Timescape_01 from Local Projects on Vimeo.
Sept. 11, 2001, means many things — and conflicting things — to each of us. Charged emotions, and debates over a history that's still so recent, made it really hard to design the National September 11 Memorial and Museum in Lower Manhattan. It was so difficult, in fact, that museum curators decided to try something quite new. They decided to hand off major curatorial duties to a computer algorithm.
Analytic Stop In An Emotional Journey
Inside the museum, almost immediately, you see and hear the faces and voices of the dead and those who witnessed the events.
Turn a corner and there's a tall steel pillar that spans two floors. It has a big dent — the exact point where the nose of the first plane hit the first tower.
Downstairs, Lynn Rigney is showing her daughter a bombed-out firetruck that was pulled from the rubble. Even though she remembers that day vividly, Rigney says, "it just makes it a lot more real."
Nearly every inch of the Sept. 11 museum is designed to evoke emotion. With one big exception: The exhibit "Timescape" is designed to create distance. And its curator is an algorithm.
"This is a big and messy world," says Jake Barton, founder of Local Projects, the media design firm that programmed it. "And this piece isn't necessarily trying to write a historic narrative. What it's trying to do is chart the impact of 9/11 on our world in a variety of places."
The museum gave "Timescape" a wall about 100 feet wide — a big chunk of real estate in the museum. The algorithm combs through over 100 news sources and 2 million articles at lightning speed. It finds key terms related to Sept. 11 and to each other — like "flights," "Boeing" and "Federal Aviation Administration" — and then projects them onto the wall, along with specific headlines.
Some of those headlines are surprising, Barton says. "You wouldn't necessarily think, oh, there's an article about Delta Air Lines coming out of bankruptcy and having a banner year. Like what does that have to do with 9/11? Well 9/11 kind of pushed them into bankruptcy."
Solving The Problem Of Human Bias
The algorithm curator does not fact-check — for example, sift out incorrect reports about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. But the museum's director, Alice Greenwald, says it solves another human problem: our limited perspective.
"We're still living in the aftermath of this event. It's not something that happened 50 years ago, or 150 years ago and we know the consequences of that event," she says. "So we weren't, from a curatorial point of view, able to wrap things up."
Human curators made lots of tough ethical decisions about using voice mails from people on hijacked planes and pictures of people jumping out of burning buildings.
But, Greenwald says, she couldn't entrust a single person to hand-select a few moments and stitch together a story. An algorithm, on the other hand, finds correlations. "So there's a kind of objectivity to that that you don't have in a more subjective, organized, curated environment," Greenwald says.
An Impartial Algorithm?
Mary Anne Staniszewski, an art historian at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, rejects that idea. "No, it's not objective because an algorithm did it."
Staniszewski has seen many artists use algorithms to create part or all of an image. While "Timescape" gives the algorithm a much more prominent role than is typical, she says, it's not free of bias.
For instance, it only reads English-language news sources. "Very typical of an American point of view of things," Staniszewski says.
Reacting To The Data
When I look at "Timescape" and see a headline about the crash near Shanksville, Pa., I feel like I'm chasing words on a wall. But visitor Edward Fleming has a flash of pride.
"The people on board took over control of the plane," he recalls. "It crashed because of them taking over control. At least it didn't get to its designated spot."
Humberto Suarez has another kind of response. He's resting after looking hard for the face of his cousin who died in the towers.
"Over there on the wall," he points behind him. "It's very hard to find. You need very good eyes. But we did it. My wife and my sister-in-law, we found them."
Suarez is so tired from that hourlong search, he's giving this wall a blank look.
Transcript
ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:
From NPR News, this is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED. I'm Robert Siegel.
MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:
I'm Melissa Block.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)
BLOCK: We begin All Tech Considered today with a visit to the new 9/11 Memorial Museum in lower Manhattan. The museum documents the terrorist attacks of September 11th, 2001, and their aftermath. Its exhibits have raised plenty of emotion and debate. And one question has been who should curate those exhibits - people or a machine? That's because curators took an unusual approach to one display. They left it to a computer to decide what news stories related to 9/11 pop up on screen. Here is NPR's Aarti Shahani.
AARTI SHAHANI, BYLINE: Inside the museum - almost immediately - you see and hear the faces and voices of the dead and those who witnessed.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Oh, my god. You don't know? The plane just crashed into the World Trade Centers.
SHAHANI: There's a tall steel pillar that spans two floors. It's got a big dent - the exact point where the first plane hit the first tower. Downstairs, Lynn Rigney is showing her daughter a bombed-out fire truck that was pulled from the rubble.
LYNN RIGNEY: It just makes it a lot more real, you know, even though I was there - I mean, not there, but I remember it. It just makes it a lot more real.
SHAHANI: Nearly every inch of the 9/11 museum is designed to evoke emotion with one big exception. The exhibit Timescape is designed to create distance and its curator is an algorithm.
JAKE BARTON: This is a big and messy world. And this piece isn't necessarily trying to write a historic narrative.
SHAHANI: Jake Barton with Local Projects, the media design firm that wrote the algorithm.
BARTON: What it's trying to do is chart the impact of 9/11 on our world in a variety of different places.
SHAHANI: The museum gave Timescape a wall that's over a hundred feet wide, which is a big chunk of real estate. The algorithm combs through a hundred news sources and 2 million articles at lightning speed. It finds key terms related to 9/11 and to each other - like flights Boeing and Federal Aviation Administration - and then projects them onto the wall along with specific headlines. And sometimes those headlines are surprising.
BARTON: You wouldn't necessarily think oh, there's an article about Delta Airlines coming out of bankruptcy and having a banner year. Like, what does that have to do with 9/11? It's like, well, 9/11 kind of pushed them into bankruptcy.
SHAHANI: The algorithm curator does not fact check - for example, sift out incorrect reports about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. But the museum's lead curator, Alice Greenwald, says it solves another human problem - the problem of our limited perspective.
ALICE GREENWALD: We're still living in the aftermath of this event. It's not something we can say OK, this happened 50 years ago or 150 years ago and we know the consequences of that event.
SHAHANI: Human curators made lots of tough ethical decisions about using voicemails from people on hijacked planes and pictures of people jumping out of burning buildings. But Greenwald says she couldn't entrust a single person to hand-select a few moments and stitch together a story. An algorithm, on the other hand, finds correlations.
GREENWALD: So there's a kind of objectivity to that that you don't have in a more, you know, subjective, organized, curated environment.
MARYANNE STANISZEWSKI: No, it's not objective because an algorithm did it.
SHAHANI: Maryanne Staniszewski is an art historian at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
STANISZEWSKI: Objectivity is an unusual word to choose.
SHAHANI: Staniszewski has seen many artists use algorithms to create part or all of an image. While the 9/11 exhibit gives the algorithm a much more prominent role than is typical, she says, it's not free of bias. Like, it only reads English-language news sources.
STANISZEWSKI: Very typical of an American point-of-view of things.
SHAHANI: When I look at Timescape and see a headline about Shankesville, I feel like I'm chasing words on a wall. But visitor Edward Fleming has a flash of pride.
EDWARD FLEMING: The people on board took over the control of the plane and crashed it. It crashed because of them taking over control. At least, it didn't get to its designated spot.
SHAHANI: Humberto Suarez has another kind of response. He's resting after looking hard for the face of his cousin, who died in the towers.
HUMBERTO SUAREZ: Over there on the wall, it's very hard to find. You need very good eyes to know and to find it. But we did it. My wife and my sister-in-law, we found it.
SHAHANI: Suarez is so tired from that hour-long search, he's giving this wall a blank look. Aarti Shahani, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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