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Everybody Lies: What the Internet Can Tell Us About Who We Really Are [Kõva köide]

3.91/5 (42120 hinnangut Goodreads-ist)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 352 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x153 mm, kaal: 662 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN-10: 1408894718
  • ISBN-13: 9781408894712
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 352 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x153 mm, kaal: 662 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN-10: 1408894718
  • ISBN-13: 9781408894712
Teised raamatud teemal:
THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER AN ECONOMIST BOOK OF THE YEAR 2017

Insightful, surprising and with ground-breaking revelations about our society, Everybody Lies exposes the secrets embedded in our internet searches, with a foreword by bestselling author Steven Pinker

Everybody lies, to friends, lovers, doctors, pollsters and to themselves. In Internet searches, however, people confess their secrets about sexless marriages, mental health problems, even racist views. Seth Stephens-Davidowitz, an economist and former Google data scientist, shows that this could just be the most important dataset ever collected.

This huge database of secrets unprecedented in human history offers astonishing, even revolutionary, insights into humankind. Anxiety, for instance, does not increase after a terrorist attack. Crime levels drop when a violent film is released. And racist searches are no higher in Republican areas than in Democrat ones.

Stephens-Davidowitz reveals information we can use to change our culture, and the questions were afraid to ask that might be essential to our health both emotional and physical. Insightful, funny, and always surprising, Everybody Lies exposes the biases and secrets embedded deeply within us, at a time when things are harder to predict than ever.

Arvustused

This book is about a whole new way of studying the mind ... Time and again my preconceptions about my country and my species were turned upside-down by Stephens-Davidowitz's discoveries ... endlessly fascinating -- Steven Pinker, author of The Better Angels of Our Nature Move over Freakonomics. Move over Moneyball. This brilliant book is the best demonstration yet of how big data plus cleverness can illuminate and then move the world. Read it and you'll see life in a new way -- Lawrence Summers, President Emeritus and Charles W. Eliot University Professor of Harvard University A whirlwind tour of the human psyche The empirical findings in Everybody Lies are so intriguing that the book would be a page-turner even if it were structured as a mere laundry list. But Mr Stephens-Davidowitz also puts forward a deft argument * Economist * Everybody Lies relies on big data to rip the veneer of what we like to think of as our civilized selves. A book that is fascinating, shocking, sometimes horrifying, but above all, revealing -- Tim Wu, author of The Attention Merchants Freakonomics on steroids--this book shows how big data can give us surprising new answers to important and interesting questions. Seth Stephens-Davidowitz brings data analysis alive in a crisp, witty manner, providing a terrific introduction to how big data is shaping social science -- Raj Chetty, Professor of Economics at Stanford University Everybody Lies is a spirited and enthralling examination of the data of our lives. Drawing on a wide variety of revelatory sources, Seth Stephens-Davidowitz will make you cringe, chuckle, and wince at the people you thought we were -- Christian Rudder, author of Dataclysm A tour de force--a well-written and entertaining journey through big data that, along the way, happens to put forward an important new perspective on human behavior itself. If you want to understand what's going on in the world, or even with your friends, this is one book you should read cover to cover -- Peter Orszag, Managing Director, Lazard Brimming with intriguing anecdotes and counterintuitive facts, Stephens-Davidowitz does his level best to help usher in a new age of human understanding, one digital data point at a time -- Fortune, Best New Business Books Stephens-Davidowitz, a former data scientist at Google, has spent the last four years poring over Internet search data . . . What he found is that Internet search data might be the Holy Grail when it comes to understanding the true nature of humanity * New York Post * Everybody Lies is an astoundingly clever and mischievous exploration of what big data tells us about everyday life. Seth Stephens-Davidowitz is as good a data storyteller as I have ever met -- Steven Levitt, co-author, Freakonomics A sobering guide to how much of ourselves we're putting online and what private companies might do with that information -- Helen Lewis * New Statesman 'Books of the Year' * Its a wonderful book, but I would say that, wouldnt I? -- Danny Doyle Stephens-Davidowitz censures academics and other researchers for ignoring the largest data set ever collected, and he is probably not overstating it when he claims that the continuing study of these searches will radically expand our understanding of mankind. This undemanding book is a useful first step towards that knowledge -- Oliver Thring * Sunday Times * Everybody Lies is an absorbing, and impassioned examination of new data sources ... as an introduction to our fascinating new universe of data, Everybody Lies is hard to beat -- John Thornhill * Financial Times * Seth Stephens-Davidowitz in his book Everybody Lies, tackles the discrepancy between the ideal version of ourselves we present to the world via social media and the confessions that we would never post there -- Judy Ketteler * International New York Times *

Muu info

Insightful, surprising and with ground-breaking revelations about our society, Everybody Lies exposes the secrets embedded in our internet searches, with a foreword by bestselling author Steven Pinker
Foreword ix
Steven Pinker
Introduction: The Outlines of a Revolution 1(24)
PART I DATA, BIG AND SMALL
1 Your Faulty Gut
25(20)
PART II THE POWERS OF BIG DATA
2 Was Freud Right?
45(10)
3 Data Reimagined
55(50)
Bodies as Data
62(12)
Words as Data
74(23)
Pictures as Data
97(8)
4 Digital Truth Serum
105(60)
The Truth About Sex
112(16)
The Truth About Hate and Prejudice
128(12)
The Truth About the Internet
140(5)
The Truth About Child Abuse and Abortion
145(5)
The Truth About Your Facebook Friends
150(3)
The Truth About Your Customers
153(5)
Can We Handle the Truth?
158(7)
5 Zooming In
165(42)
What's Really Going On in Our Counties, Cities, and Towns?
172(18)
How We Fill Our Minutes and Hours
190(7)
Our Doppelgangers
197(8)
Data Stories
205(2)
6 All the World's a Lab
207(36)
The ABCs of A/B Testing
209(12)
Nature's Cruel---but Enlightening---Experiments
221(22)
PART III BIG DATA: HANDLE WITH CARE
7 Big Data, Big Schmata? What It Cannot Do
243(14)
The Curse of Dimensionality
246(6)
The Overemphasis on What Is Measurable
252(5)
8 Mo Data, Mo Problems? What We Shouldn't Do
257(14)
The Danger of Empowered Corporations
257(9)
The Danger of Empowered Governments
266(5)
Conclusion: How Many People Finish Books? 271(14)
Acknowledgments 285(4)
Notes 289(30)
Index 319
Seth Stephens-Davidowitz is a New York Times op-ed contributor, a visiting lecturer at The Wharton School, and a former Google data scientist. He received a BA in philosophy from Stanford, where he graduated Phi Beta Kappa, and a PhD in economics from Harvard. His research which uses new, big data sources to uncover hidden behaviours and attitudes has appeared in the Journal of Public Economics and other prestigious publications. He lives in New York City.

sethsd.com / @SethS_D