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Trap of Information Overdose
liwei999 2017-1-17 10:15
Today, my topic relates to the issue of information overload. We are born in the era of big data and information overload. As an NLPer (Natural Language Processor), for years I have been stuck in the belief that my sole mission is to help solve this problem of information overload. Just like Alibaba’s Jack Ma's vision that there should be no barriers for any business in this e-commerce world, my colleagues and I seem to share the vision in the community that there should be no barriers for instant access to any information amid the big data. So Google appeared, with crude keywords as basis and with its insatiable appetite to cover as big data as possible, to have solved the problem of information long tail. Today whatever your query, and however rare your information need is, you google it and you get some relevant info back. We don’t want to stop there, so we begin to criticize Google because its solution to the information on the long tail has the defect of poor data quality. Hence AI (Artificial Intelligence) is proposed and being practiced to enhance the deep processing of data (whether via deep learning or deep parsing), in an attempt to both handle big data for its long tail, as well as to drastically raise the data quality through natural language understanding (NLU). The aim is to satisfy any soul with information needs, whether explicitly requesting it or implicitly carried in the mind, by a steady flow of quality information. This is the perspective from us practitioners’ point of view, currently mixed with lots of excitement and optimism. Let us change our perspective to ask ourselves, as a consumer, what have we benefited from this exciting AI battle on information overload? Indeed, what we now get is more and more data -- to the point, high-quality, with constant and instant feeds, which we have never before been able to reach. Previously we were drowned in the overload of the information ocean, mostly garbage occasionally with a few pearls, and nowadays we end up being choked to death by over-satisfaction of quality information thanks to the incredible progress of information high-tech via AI. So the feelings are dramatically different, but the ending remains the same, both are an inescapable path to death, drowned or choked. So each day we spend more and more time in the social media among our circles of friends, on all types of news apps, or entertainment apps, with less and less time for real-life work, family and serious thinking. Numerous geniuses out there (many are my talented peers) racked their brains to study our preferences, study how to make us stick to their apps, and what tricks they can apply to drive us crazy and addicted to their products. It is the iron law that a person is no match for a calculated and dedicated world. Made of flesh and blood, each individual consumer is no match for an invisible legion of tech gurus (including myself) from businesses and their accomplices in the information industry, looking closely into our behavior and desires. So we are bound to sink to the bottom, and eventually become a slave of information. Some of us begin to see through this trap of information overdose, struggling hard to fight the addiction, and seeking self-salvation against the trend. Nevertheless, with the rapid progress of artificial intelligence and natural language technology, we see the trend clear, unstoppable and horrifying: more and more are trapped in the info, and those who can save themselves with a strong will are a definite minority. The world has n billion people, and m million organizations, each producing information non-stop every moment, which is now recorded one way or the other (e.g. in social media). Even if we raise our bar higher and higher for our information needs for work and for pleasure, to the extent of an incredible ratio to the effect of something like ten-millionth, using a variety of technology filters of information, we are still faced with info feeds from n-hundred human entities and m-organizations. There is simply no way in our lifetime to exhaust it all and catch up with its feeds. We end up feeling over-satisfied with information most of which we feel we simply cannot and should not miss. We are living in a terrible bliss of an over-satisfying world. As consumers we are doomed in this battle to fight the addiction against our own nature, trying to resist the temptation that by nature cannot be resisted. Having pointed out the problem, I have no effective remedy to this problem to offer. What I myself do is that at times, I simply shut down the channels to stay in info-diet or hungry mode, focusing on family and the accumulated to-do list of work. This seems to work and I often got my work done, without feeling I have missed that much for the information gap during the diet period, but it is not a sustainable technique (with exception perhaps of very few super guys I know whom I admire but really cannot tell whether that lifestyle is really for better or not as shutting the info channels for too long has its own side effects, or consequences, to my mind). In the end, most of us fall back to being willing slaves of information. The smarter minds among us have learned to shift between these two modes: shutting channels down for some time and going back to the