Lynn Marentette

Idea for an interactive timeline project based on the series of events related to our current economic crisis

To help me understand the complexity of our economic crisis, I decided to search for information from the past that might have contributed to the current set of events. The Celestial Economic Sphere, DataViz for the Finance Biz, Truthin... is the title of the post (long) that I wrote in response to the economic crisis.

As I dug up material for my post, it occurred to me that an interactive timeline might be a good way of representing what I wanted to cover. The New York Times was a treasure trove of information and I found links to resources that I have not yet explored.

In my post, I included a video clip from the movie Wall Street, from 1987, featuring Michael Douglas playing the role of Gordon Gekke giving his "Greed is Good" speech. I found a picture of President Reagan with his chart as he introduced his Reaganomics concepts. I found charts of the fall of the stock market from October 19th, 1987, otherwise known as Black Monday. I also included a September 11, 2008 panel discussion of economic experts on the Charlie Rose show.

The most interesting thing I found was created in 1998. It was a representation of stock market transactions around the world, in real-time, using stars in a planetarium. Known as the Black Shoals Stock Market Planetarium (also the Celestial Economic Sphere), it used a genetic algorithm to account for different variables. Although the project was initially developed as a parody in response to a significant drop in the UK's FTSE 100 that impacted the global market, the visualization it provided gives us a sense of the interconnectedness and complexity of the world's economy.

I'd be interested in hearing from anyone who has worked on an interactive timeline or has interest in working on a time-line project. I would like the time-line to show how economic events are related to many different disciplines, regions, and decisions/policies.

Tags: blogging, collaborate, crisis, economics, economy, education, interactive, market, stock, technology

4 Comments

Paul Schumann Comment by Paul Schumann on September 27, 2008 at 12:39pm
I really admire and appreciate all the work you've done leading to a timeline of the crisis. I fear that the economic system we have is complex (in the mathematical sense) and hence cause and effect are not related. Read my blog at http://incollaboration.ning.com/profiles/blog/show?id=2314081%3ABlogPost%3A488. Can we talk?
Lynn Marentette Comment by Lynn Marentette on September 27, 2008 at 2:40pm
Paul,

I took a quick look at your blog and noticed that you have a few posts that hit on some of the topics I've been thinking about over the past few weeks..The easiest think is to create a web-based version, so teachers could use it a tool for their students, using interactive whiteboards, or accessed through libraries that have interactive whiteboards.

The fancier version could be in the form of an exhibit, maybe a traveling one, one one of those new multi-touch wall screens. Different people could interact with it at the same time.

Lynn
andrew bendelow Comment by andrew bendelow on October 5, 2008 at 6:24pm
As a matter of fact, Lynn, I've been trying to find a good open source timeline for my 17-18 yr. old Popular Literature students. Here's our start of the "popularity timeline"-- https://wiki-land.wikispaces.com/Popularity+Timeline
It's not as vital as the economic health of society, for without your subject (you're an economist?) nothing as frivolous as popular culture could arise.
Wishing you well, and hoping we can confer if not collaborate.
andrew
Lynn Marentette Comment by Lynn Marentette on October 5, 2008 at 8:00pm
Andrew,

I am not an economist. I am a school psychologist and have taken computer courses over the past five years or so, part time. I took a graduate course in information visualization this year, and that is when I started thinking about ways data visualization could support better decision-making. When we had a few economic sputters earlier this year, I decided to listen to CNBC on XM radio while driving to work and back.

I thought it was interesting that when economist and finance industry experts were confused by economic events, they would attribute things to "psychology" or "herd mentality", and factors related to consumer confidence, whatever that really means. I didn't really know at the time that "Behavioral Finance" was a field of study!

It dawned on me that even the most brightest economist and financial experts must lack the appropriate visualization tools to help them manage and analyze complex data. Otherwise, why would so many people be so wrong in their calculations and predictions? Their tools could not make the hidden seen, despite sophisticated algorithms and high-powered computers.

If all of these bright minds couldn't figure things out, if our leaders in business, industry, and government couldn't figure things out to make wise decisions, then what about the rest of us?

An example of an interactive timeline that is sort of what I have in mind can be found on the ArtMuseum.net website: Multimedia: From Wagner to Virtual Reality

I'd like the time-line to be navigated on a SmartBoard or touch-screen display.

Do you have access to an interactive whiteboard?

Lynn Marentette

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