We Feel Fine

Last updated

We Feel Fine is an interactive website, artwork, and book created by Jonathan Harris and Sep Kamvar that searches the internet every 10 minutes for expressions of human emotion on blogs and then displays the results in several visually-rich dynamic representations. [1] [2] Created in 2005 and launched in 2006, We Feel Fine was turned into a book in 2009. [3] [4] [5]

Contents

History

Sep Kamvar and Jonathan Harris started We Feel Fine in August 2005 as both a data visualization project and an online artwork. [6] [7] The site was launched officially on May 8, 2006. [8] [9] It has toured regularly and been exhibited as an artwork all over the world since its launch. [10] [11] In 2009, Kamvar and Harris took the findings from the four years since they launched the project and turned them into a book called "We Feel Fine: An Almanac of Human Emotion". [5] [12] [13]

Website and exhibitions

We Feel Fine is an interactive web-based experience built on top of a data collection engine that scours blog posts every 10 minutes for occurrences of the phrases "I feel" or "I am feeling" and then saves into a database the sentences in which those phrases and any of the 5,000 pre-identified feelings are found. [14] [15] The sentences and their attendant feelings are then organized and displayed visually in 6 distinct "movements" called Madness, Murmurs, Montage, Mobs, Metrics, and Mounds. [15] [16] Users navigate between the movements in an applet. [17] Kamvar and Harris have made a We Feel Fine API available with the intent of allowing other artists to create pieces about human emotion. [18] The site currently collects approximately 15,000 - 20,000 new feelings every day. [4] [19] Since its launch in 2006, We Feel Fine has also been exhibited internationally in galleries, museums, and festivals, including: [10] [11]

List of "We Feel Fine" Exhibitions
LocationMuseumExhibitionDates
Prague, Czech Republic Laufen GalleryGenArtSeptember 25, 2006 - October 20, 2006 [20]
Seoul, Korea Triad New Media GalleryFabrica: I've Been Waiting For YouNovember 16. 2006 - December 17, 2006 [21]
Houston, Texas Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Color Into Light: Selections from the MFAH Collection [22] December 13, 2008 - April 5, 2009 [23]
Park City, Utah Sundance Film Festival New FrontiersJanuary 15, 2009 - January 25, 2009 [24]
Athens, Greece National Museum of Contemporary Art - AthensTags, Ties and Affective SpiesMarch 18 to August 31, 2009 [25]
Prague, Czech RepublicENTER FestivalTags, Ties and Affective SpiesApril 18, 2009 - April 25, 2009 [25]
London, England Victoria and Albert Museum [26] Decode: Digital Design Sensations [27] December 8, 2009 - April 11, 2010
New York City, New York Ogilvy & Mather New LanguageMay 19, 2010 - October 15, 2010 [28]
Morwell, Victoria, Australia Latrobe Regional GalleryWe Feel...May 4, 2011 - May 29, 2011 [29]
New York, NYPace/MacGill GallerySocial MediaSeptember 16, 2011 - October 15, 2011 [30]
Holon, Israel Design Museum HolonDecode: Digital Design SensationsNovember 18, 2011 - March 10, 2012 [31]

The Book

Kamvar and Harris took the findings from the four years since We Feel Fine was launched in 2006 and turned them into a book called "We Feel Fine: An Almanac of Human Emotion". [5] [12] [13] It was released on December 1, 2009 by Scribner. [13] [32] [33] While the website presents the most recent feelings mined by the data collection engine, the book does a deeper statistical analysis of the approximately 12 million feelings collected up to the point of publication. [5] [34] Sections of the book are viewable as jpegs on the We Feel Fine website. [12] [34]

Reception

We Feel Fine, in each of its forms, was received well by the public as well as critics, technology writers, and culture commentators. It has been featured in the New York Times, Wired, NPR, Fast Company, and BBC [2] [3] [5] [17] [35] In particular, We Feel Fine was highlighted in a number of "best of" or "Decade in Review" pieces. [2] [36] [37] The site was praised by Reuters and New York Magazine who referred to it as a "mesmerizing visual experiment" and "astonishing and brilliant." [38] [39] From a design and technology perspective, the commentary centered around We Feel Fine as one of the defining examples of the potential for internet-based art and data visualization. [4] [34] In 2010, NPR, in its "Cosmos and Culture" feature stated that We Feel Fine "takes the cloud of feeling humans have always unconsciously moved through and makes it explicit, dynamic and global." [35]

Related Research Articles

Feeling is the nominalization of the verb to feel. The word was first used in the English language to describe the physical sensation of touch through either experience or perception. The word is also used to describe experiences other than the physical sensation of touch, such as "a feeling of warmth" and of sentience in general. In Latin, sentire meant to feel, hear or smell. In psychology, the word is usually reserved for the conscious subjective experience of emotion. Phenomenology and heterophenomenology are philosophical approaches that provide some basis for knowledge of feelings. Many schools of psychotherapy depend on the therapist achieving some kind of understanding of the client's feelings, for which methodologies exist.

