ASDK20006U Advanced Social Data Science II

Volume 2020/2021
Education

Mandatory course on MSc programme in Social Data Science at University of Copenhagen. The course is only open for students enrolled in the MSc programme in Social Data Science.

Content

The wealth of new data in the digital society is characterized by high frequency observations in a high granularity setting, allowing for both comprehensive and detailed analysis of social and individual behaviour. Messages in digital form and comments and conversations on social media have the potential to provide thick descriptions of social interactions and individual values in large-scale, sometimes population level, settings. At the same time, digitalization of large corpuses of legal, administrative and political texts allow for dynamic analysis of evolving social ideas and issues. At the same time, most digital data do not arrive in simple accessible, quantifiable and comparable forms, but as text, sound and pictures. Advanced Social Data Science II is focused on unstructured data and methods for processing, transforming and dealing with complex and high dimensional data. The course presents classic unsupervised learning methods for characterizing and developing typologies and categories of individual and social behaviour, networks and ideas. Furthermore, it introduces state-of-the-art methods of self-supervision and transfer learning for classifying complex unstructured data such as text and images, and relates such data-driven methods to existing theoretical methods and models, as well as quantitative and qualitative methods, in the social sciences.

Learning Outcome

Knowledge

  • Explain the differences between and capabilities of neural network architectures such as CNN, RNN, LSTM and Attention based models.
  • Account for various learning strategies, algorithms as well as approaches: clustering and unsupervised learning, supervised learning, semi-supervised learning, transfer learning, multi-task learning.
  • Account for the potential of different representations, encodings and transformations of text, structured and unstructured.

 

Skills

  • Extract reliable information from text data using supervised learning and techniques from natural language processing.
  • Handle advanced matrix and tensor manipulation using a major deep learning framework (e.g. PyTorch, TensorFlow)
  • Apply state-of-the-art deep transfer learning to classify unstructured data.
  • Master computer vision methods to extract features from image data.

 

Competencies

  • Integrate theoretical and applied knowledge within the field of Social Data Science and formulate compelling research questions given an unstructured dataset.
  • Construct validated and documented data sets for social science from unstructured text and media data.
  • Independently carry out an end-to-end analysis given an unstructured dataset of text or images, including exploratory analysis and discovery using unsupervised methods and supervised learning for measurement, and assessment of model-based biases.
  • Critically evaluate the implications of results, considering model limitations and biases, and systematic noise introduced by data collection and sampling methods.
  • Communicate results using comprehensive statistics and modern visualization methods in particular plotting new data types to specialists within the academic field.

Examples of course readings:

 

- Bishop, Christopher: *Pattern Recognition and Machine Learning*. Spring Publishing, 2006.

- Cantu, Francisco & Michelle Torres: "Learning to See: Visual Analysis for Social Science Data".

- Gentzkow, M., Kelly, B. T., & Taddy, M. Text as Data. *Journal of Economic Literature*.

- Grimmer, J., & Stew art, B. M. (2013). Text as data: The promise and pitfalls of automatic content analysis methods for political texts. *Political Analysis*, 21(3), 267-297.

- Hastie, T., & Tibshirani, R. & Friedman, J.(2008). *The Elements of Statistical Learning; Data Mining, Inference and Prediction*.

- Jurafsky, Dan, and James H. Martin. *Speech and language processing*. Vol. 3. London: Pearson, 2014.

- Krippendorff, Klaus. Content analysis: An introduction to its methodology. Sage publications, 2018.

Students can only register for the exam for Advanced Social Data Science II if they have passed all compulsory courses on the first semester on the master's programme in social data science.

Students must follow Advanced Social Data Science II concurrently with the Digital Methods course on the master's programme in social data science.
This class will be taught using a combination of lectures and hands-on lab exercises working with problem sets.
  • Category
  • Hours
  • Lectures
  • 28
  • Preparation
  • 112
  • Exercises
  • 42
  • Exam
  • 24
  • Total
  • 206
Oral
Peer feedback (Students give each other feedback)
Credit
7,5 ECTS
Type of assessment
Written assignment
Group-based written assignment in the shape of a wiki, that students are expected to write in groups of 3-4 students.

The wiki should contain text (method accounts, analyses etc.) and formulate and evaluate an explicit research question. In addition, it may contain documentation in the shape of code, field-notes, data visualizations, and so on, as relevant to the project.

The exam is integrated with Digital Methods, with separate assessment and grading. The ASDSII assessment is based solely on the relevant wiki material. Aspects of the project pertaining to the ASDSII exam must be clearly marked in the wiki as a stand-alone page. Students must account for the distribution of responsibilities in the group for the different sub-aspects of the ASDSII exam, to facilitate individual-level assessment. This distribution is specified in a separate section in the wiki.

The total length of the exam must not exceed:
• For three students: 20 standard pages
• For four students: 25 standard pages
Aid
All aids allowed
Marking scale
7-point grading scale
Censorship form
No external censorship
Re-exam

The second and third exam attempts run identical to the ordinary examination. It will be possible to do the re-examination individually or in groups of 3 or 4 students. If done individually, the total length of the re-exam must be no longer than 10 standard pages.

If the student passes either the ASDSII or the Digital Methods course, the re-examination pertains only to the course not passed.

Criteria for exam assesment

The exam will be assessed on the basis of the learning outcome (knowledge, skills and competencies) for the course.