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sources
What is urgent for me in 2020? 
The search for love.
If I look at myself, and see what keeps me always 24/7 busy it's: Relationships. I'm always open, and looking for one. because I have the feeling that I need one. Where does that come from? Good question, I think society portrays a beautiful image of the: perfect couple. Even tho it doesn't exist. When I look at social media I see, couple, couple at the beach, couple in a club, couple eating dinner, couple having some cute cuddles together. It doesn't matter where I look, I will always be exposed at the perfect couple. So you get the feeling that you need one, what happens next? You're going to download tinder, happn, baboo or other dating apps, trying to find that one. But you get exposed to a database full of girlfriend material. Endless photo's of girls. Endless. How do you deal with that? What effect does that database have on us? Can we still find true love, without being influenced in what the: "perfect couple" is? 
subjects I would like to research: 
1. The pressure of having a relationship
2. Being exposed through do so many possible relationships
Notes: Urgent Publishing: Why did post-truth become urgent?
algorithm: a systematic, step-by-step way to solve a problem

The tricky part in designing the algorithm figuring out how to take something mysterious, human attraction, and break it into components that a computer can work with.

computer works with numbers.





Notes: Speed Dating and Decision-Making: Why Less Is More
Yet new research does point out a different "dating problem: being confronted with a large number of choices can make it harder to make a good decision"

" participants presented with more potential partners did not experience any greater emotional satisfaction than participants presented with fewer options."

"extensive or limited amount of potential consumer choices (e.g. chocolates, jam flavors) more people actually end up making purchases, and are happier, when the choice environment only offers a limited set of options."

"speed-dating events where the amount of potential partners to choose from is relatively large, people predominantly pay attention to information that is easily accessible, such as age, height, body mass index, etc., rather than information that is harder to observe, such as occupation and education."

“recognition heuristic.” The recognition heuristic states that “if one of two objects is recognized and the other is not then we should infer that the recognized object has the higher value.”

"that you are able to judge the appeal of a face in less than 13 milliseconds. That’s right, research strongly suggests that your mind has decided on the attractiveness of a face before you are even consciously aware of the fact that you have seen one."


petermaakt:
notes
All sources can be found on the "sources" page in the menu
The recognition heuristic:
originally termed the recognition principle, has been used as a model in the psychology of judgment and decision making and as a heuristic in artificial intelligence. The goal is to make inferences about a criterion that is not directly accessible to the decision maker, based on recognition retrieved from memory. This is possible if recognition of alternatives has relevance to the criterion. For two alternatives, the heuristic is defined as

If one of two objects is recognized and the other is not, then infer that the recognized object has the higher value with respect to the criterion.
Notes: Barry Schwartz - the paradox of choice
More notes can be found on the right
>>>>>>>>>
Notes: Barry Schwartz - What for role does luck play in your life? 
Notes: Urgent Publishing: Why did post-truth become urgent?
A dichotomy /daɪˈkɒtəmi/ :
is a partition of a whole (or a set) into two parts (subsets). In other words, this couple of parts must be

jointly exhaustive: everything must belong to one part or the other, and
mutually exclusive: nothing can belong simultaneously to both parts.
Such a partition is also frequently called a bipartition.

The two parts thus formed are complements. In logic, the partitions are opposites if there exists a proposition such that it holds over one and not the other.

Treating continuous variables or multicategorical variables as binary variables is called dichotomization. The discretization error inherent in dichotomization is temporarily ignored for modeling purposes.
petermaakt:
spreads
The keyword sentence
- exclusiviteit
- pre-la
- Re-la
- Bindingsangst
- Paradox
- keuzes
- te veel
- communicating
-patient autonomy
- monogame
- lat relatie
- open relatie
- polyamorie

Exclusivity, lat, pre, re - la, monogamous whatever you are, you're classified as patient autonomy with too much choice.

