Twitter, YouTube, and Another Man’s Shoes

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Two things came across my RSS feeds today that show how technology is impacting our information environment. First, YouTube has added a News Manager (Olivia) to promote Citizen News content:

Second was a blog entry by CNET’s Dan Farber on Twitter as a viable means of spreading information. (See Jon’s last entry below, too.)

I am simultaneously excited by the prospects of such a wide range of information and the complications of it. How do I find the interesting and important stuff? (Certainly not always the same thing. Think Mentos and Diet Coke.) How do I manage the information flows that meet the interesting or important criteria? And a perhaps cautionary concern (or call it cynical) of how I can perform due diligence on all this stuff? How do I determine quickly enough to be useful what is reliable, objective, white-washed, agenda-laden, mean-spirited, or just plain wrong? We see errors enough in the official reporting establishments that suggest this is no easy task (like the go-to CNN footage showing Chinese soldiers in Tibet that turned out to be Nepalese soldiers–oops).

There are continually emerging ways of monitoring information–from RSS feeds, feed consolidators, listservs, trolling MySpace, Facebook, and Twitter, and, or course, just hearing about things from friends. For me, the challenge is to make sure that I am not just keeping up with information, but trying to achieve a balance in perspective. (My husband John reads the front pages of 30 foreign language papers for this, when he is not actually visiting the places he’s curious about–he reads a lot faster than I do, language issues notwithstanding)

While I frequently wonder how these bloggers, emailers, and YouTubers know so many interesting people, I remind myself that generally our sources are self-selected, and therefore make it unlikely that we get opinions from the “other side” whatever that might be. With the abundance of information, it becomes all the easier to reaffirm our own points of view. To give a nod to cognitive psychology, it really cuts down on the cognitive dissonance and that pesky discomfort that comes from uncertainty.

The challenge is to make sure that knowing all this stuff doesn’t make us so scared that we don’t want to know it. There are no shortage of advice from dignitaries such as Yogi Berra, Will Rogers, and St. Augustin about seeing things from another’s point of view. It turns out a lot of things are at stake, just ask the social and political scientists who spend time trying to resolve intergroup conflict.

The worst kinds of intractable conflict starts with fear in our own brains. The great thing about the new journalism is that it’s not linear; it comes at you from everywhere. A lot of people worry about this, but I think it’s a good thing. With luck, a bunch of stuff will sneak in our brains that we hardly notice and wedge us out of our comfort zone into seeing a bigger picture.

About Dr. Pamela Rutledge

Pamela Rutledge is the Director of the Media Psychology Research Center. Her area of expertise is positive and cognitive psychology applied to emerging technologies and the use and impact of social media and transmedia storytelling for branding, advocacy, and messaging. She is Adjunct Faculty in the School of Psychology at Fielding Graduate University and an instructor of Media Psychology, Social Media and Transmedia Storytelling at UCLA Extension and UC Irvine Extension. Pam is also on the advisory board for UC Irvine Extension Business School's certificate program in Internet and Social Media Marketing. Through A Think Lab, Pam develops workshops and presentations to teach Transmedia Storytelling for Organizations, Advocacy, and Branding.

Comments

  1. Dee says:

    How long has this blog been up? I just found it and really like it. I am an ed psych grad student.
    AND I am actually exploring blogs for an assignment. I wonder–why are there no comments on this one? Is it just so new?

  2. Pamela Rutledge says:

    Hi Dee,
    Thanks so much for your comment! We’ve had this blog up for only a few months. I hope the word gets out and we generate lots more interest and comments. We want to provide a platform for an ongoing, multidisciplinary dialogue. There are lots of opinions about the role of media technologies in society (individual, groups, nations…). We need voices from all disciplines and experiences to better understand how we are using, changing, and growing in this new environment!

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