlords, Beowulf cluster.
Re:Let me help them (Score:4, Funny)
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Natalie Portman naked and petrified, karma whoring, ASCII Goatse/Penis Bird, only old Koreans use that anymore, BSD is dying, GNAA, The Lone Gunmen Are Dead, OMG Ponies, Twitter sockpuppets [slashdot.org], nobody wants an HTPC, hosts file, Buck Feta...
Any more?
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Editors can't spell (or read), that gross poop eating guy, Time Cube guy, Cowboy Neil, dupes.
I'm sure there's plenty more.
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1)
First post, hot gritz, car analogy, robotic overlords, Beowulf cluster.
2)
Natalie Portman naked and petrified, karma whoring, ASCII Goatse/Penis Bird, only old Koreans use that anymore, BSD is dying, GNAA, The Lone Gunmen Are Dead, OMG Ponies, Twitter sockpuppets [slashdot.org], nobody wants an HTPC, hosts file, Buck Feta...
Any more?
3) Profit!!!
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In Soviet Russia, you are belong to our base!
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All your base are belong us!
You're doing it wrong.
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Plenty of them from 4chan:
Cockmongler
Happy Negro
Reidick ("She is cute, that is why she is called Rei-chan!")
Nigra Cell (before it was sanitized and turned into "SHOOP DA WOOP")
Bix Nood
Milhouse is not a meme (is a meme)
Longcat (again, before Reddit got their filthy hands on it)
Divided by Zero
SAFETY CAR
Hoodpins
Pool's Closed, AIDS, etc.
Dio Brando (and his cry of "WRYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY")
DUWANG
PROMOTIONS
W.T. Snacks (Around Snacks, CP was lax)
Ondore ("Don't believe Ondore's lies! I'm Captain Basch fon
Re: Let me help them (Score:2)
The year of the Linux Desktop.
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Do *NOT* mention hosts files! You'll summon..him.
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Another pile of nostalgic /. memes (Score:3)
One does not simply get paid to surf the Web (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't always get paid to surf the Web but when I do, I make sure to get a grant that could have gone to a better cause...
Memes = Politics? (Score:2)
Re:Memes = Politics? (Score:5, Interesting)
The odd part of this story is when it says:
some are engineered by the shady machinery of high-profile congressional campaigns
yet I'm failing to think of even one example of a viral meme that fits into that category. I mean, yeah, trigger words for government funding and all that, but even one?
If somebody wants to tell me that Nanci Pelosi's people came up with Doge, OK, fine, I'd believe it, but I've never heard any such insinuations.
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Death panels. Obamacare. Birthers. The memes don't have to be jokes.
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Death panels. Obamacare. Birthers. The memes don't have to be jokes.
You might be able to argue that "Death panels" was "engineered by the shady machinery of high-profile congressional campaigns" (Sarah Palin is credited with coining the term), but definitely not "Obamacare" (the media promoted that one), or "Birthers", which was certainly an organic meme, to describe people questioning Obama's origins. It's also a form of the "something-ers" form of describing a group (deniers, anti-vacciners, etc.), which as I recall sprang out of calling the 9/11 conspiracy theorists "tr
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You might be able to argue that "Death panels" was "engineered by the shady machinery of high-profile congressional campaigns" (Sarah Palin is credited with coining the term), but definitely not "Obamacare" (the media promoted that one),
A quick glance around the internets suggests that it was promoted by the Romney campaign, including his self, but has a history going back reps calling single-payer health care "Hillarycare". So no, definitely "Obamacare" as well.
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You might be able to argue that "Death panels" was "engineered by the shady machinery of high-profile congressional campaigns" (Sarah Palin is credited with coining the term), but definitely not "Obamacare" (the media promoted that one),
A quick glance around the internets suggests that it was promoted by the Romney campaign, including his self, but has a history going back reps calling single-payer health care "Hillarycare". So no, definitely "Obamacare" as well.