petermaakt:
spreads
Notes: Urgent Publishing: Why did post-truth become urgent?
The problem with “Hang the DJ,” especially when you view it as a companion to “San Junipero,” comes down to the idea of choice. In “San Junipero,” hope and happiness come out of the protagonists making the conscious, informed decision to be together. Technology enables and informs that choice, but the final utopian vision depends on Yorkie and Kelly exercising free will in concert with this world-bending tech. “Hang the DJ” tries to do the same thing — the triumphant climax is Frank and Amy choosing one another, and they do it by deciding to thumb their noses at the Establishment and throw it all away for one another — but in the very next breath, the episode undermines its damn-the-man sensibility. The characters who actually make a choice, the Frank and Amy who actually exercise free will, get destroyed so their real-world counterparts can abdicate the decision-making power to an algorithm. Simulated Frank and Amy make the choice to fight the System, but real-world Frank and Amy end up embracing it. The chorus of the Smith’s “Panic” plays in the background of the bar where they meet, and its repeated exhortation to “hang the DJ” is a celebration of fighting the power and doing it for yourself. But in real life, Amy and Frank looked down at their phones and trusted an algorithm that they’re a 99.8 percent match. To root for their future together, we have to root for them to embrace the power of that algorithm. We have to root for them to blindly do whatever their phones tell them to do.
Amy and Frank looked down at their phones and trusted an algorithm that they’re a 99.8 percent match. To root for their future together, we have to root for them to embrace the power of that algorithm. We have to root for them to blindly do whatever their phones tell them to do.
petermaakt:
needs to crave love? 
petermaakt:
What next/mid-term feedback? 
petermaakt:
Mid-term feedback? 
Problem: He's single-dating apps.

"we need a relationship"

The paradox of choice - never satisfied so many choices, pop ups.

Articles about relationships
Kimmy: What are you excited about? 
- to give the reader a feeling f being overwhelmed

All the squares are text about relationships. How are you gonna do that? 
Party design/party writing.
Gijs: It is clickbait.

The titles of the text, changing it.

ads are very different from texts
Kimmy: collect the strategies and tweak them. How do you implement them? 

Kimmy: the gesture of the swiping = good.
people on tinder always frustrated. You only see one face: Gambling





Feedback Presentatie
Arjan: You can only read one, you can read all the texts.

Kimmy: there needs to be criteria of how do you make the right decision.

Arjan: Maximizer.

Gijs: Booking.com, making you feel you have to book bow.

Do you want to focus to be on relationships? 

What kind of content are you giving.
Tinder
Gambling
<<<<>>>>
What is the connection between Tinder and gambling? 
1) What do you risk with Tinder in order to win a prize (money, monetary value)? 
A) The risk is not finding the best looking person there is. You don't know who is coming next.

2) What is the prize you can win with Tinder? 
The prize is matching the best looking person possible.

3) Why would you want to keep playing? 
You want to keep playing because there are endless options (persons) to match with. You don't know who is coming next, prince charming could be the next one.
Why is tinder so populair?
Questions about Tinder & gambling
Who Is Most Likely to Use Tinder Compulsively?
"A compulsion, at least as it is experienced in obsessive-compulsive disorder, does not include the experience of pleasure"

"While people who have addictions suffer all manner of discomfort, the desire to use the substance or engage in the behavior is based on the expectation that it will be pleasurable."
petermaakt:
Assessment presentation
Feedback Presentatie
Your concept centers around subverting the functionalities of tinder to raise the question if you should judge a book by its cover OR that we base our relationship potential on what a person looks like. Using this mechanism as a way to get access to content can be valuable, but exploring further what questions you are raising and what role tinder or a tinder like mechanism plays in this is needed.
In your current proposal you re-affirm the mechanisms of Tinder while the motivation for the user isn’t clear.
petermaakt:
Plusplan
Mijn concept voor Major 3.1 was: Doormiddel van een Tinder mechanisme toe te passen bij het uitkiezen van verschillende artikelen, wou ik of een vraag beantwoorden of een statement maken. Doordat het concept hierdoor nog tussen twee doelen valt is het concept niet sterk genoeg en heeft het niet zijn potentieel behaalt. Ik moet daarom gaan kiezen tussen de twee doelen doormiddel, dit wil ik doen door met allebei een klein prototype te maken. Hierdoor kan ik namelijk gaan der weg weten wat nou de echte vragen of statements zijn.

Feedback:
Tijdens mijn Assessment presentatie werd verteld dat ik veel feedback moest vragen. Ook is dit essenstieel om de motivatie hoog te houden. Daarom heb ik elke week 3 keer een feedback moment. 2x met de leraren en 1x met Hannah kloosterman en andere aanwezigen van de van Nelle studio.