Nonviolent Communication communication process developed by Marshall Rosenberg

Nonviolent Communication is an approach to nonviolent living developed by Marshall Rosenberg beginning in the 1960s.

Ron Mueck Australian sculptor

Ronald Mueck is an Australian sculptor working in the United Kingdom.

Paula Poundstone American stand-up comedian

Paula Poundstone is an American stand-up comedian, author, actress, interviewer, and commentator. Beginning in the late 1980s, she performed a series of one-hour HBO comedy specials. She provided backstage commentary during the 1992 presidential election on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno. She is the host of the Maximum Fun podcast Nobody Listens to Paula Poundstone, which is the successor to the National Public Radio program Live from the Poundstone Institute. She is a frequent panelist on NPR's weekly news quiz show Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me, and was a recurring guest on the network's A Prairie Home Companion variety program during Garrison Keillor's years as host.

Esther Hicks American writer

Esther Hicks, often credited as Abraham Hicks, is an American inspirational speaker and author. She has co-written nine books with her late husband Jerry Hicks, presented numerous workshops on the law of attraction with Abraham Hicks Publications and appeared in the original version of the 2006 film The Secret. The Hicks' books, including the series The Law of Attraction, are — according to Esther Hicks — "translated from a group of non-physical entities called Abraham." Hicks describes what she is doing as tapping into "infinite intelligence".

Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Art Museum, Institute, Library, Sculpture Park in Houston, TX United States

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), located in the Houston Museum District, Houston, is one of the largest museums in the United States. The permanent collection of the museum spans more than 6,000 years of history with approximately 64,000 works from six continents.

Sepandar Kamvar Iranian computer scientist

Sepandar David Kamvar, also known as Sep Kamvar, is a computer scientist, artist, and entrepreneur. He is currently the LG Career Development Professor of Media Arts and Sciences at MIT, and he was director of the Social Computing group at the MIT Media Lab.

OttoBib.com is a website with a free tool to generate an alphabetized bibliography of books from a list of International Standard Book Numbers (ISBN) with output in MLA, APA, Chicago/Turabian, BibTeX and Wikipedia {{cite book}} format. Each query also generates a "temporary" permalink which can be used to recall the bibliography without reentering the ISBN data. The site is a metasearch engine, integrating data from several sources, including the U.S. Library of Congress API, the Amazon.com database of books, and ISBNdb.com. OttoBib accepts ISBNs with either 10 or 13 digits.

The Greater Good Science Center (GGSC) is an interdisciplinary research center located at the University of California, Berkeley.

Possibilianism is a philosophy which rejects both the diverse claims of traditional theism and the positions of certainty in strong atheism in favor of a middle, exploratory ground. The term was invented by Robbie Parrish, a friend of neuroscientist David Eagleman who defined the term in relation to his book of fiction Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives.

Jonathan Harris (artist) American artist

Jonathan Harris is an Internet artist and designer living in Brooklyn, New York. He has won three Webby Awards. Harris was honored as "Young Global Leader" by the World Economic Forum. His work has received coverage by CNN and BBC and has been exhibited in the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Centre Pompidou in Paris. In his own words, his work aims to "explore and explain the human world". He studied computer science at Princeton University. Some of his noted works are the Yahoo Time Capsule which attempted to create a digital finger print of the world in 2006, I Want You To Want Me, the Sputnik Observatory, Universe, the Whale Hunt, and anonymous question/answer service Justcurio.us.

Anne Wilkes Tucker American curator

Anne Wilkes Tucker was an American museum curator of photographic works. She retired in June 2015.

Reverence is "a feeling or attitude of deep respect tinged with awe; veneration". The word "reverence" in the modern day is often used in relationship with religion. This is because religion often stimulates the emotion through recognition of God, the supernatural, and the ineffable. Reverence involves a humbling of the self in respectful recognition of something perceived to be greater than the self. Thus religion is commonly a place where reverence is felt.

Prince Varughese Thomas artist

Prince Varughese Thomas is a multi-media artist who is part of what has come to be known as the Indian Diaspora. Thomas had actually been born in Kuwait, the son of Christian, Malayalam-speaking guest workers from India's southern Kerala state. Being Indian by birth, born in Kuwait, naturalized in the US, and raised primarily between India and the United States, he has always felt outside the dominant culture in which he exists. This sense of being the ‘Other’ has influenced how he views the world, approaches his conceptual concerns, and creates art. With an educational background and degrees in both Psychology and Art, he investigates and deconstructs complex sociopolitical issues from the interstices in personally expressive ways that humanize his subjects by incorporating a variety of photographic, video, drawing, and installation techniques into his artwork. Thomas currently resides in Houston, TX. He is an Associate Professor of Art at Lamar University in Beaumont, TX. He is represented by Hooks-Epstein Galleries in Houston, TX.

