Syllabus

Course Meeting Times

Lectures: 2 sessions / week, 2 hours / session

Course Perspective and Description

The emergence of online social networks opens up unprecedented opportunities to read the collective mind, discovering emergent trends while they are still being hatched by small groups of creative individuals. The Web has become a mirror of the real world, allowing researchers in predictive analytics to study and better understand why some new ideas change our lives, while others never make it from the drawing board of the innovator.

Diversity begets creativity—in this seminar we tap the amazing power of swarm creativity on the Web by studying and working together as Collaborative Innovation Networks (COINs). As interdisciplinary teams of MIT management, Savannah College of Art and Design, University of Cologne informatics, and Aalto University software engineering students we will explore how to discover latest trends on the Web, and how to make them succeed in online social networks.

We study a wide range of methods for predictive analytics (coolhunting) and online social marketing (coolfarming), mostly based on social network analysis and the emerging science of collaboration. Our methods are based on analysis of large corpora of digital traces of human activity, in particular the Web, Blogs, online forums, social networking sites, e-mail archives, phone logs, and face-to-face interaction through using sociometric badges. Students will also learn to use our own unique MIT-developed Condor tool for Web mining, social network analysis, and trend prediction.

Students will be asked to do preparatory readings. During class, small teams will be asked to present an overview of research topics based on the papers listed below. In the second half of the seminar, small student teams with participants from MIT, SCAD, Aalto University (Helsinki), and University of Cologne (Germany) will work on their own trend analysis, prediction, and viral marketing projects using Web mining and dynamic SNA tools and methods, gaining invaluable insights about global virtual collaboration and about themselves as members of cross-disciplinary global virtual teams.

Course Norms and Expectations

Because this course relies heavily on class participation for its success, class norms and expectations regarding class behavior are very important:

  1. Attendance at every class is required. Please schedule outside activities at times other than when 15.599 meets. Please arrive on time and stay from the beginning of class to the end. You are allowed up to two excused absences before missing class seriously affects your grade. For classes you must miss, it is your responsibility to find out from your classmates what materials were covered, what items were distributed in class, and what key points were collectively advanced.
  2. Please come to class prepared to discuss the readings. For each theory class a small team of students is asked to briefly present major findings and prepare a set of questions to guide the others through the discussion.
  3. For the teamwork and virtual collaboration sessions, being globally connected is essential, so bring your laptop to be able to connect with colleagues at other locations in virtual collaboration sessions (Savannah, Helsinki, Cologne) for the second half of the course (virtual collaboration sessions unavailable to OCW users).

Grading

ACTIVITIES PERCENTAGES
Class participation 20%
Midterm project 20%
Case presentations 20%
Final team project 40%

Course Info

Instructor
As Taught In
Fall 2011
Level
Learning Resource Types
Lecture Notes
Projects
Presentation Assignments
Programming Assignments