normal modern way of information life. For people who want and need to kill time, for example, the retired in the lonely senior homes, info age is God-sent: their quality of killing time has never been made better. But how about the younger generation who is most vulnerable to info overdose, as much as the addiction to the crazily popular games today. The shutting the channels technique is a survival skill of middle-aged generation who needs to dedicate sufficient time to go about their daily work and life, making a living, supporting the family and keeping it running. But this technique is almost impossible for the young generation to practice, given that they are born in this info age, and social media and stuff are part of their basic lifestyle. Nevertheless, there is no short of struggles and helplessness as we observe when they are being drowned in the sea of games, social media and Internet, in front of the academic pressure and career training competition. The external world is not in the least prepared and is basically helpless to them. So are us parents. Many times we cannot resist the temptation from being enslaved in the information trap for ourselves, how can we expect our next generation to learn the balancing skill easily, considering they are at the age of exploration with tremendous curiosity and confusion. Sometimes I tell myself: why should we work so hard on info technology if we know it has both positive effects as well as huge negative impact which we have no clues how to fix. After all, we do not need to rush the entire world of life and time to be engulfed by info no matter how high quality we can make it to be. Meanwhile, I really hope to see more and more study to get invested in addressing how to help people resist the temptation of the information trap. The ideal world in my understanding should be that we stay equipped with both intelligent tools to help access quality information as nutrients to enrich our lives, as well as tools to help resist the temptation from info over-satisfaction. Translated and recompiled from the original post in my Chinese blog: 【 杞人忧天:可怕的信息极乐世界 】
个人分类: 立委科普|3179 次阅读|0 个评论
Addiction专刊: 关注中国的“药物应用”和“减缓毒害”
WileyChina 2015-3-31 20:49
Addiction 出版 中国特刊 ,关注中国的“药物应用”和“减缓毒害”。 Addiction 中国特刊,点此进入 Addiction 简介 期刊名: Addiction 影响因子( ImpactFactor ) : 4.894 2013 年 JCR 排名 : 1/35 (Substance Abuse (Social Science)); 2/18 (Substance Abuse); 13/124 (Psychiatry (Social Science)); 20/136 (Psychiatry) 期刊简介: Addiction 的各项目标包括: ♦ 通过精选用于出版的优秀论文并在审稿过程中加以提高,为瘾癖领域的高品质研究提供一个有效的出版平台, ♦ 促进瘾癖科学相关问题的讨论或者将其转化为临床实践或政策 ♦ 通过其出版和其他活动在全世界范围推动瘾癖领域的高品质研究。 Addiction 的出版范围涵盖任何有成瘾可能性的活动相关的人体临床、流行病学、实验、政策与历史研究等。 特 刊 文章开放获取 Editorial Towardsending HIV/AIDS among drug users in China (pages 1–3) Zunyou Wu, YuWang, Roger Detels and Marc Bulterys Article first published online: 23 DEC 2014 |DOI: 10.1111/add.12809 Research Reports Trackingthe evolution of drug abuse in China, 2003–10: a retrospective, self-controlledstudy (pages 4–10) Zhongwei Jia,Zhiming Liu, Ping Chu, Jennifer M. McGoogan, Minchao Cong, Jie Shi and Lin Lu Article first published online: 23 DEC 2014 |DOI: 10.1111/add.12769 Club druguse and associated high-risk sexual behaviour in six provinces in China (pages11–19) Yan-Ping Bao, Zhi-Min Liu, Jian-Hua Li, Rui-MinZhang, Wei Hao, Min Zhao, Jie Shi, Jennifer M. McGoogan and Lin Lu HIVepidemic among drug users in China: 1995–2011 (pages 20–28) Lan Wang, Wei Guo,Dongmin Li, Zhengwei Ding, Jennifer M. McGoogan, Ning Wang, Zunyou Wu, Lu Wangand for theChina National HIV/AIDS Surveillance Program Article firstpublished online: 23 DEC 2014 | DOI: 10.1111/add.12779 Who usesmethadone services in China? Monitoring the world's largest methadone programme(pages 29–39) Sheena G.Sullivan, Zunyou Wu, Keming Rou, Lin Pang, Wei Luo, Changhe Wang, Xiaobin Cao,Wenyuan Yin, Enwu Liu, Guodong Mi and for theNational Methadone MaintenanceTreatment Working Group Article firstpublished online: 23 DEC 2014 | DOI: 10.1111/add.12781 Predictorsof accessing antiretroviral therapy among HIV-positive drug users in China'sNational Methadone Maintenance Treatment Programme (pages 40–50) Yan Zhao, CynthiaX. Shi, Jennifer M. McGoogan, Keming Rou, Fujie Zhang and Zunyou Wu Article firstpublished online: 23 DEC 2014 | DOI: 10.1111/add.12782 Factorsassociated with depression and anxiety among patients attending community-basedmethadone maintenance treatment in China (pages 51–60) Wenyuan Yin, LinPang, Xiaobin Cao, Jennifer M. McGoogan, Michael Liu, Congbin Zhang, Zhijun Li,Jianhua Li and Keming Rou Article firstpublished online: 23 DEC 2014 | DOI: 10.1111/add.12780 Needle andsyringe exchange programmes and prevalence of HIV infection among intravenousdrug users in China (pages 61–67) Wei Luo, ZunyouWu, Katharine Poundstone, Jennifer M. McGoogan, Willa Dong, Lin Pang, KemingRou, Changhe Wang and Xiaobin Cao Article firstpublished online: 23 DEC 2014 | DOI: 10.1111/add.12783 Review Article Healthpromotion interventions and policies addressing excessive alcohol use: asystematic review of national and global evidence as a guide to health-carereform in China (pages 68–78) Qing Li, Thomas F.Babor, Donald Zeigler, Ziming Xuan, Donald Morisky, Melbourne F. Hovell, TobenF. Nelson, Weixing Shen and Bing Li Article firstpublished online: 23 DEC 2014 | DOI: 10.1111/add.12784
个人分类: Health Science|1685 次阅读|0 个评论

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