No doubt Romney's campaign used the term, but it was in widespread use long before then. Everything that I've read indicates that Hillary's primary campaign actually coined the term, so you might have a point that it was a campaign that promoted, but both of those were presidential campaigns, not "shady machinery of high-profile congressional campaigns."
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...and the most likely contender for a Presidential run in 2016.
Pft. Not if we can get Elizabeth Warren to run!
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Which is why I suggest the grant money to study memes is really to fund a high-profile congressional campaign's viral marketing budget, using this pretense of "testing" political memes. Especially, if by some coincidence, the memes tested are for said high-profile congressional campaign.
Either that or the article is just trolling...
LOL .... (Score:2)
I, for one, welcome our new meme-studying overlords.
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I, for one, welcome our new meme-studying overlords.
In Soviet Russia, memes study you!
Interesting. (Score:5, Interesting)
The question of how and why ideas, 'culture', religions, new scientific hypotheses, etc. are transmitted and compete with one another is really a very long standing one. A lot of the historical study emphasizes 'elite' culture and theory(mostly because everything else was oral record only, and that doesn't keep well; but written works sometimes survive) or religious(high frequency of literacy, and proselytizing is a technology of considerable interest to contemporary religions); but there is also study of popular culture, folk mythologies, what the middle and lower classes were reading and watching(once that became common), and so on.
Cultural transmission is a very solid social science topic, and internet memes have the dual virtues of both potentially being novel(they might actually follow some traditional propagation pattern, might be something new, either way would be interesting to know) and being amenable to large-scale analysis because the internet is just so conveniently searchable and heavily cached in various places. You don't have to like the entire field; but this research project seems like a perfectly reasonable exercise.
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Cultural transmission is a very solid social science topic
"Social science" is an oxymoron. Science is not a field. It's a methodology, and social sciences fail miserably at applying that methodology. It's undoubtedly an interesting academic exercise, but let's not pretend it's something that it's not.
One could possibly make the argument for spending money on social research like this were we not currently in a long-term deficit spending pattern. As it is, we simply don't have the money to waste. Just because a million dollars is a tiny fraction of the federal
Re: Interesting. (Score:2)
If we are going to get pedantic, methodology is the study of methods. (Like geology is the study of the geo ~earth)
The word you are looking for is "method"
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The question of how and why ideas, 'culture', religions, new scientific hypotheses, etc. are transmitted and compete with one another is really a very long standing one. [. . .]
Cultural transmission is a very solid social science topic, and internet memes have the dual virtues of both potentially being novel(they might actually follow some traditional propagation pattern, might be something new, either way would be interesting to know) and being amenable to large-scale analysis because the internet is just so conveniently searchable and heavily cached in various places.
While a bit dated and somewhat intellectually renegade, Marshall McLuhan has done much to talk about how print fostered literacy (duh) and the transmission of ideas in a stable form across human cultures in The Gutenberg Galaxy (i.e. Gutenberg Bible and the enablement of Christianity as a proselytizing religion with a relatively stable population of "practicing" Christians all "reading" the same text). However, his writing style is a bit mimetic of the illuminated manuscript and he communicates his point in
I'd love to mock this grant... (Score:2)
...but I'm finding it hard to really get too worked up about.
We are planning to buy almost F-35s at a price of approx. $188 million per. This is a plane that in the words of Rand corp (hardly an anti-military outfit) "can't turn, can't climb, can't run" well enough to dogfight.
We are planning to buy a total of 10 Ford class aircraft carriers, at a cost of more than $11 billion per ship. The Chinese seem to think they can neutralize our carriers with cheap ballistic missiles and attack subs. Lots of expe
3 steps. No, 4. (Score:2)
1: Find idiots in government handing out other peoples money (redundant)
2: Apply for grant
3: ???
4: Profit
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Or it didn't happen.
The federal deficit this year is $550 billion (Score:4, Insightful)
This year the federal government moved $550 billion closer to default and the collapse of the dollar.
Just thought I would point that out, since it seems relevant.
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Oh, it's absolutely relevant. I don't care if I get modded off-topic. I've got plenty of karma.
