Course description
Self-tracking. Biohacking. Personal informatics. Quantified self.
The contemporary “quantified self” movement makes claims of
“self-knowledge through numbers” and improving health and human
welfare. There are clearly other elements to self-tracking culture
that deserve critical investigation. What does the self become seen
through the lens of data? What is the dark side of data that can be
used against us, and without regard for social justice and equality?
This multidisciplinary course takes both a theoretical and a
practical look at the pressing issue of data aggregation about human
beings. It looks to the past for historical forms of
self-quantification and to the future of a rapidly expanding
globalized landscape of app tracking and wearable technologies. With
the question of human data in mind, the course examines the unsure
futures of humanity in a variety of domains: medicine and aging,
education, the arts, marketing and the Internet of Things. Students
will situate themselves critically within this increasingly dense
data landscape by creating data about themselves that can be
analyzed and interpreted using a variety of data visualization and
storytelling frameworks.