
Personas is a component of the Metropath(ologies) exhibit,
originally on display at the MIT Museum by the
Sociable Media Group from the MIT Media Lab. It has been shown in 7 exhibits around the world since, from Peru to Italy.
It uses sophisticated natural language processing
and the Internet to create a data portrait
of one's aggregated online identity. In short, Personas
shows you how the Internet sees you.

Enter your name, and Personas scours the web for information and attempts to characterize the person - to
fit them to a predetermined set of categories that an algorithmic process created from a massive corpus of
data. The computational process is visualized with each stage of the analysis, finally resulting in the
presentation of a seemingly authoritative personal profile.

In a world where fortunes are sought through data-mining vast information repositories, the computer is
our indispensable but far from infallible assistant. Personas demonstrates the computer's uncanny insights
and its inadvertent errors, such as the mischaracterizations caused by the inability to separate data from
multiple owners of the same name. It is meant for the viewer to reflect on our current and future world,
where digital histories are as important if not more important than oral histories, and computational methods
of condensing our digital traces are opaque and socially ignorant.

Personas was created by Aaron Zinman, with help from
Alex Dragulescu, Yannick Assogba
and Judith Donath.
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Personas is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License. |