Quite frankly, this sort of stuff is insane when we're continuously running a massive deficit. No one likes to hear this, but we really need to crank down the government spigot at so many levels it's no longer even funny. We simply don't have the money to be spending on what I'll generously term "discretionary" research. It's not just grants either, which admittedly take up a very small portion of the budget.
For the humorless gits out there... (Score:2)
The main topic is memes, not the Federal deficit.
"TLDR", being a meme, many of which were quoted here, is actually ON TOPIC.
Which is funny all on its own, being that it is probably one of the few times that a reply such as TLDR is actually ON TOPIC, and it is funny as a reply to trolls who are trolling the topic with idiotic insinuations of "useless research causes Federal budget to collapse".
And it's triple funny cause though THEY are aware of being off-topic, moderators are not.
There...
Now...
Place your ri
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Quite frankly, this sort of stuff is insane when we're continuously running a massive deficit.
No, not even slightly. The reason you're running a massive defecit is because you have dumped trillions into two pointless wars and the military industrial complex. It was such a dumb idea that even previous presidents have warned about such things.
Cutting back on basic research is a sure-fire way to hobble long term future development. The only way to do this successfully and on the scale and longevity required is
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Did you not even read my post? I'm agreeing with you about the military spending - it's a massive part of the federal budget. I'll even quote myself for your benefit, so you don't have to do all that pesky reading before typing up a reply.
The military budget is out of control. Yes, we live in a dangerous world, but we need to ask the rest of the civilized nations to help share the burden a bit (and this is coming from a somewhat conservative hawk), or perhaps scale back our overseas adventures.
And how exactly is meme investigation "basic research"? I'd really like to know how cutting frivolous grants like this will damage future meme propagation on the internet. I'm perfectly fine with federal dollars being judiciously spent on science which may have a real
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Yes I did: I summarised it as "etc".
We both agree military spending is out of control.
And how exactly is meme investigation "basic research"?
It's pretty solid social science as far as I see it. It's about better understanding of people.
I'd really like to know how cutting frivolous grants like this will damage future meme propagation on the internet.
It won't harm meme propagation, and if you believe that you seriously misunderstand the research (which is why decisions on such things should not be left to la
Re: The federal deficit this year is $550 billion (Score:2)
"Solid Social Science"
Wow. That pegged my oxymoron detector!
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It won't harm meme propagation, and if you believe that you seriously misunderstand the research
Whoosh? Just trying to be funny and failing as usual.
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Quite frankly, this sort of stuff is insane when we're continuously running a massive deficit.
No, not even slightly. The reason you're running a massive defecit is because you have dumped trillions into two pointless wars and the military industrial complex. It was such a dumb idea that even previous presidents have warned about such things.
Cutting back on basic research is a sure-fire way to hobble long term future development. The only way to do this successfully and on the scale and longevity required is via government funding.
etc...
Yes government spending is out of control. About the worst way of reignin it in is to cut down on basic research.
Pink elephant in the room.
The government gave $1 million dollars for research that sounds silly but may yield results in psychology (leading to developments in teaching, detecting and treating mental illness, advancements in stand up comedy). Meanwhile, the US military spends $1.3 Billion per day (that's $1,300 million)*.
Now I know a lot of advances come from the military, but I highly doubt much of the money is being spent on R&D. The US could reduce it's military spending a little and solve most
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Where did the majority of your spending money begin its life? Bank loans. Remember that massive issue the banking sector had recently?
We need to get our economy off credit. We need to stop borrowing against every security we can find. Either we reduce our debts voluntarily, or we go bankrupt. Either way, we will reduce our debt level over the next 5-20 years. This is going to remove money from circulation. If the government runs a surplus, this will also remove money from circulation. If we stop deficit sp
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If we stop deficit spending the economy will shrink and may falter.
And if we keep doing it the economy will collapse.
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That it is, that it is.
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Large government-sponsored programs have a notorious history of exploding far beyond predicted budgetary constraints. We'll see in another few years or so if that prediction, turns out to be accurate. History is on my side, unfortunately.