Documentatie:
Wordt gedaan op de huidige hotglue=
https://peterwojakowski.hotglue.me/?hybrid-publishing

Relevantie:
Bij m'n practise Datadesign heb ik veel geleerd over prototypen & doelen stellen, ik ben erg gemotiveerd om deze kennis toe te passen bij m'n major project.

Planning:
Week 1= 2 Prototypes
Week 2= 2 Prototype + Planning verdere uitwerkingen van een van de twee.
Week 3= Uitwerking
Week 4= Uitwerking & presentatie.
Plusplan 1.0
[12:35] Spreeuwenberg, K.D. (Kimmy)

Not yet approved. In your description you write that you want to produce two prototypes and reflect on their potential. It does not really become clear what these two prototypes are. Hopefully this is clear to your-self, otherwise it could become difficult
to actually start working. A clear planning is also missing, this is an opportunity to make the prototypes also clearer. It would be valuable to cut-up the process in clearer steps and describe this per week.




Plusplan 1.0 - Feedback
Problem:
Choices that users of tinder make are mostly based on appearance. This gets encouraged by the game effect that the app has. Would she like me? Would I have a match? Would be the next person be hotter? So many options (people) to chose from.

Goal:
Showing that tinder mechanisms have a negative impact on how we treat appearance and the inner (content).

How:
Applying the tinder mechanism to an other subject, where the user would interact with the product.

Target Audience:
18 - 24
Users or non users of tinder or other dating apps.

Prototypes:
With the prototypes I want to test my product on the target audience and see whether it will be achieved. Hereby I want to gain data and reflect on that.

Planning,
Week 1:
- Define problem and goal
- Make a visual moodboard
- Make first sketches of prototype 1
- Updating Hotglue
- Search for Target audience candidate
- Come up with questions to gain data for the prototype 1

Week 2:
- Finish prototype 1
- Test it and gain feedback
- Reflect on it, prepare for prototype 2
- Sketching prototype 2.

Week 3:
- Finish prototype 2
- Test it and gain feedback
- Reflect on it, prepare for prototype 3
- Sketching prototype 3.

Week 4:
- Finish prototype 2
- Test it and gain feedback
- Making online presentation/medium




Plusplan 2.0
[15:11] Heij, G.W.C. de (Gijs)
Hi Peter,

Thanks for your adjusted version. It's good to see you've defined clear steps in the process. Approved.
Plusplan 2.0 - Feedback
petermaakt:
Day: 05 - 06
petermaakt:
Day: 07 - 11
Concept:

- Ux > swiping (you wouldn't want to buy a house on tinder or with the gesture).
- Short attention span
- Analysing interaction
- swiping is dismissive
- very binary
- placing it in a different context
- "exaggerate > subvert > dismissive > How do you navigate through the text
- Information = Relevant? 
- Which questions do you want to get answered? 
- What does the design say about......
Feedback Kimmy
Concept
Test how I can make a screenshot of a online article visual appealing where you cannot read or recognise the text.

So instead of using pictures of authors to base your decision on, you base your decision on the examples to the right >>>>
Original screenshot
Gif of all the 37 examples
The 37 examples
Feedback Gijs
Hoe onderzoekt dit artikel het swipe effect? 
> Wil ik? 
> >Spelelement verdwenen
>>> je kan niet meer winnen
> >>>Wat win je nu uberhaupt? 
>>>>>Beeldonderzoek
>>>>>>Niet meteen duidelijk maken
>>>>>>>Filters
>>>>>>>>Het gaat nu elke keer op elkaar lijken
>>>>>>>>>Wat is het nut van het swipen? 
>>>>>>>>>>Oude kranten, Geen koppen = kop: geeft samenvatting > Nos clickbait artikelen

> Typography overnemen van artikelen
>> Beeld verdwijnd
>>> Hoe herken je nu de artikelen? 
>>>>Zoals krant of een tedtalk

Lezers trekken
> Titels geven een statement
>> verleiding terug laten kopen
>>> Hoe kan ik verleiding terugkrijgen in een tekst?

>Algoritmes swipen jou
>> In het begin vragen beantwoorden
>>> dan swipen de algoritmes jou als het waren gebaseerd op keywords
>>>> Tekst over jezelf worden die terugkomen in je bio



petermaakt:
Day: 12 -
Text Analyser
Basing your choice of text on information you get out of a text analyser. Like the examples on the right.

http://www.roadtogrammar.com/textanalysis/
http://www.roadtogrammar.com/textanalysis/