Insignificance

People may face feelings of insignificance due to a number of causes, including having low self-esteem, being depressed, living in a huge, impersonal city, comparing themselves to wealthy celebrity success stories, working in a huge bureaucracy, or being in awe of a natural wonder.

Maria Popova writer

Maria Popova is a Bulgarian-born writer, blogger, literary and cultural critic living in Brooklyn, New York. She is known for her speeches and her blog BrainPickings.org, which features her writing on culture, books, philosophy and eclectic subjects on and off the Internet.

Jonathan Balcombe is an ethologist and author. He currently serves as Director of Animal Sentience with the Humane Society Institute for Science and Policy, and Department Chair for Animal Studies with Humane Society University, in Washington, DC. He lectures internationally on animal behavior and the human-animal relationship. He is Associate Editor of the journal Animal Sentience.

Elevation is an emotion elicited by witnessing virtuous acts of remarkable moral goodness. It is experienced as a distinct feeling of warmth and expansion that is accompanied by appreciation and affection for the individual whose exceptional conduct is being observed. Elevation motivates those who experience it to open up to, affiliate with, and assist others. Elevation makes an individual feel lifted up and optimistic about humanity.

govy is a French artist diagnosed on the Autism Spectrum in 2013, and is an advocate for the Neurodiversity Movement. She is the recipient of three A' Design Awards and two Videoformes Awards.

Adam Magyar (born 1972) is a Hungarian photographer and video artist.

References

  1. Cook, Garth & Sep Kamvar.An Almanac of Internet Emotion. Scientific American. January 26, 2010.
  2. 1 2 3 The Decade's 14 Biggest Design Moments. Fast Company. December 28, 2009.
  3. 1 2 Carey, Benedict. Does a Nation's Mood Lurk in its Songs and Blogs?. New York Times. August 3, 2009.
  4. 1 2 3 Leberecht, Tim. We Feel Fine. CNET. November 25, 2008.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Popova, Maria. The Sum of All Emotions. Wired. December 2, 2009.
  6. Weiler, Lance. Interview with Sep Kamvar. Workbook Project. December 15, 2009.
  7. We Feel Fine FAQ. wefeelfine.org.
  8. We Feel Fine. MetaFilter. May 8, 2006.
  9. We Feel Fine News. wefeelfine.org.
  10. 1 2 News Page. Jonathan Harris Website.
  11. 1 2 List of Exhibitions. kamvar.og.
  12. 1 2 3 The Book. wefeelfine.org.
  13. 1 2 3 Whelan, Christine. The 10 Most Common Feelings Worldwide. The Huffington Post. December 1, 2009.
  14. If You're Happy and You Know it Write a Blog. Montreal Gazette on canada.com. November 30, 2006.
  15. 1 2 We Feel Fine Methodology. wefeelfine.org.
  16. We Feel Fine Movements. wefeelfine.org.
  17. 1 2 Russell, Kate. Webscape. bbc.co.uk. October 12, 2007.
  18. Driver, Erica. Harvesting Data: What is the Mood of the World?. Smart Data Collective. August 27, 2011.
  19. Interactive Storytelling with Jonathan Harris. pbs.org. August 5, 2011.
  20. Manifesto - GenArt. czechdesign.cz. September 12, 2006.
  21. I've Been Waiting For You. Fabrica Website.
  22. Color into Light: Selections from the MFAH Collection Opens. artdaily.org. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  23. MFAH Past Exhibitions. MFAH Website.
  24. Archives Page. Sundance Institute.
  25. 1 2 Tag, Ties and Affective Spies. ENTER Festival Website.
  26. DECODE. Victoria & Albert Museum.
  27. NETWORK. Victoria & Albert Museum.
  28. Ogilvy & Mather New York Host "New Language" Art Exhibition. ogilvy.com. May 17, 2010.
  29. Exhibitions Page. Latrobe Gallery Website.
  30. Social Media Press Release. Pace/MacGill Website. August 22, 2011.
  31. Exhibition Info. Design Museum Holon Website.
  32. Nothing More Than Feelings. Daily Candy. December 1, 2009.
  33. Social Data Mining. kamvar.org.
  34. 1 2 3 Popova, Maria. We Feel Fine: An Almanac of Human Emotion. Brain Pickings. December 3, 2009.
  35. 1 2 Frank, Adam. The Cloud of Human Feeling. NPR. January 11, 2010.
  36. Kuang, Cliff. Picassos with Pixels: 12 Groundbreaking Pieces of Digital Art. Fast Company. December 7, 2009.
  37. Walker, Alissa. The Decade in Design. GOOD Magazine. December 23, 2009.
  38. Getting Human Feelings on the Web. Reuters. April 2, 2007
  39. The Approval Matrix. New York Magazine. March 18, 2007.