Even so, I'll go ahead and concede the point. Fine, let's say the new health care program has zero impact on the budget, or perhaps a negligible effect. I should also have not used the phrase "with no regard to how the government is going to pay for it", because obvious
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Actually, the CBO report is a lot more rosy than the GAO report (GAO being generally more reliable):
http://www.nationalreview.com/... [nationalreview.com]
I wonder if the CBO report counts as astroturfing? :)
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So, if the ACA reduces the deficit, but we build programs that spend that extra money and *more*, are we really reducing the deficit? :)
Compare the GAO report to the CBO report:
http://www.nationalreview.com/... [nationalreview.com]
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Explained joke is explained.
YOU DON'T SAY? (Score:2)
I love memes.
I make sure to catch up with memes twice a month on specialized web sites, but they often come to me while browsing around.
I think they are now a good 33% of what really make me laugh on the web.
The Botched Christ [wikipedia.org] meme [knowyourmeme.com] and its parodies [google.com] is a major meme to me, I hope they won't forget this one
Why just internet memes? (Score:2)
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Because the Internet acts like a convenient system of record. More traditional memes, while going through many of the same spreads/transformations do so in a way that only leaves behind secondary evidence.
That stupid 2008 era lolcat, on the otherhand, has an upload date, comments, viewcounts, and a directly trackable spread path.
It's almost certain, knowing humanities academia, that any models that arise from this study will be used as a "template" in an attempt to understand more serious non-internet meme
What happened to serious research? (Score:2)
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As a guy whose worked in marketing... (Score:2)
>> It could benefit marketers or anyone who wants to spread a message.
The multi-billion dollar marketing industry is WAY ahead of you. We are well aware of memes (as self-perpetuating brands or slogans) and have been successful launching quite a few of our own on behalf of our well-heeled customers for the past 80 or so years, e.g.,
"Bud" "Wise" "Er"
"So easy a caveman could do it."
"... Burma Shave"
"War on Women"
So...we're good over here. Why don't you just send that $1M back to the taxpayers?
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>> ad development is more like a crap shoot than a science
Crap shoots (e.g., deterministic systems) can be science too. Think of particle physics. Or today's story about the "one in decades" chance to film moving stones.
The "science" in marketing (focus groups, crowdsourcing, testing, brand affinity, etc.) can be used to take a pile of ".00001% successful" ideas to (let's say) "2-3% successful" ideas...which can still be valuable if each idea takes $10K to try but could bring in millions if successf
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I agree. Purely for defensive & preventive purposes, of course.
Real Reason for funding this (Score:5, Interesting)
"This service could mitigate the diffusion of false and misleading ideas, detect hate speech and subversive propaganda, and assist in the preservation of open debate. "
Or more aptly:
"This service could mitigate free speech, detect anything we don't agree with and allow us to control the message"
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Or maybe they do just want to do what they say, and they don't have a shadowy agenda.
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Did I clear that up? I'm not necessarily saying they do, but history would dictate that it's likely.
Nice (Score:2)
assist in the preservation of open debate
That has got to be the most beautiful characterization of censorship I have ever read.
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Or both. Any new understanding of the world will be used in as many ways as people can think of using it. I wrote a novel that speculates on precisely the topic of what might happen with exactly this kind of technology, and part of the fun was thinking about how different groups might use it for good or ill: http://www.amazon.com/Darwins-... [amazon.com]
$1 million grant? (Score:2)
Shut up and take my money!
Aren't they effectively astroturfing themselves? (Score:1)
Spend a million dollars, and astroturf the meme "evil republican congress people are trying to influence you with memes".
Back in reality-world:
http://www.freedomworks.org/co... [freedomworks.org]‘one-nation’-just-liberal-astroturfing
http://mashable.com/2008/08/08... [mashable.com]
http://lonelyconservative.com/... [lonelyconservative.com]
http://dailycaller.com/2013/02... [dailycaller.com]
Politics... (Score:1)
Who invented the neologism meme? (Score:2)
That was in 2011 (Score:2)
What happens when people stop going to church (Score:1)