Not-so-confidential confidantes
Research shows that locations of online photos may reveal your friendships
2010-12-09
(Press-News.org) ITHACA, N.Y. – Comparing the locations of photos posted on the Internet with social network contacts, Cornell University computer scientists have found that as few as three "co-locations" for images at different times and places could predict with high probability that two people posting photos were socially connected.
The results have implications for online privacy, the researchers said, but also suggest a quantitative answer to a very old psychological question: What can we conclude from observing coincidences?
"This is a kind of question that goes way back," said Jon Kleinberg, Cornell professor of computer science, who conducted the study with Dan Huttenlocher, dean of the Faculty of Computing and Information Science, and colleagues. "Online data gives us new ways to address it," he said.
"Inferring Social Ties from Geographic Coincidences," is reported online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (Dec. 8, 2010). David Crandall, a former Cornell student and postdoctoral researcher now at Indiana University, is the lead author on the study.
The researchers used a database of some 38 million photos uploaded to the Flickr photo-sharing website by about a half million people. The time and place where photos were taken was provided by GPS-equipped cameras or by people who used Flickr's online-interface to indicate the location on a map. Anyone can read this information from a Flickr page.
Flickr also offers a social networking service, and computer analysis showed that when two people posted photos several times from the same locations (often famous landmarks) and at about the same times, this was a good predictor that those people would have a social network link.
"It's not that you know with certainty, but it's a high likelihood that these people know each other," Huttenlocher said. As expected, the probability increases as the analysis moves to smaller areas and shorter time spans.
Flickr is just a convenient place to study the phenomenon, the researchers said. The same conclusions might be drawn from credit card purchases, fare card transactions on the bus and subway, and cell phone records, they suggested.
"It's surprising – and not in a reassuring way – that so much information comes from so little," Kleinberg said. "You go through life and leave all sorts of records. You're conveying information you deliberately wrote but also conveying broader information. Our research is trying to provide a way of quantifying these risks."
"While it's obvious that a photo you post online reveals information about what is pictured in the photo, what is less obvious is that as you post multiple photos you are probably revealing information which may not be pictured anywhere," Huttenlocher added.
One way to mitigate privacy risks, Kleinberg suggested, would be to "blur" time and space information in permanent records, making it less precise. This research might offer hints on how much blurring is needed, he said.
The researchers recognized that the photo-sharing process might introduce some bias into their results. For example, people might seek out social contacts with others who had photographed the same site. To control for this they compared photos posted after a certain date only with social links established before that date. They also controlled for the possibility that friends might upload the same photos, and for the fact that people with many social contacts on Flickr might be more likely to geotag their photos.
"I think we've all wondered about questions like this, and there's an opportunity now to start making them precise," Kleinberg concluded. "This paper is trying to begin that line of questioning."
###Also participating in the research were Dan Cosley, assistant professor of Information Science, and former Cornell Ph.D. students and postdoctoral researchers Lars Backstrom, now at Facebook; and Sid Suri, now at Yahoo! Research. The work was supported in part by grants from the MacArthur Foundation, Google, Yahoo!, and the National Science Foundation.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2010-12-09
Yale University researchers have found that a single molecule not only connects brain cells but also changes how we learn. The findings, reported in the December 9 issue of the journal Neuron, may help researchers discover ways to improve memory and could lead to new therapies to correct neurological disorders.
The junctions between brain cells over which nerve pulses pass — called synapses — are crucial for regulating learning and memory and how we think. Aberrations in the structure and function of synapses have been linked to mental retardation and autism, while synapses ...
2010-12-09
A group of researchers at MIT, Cornell University and University College London have used one of the world's largest databases of telecommunications records to redraw the map of Great Britain. The research, which will be published in the journal PLoS ONE on Dec. 8, is based on the analysis of 12 billion anonymized records representing more than 95% of Great Britain's residential and business landlines.
"Since the pioneering work of Christaller and Lösch in the early 20th century, a long-standing question in economic geography has been how to define regions in space," ...
2010-12-09
PULLMAN, Wash.—Beverages supplemented by whey-based protein can significantly reduce elevated blood pressure, reducing the risk of stroke and heart disease, a Washington State University study has found.
Research led by nutritional biochemist Susan Fluegel and published in International Dairy Journal found that daily doses of commonly available whey brought a more than six-point reduction in the average blood pressure of men and women with elevated systolic and diastolic blood pressures. While the study was confined to 71 student subjects between the ages of 18 and 26, ...
2010-12-09
Prostate cancer is the most common type of cancer among men, but its diagnosis has up to now been inaccurate and unpleasant. Researchers at Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e), in cooperation with AMC Amsterdam, have developed an imaging technology that can accurately identify tumors. The technology is based on ultrasound, and also has the potential to assess how aggressive tumors are. This can lead to better and more appropriate treatment, and to cost savings in health care.
About 11% of men who die of cancer in the western world do so as a result of prostate cancer. ...
2010-12-09
ANN ARBOR, Mich.— Researchers have shed new light on dopamine's role in the brain's reward system, which could provide insight into impulse control problems associated with addiction and a number of psychiatric disorders.
A joint study by the University of Michigan and University of Washington found that, contrary to the prevailing conception, differences in individuals' styles of response to environmental cues can fundamentally influence chemical reward patterns in the brain.
Deeper understanding of these differences between individuals may lead to new preventive tools ...
2010-12-09
Philadelphia, PA, 8 December, 2010 - A study of long-term, active duty military personnel who used Department of Veterans Affairs' health services showed that childhood maltreatment and other high magnitude stressors, such as being in a serious accident or a natural disaster, were more strongly associated with participants' current psychiatric symptoms than were their military sexual experiences, such as sexual harassment.
The research, described in issue 44 -16 of the Journal of Psychiatric Research, was completed by Dr. Maureen Murdoch and colleagues of the Minneapolis ...
2010-12-09
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Patients who have complications after colorectal cancer surgery are less likely to get chemotherapy, even when it is clearly recommended for their diagnosis, a new study from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center finds.
In addition, patients with complications were more than twice as likely to have their chemotherapy delayed for more than 120 days after diagnosis or two months after surgery, which is considered the appropriate timeframe for receiving chemotherapy.
"Surgical complications are typically thought to be short-term problems, ...
2010-12-09
Haifa / Leipzig. The fire disaster in the Carmel Mountains near Haifa is a typical example of climate change effect and a taste of the future, says Dr. Guy Pe'er, one of the authors of Israel's first report to the UN on climate change. Ten years ago, Dr. Pe'er and other Israeli scientists collated knowledge about the effects of climate change for Israel. They warned already in the year 2000 of expected climatic fluctuations, heat events, decreased rainfall and delayed late winter rainfall, all of which would lead to increased risk of intense forest fires.
According to ...
2010-12-09
BEIJING -- Responding to the challenges posed by a rapidly aging population will be one of the most difficult tasks for Asian governments in the first half of this century, says a report released today by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Indian National Science Academy, Indonesian Academy of Sciences, U.S. National Academy of Sciences, and the Science Council of Japan.
The report, which discusses these challenges and identifies needed research to help policymakers better respond to them, was released at the opening of an international conference on aging in ...
2010-12-09
Targeting the core social deficits of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) (http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/autism-spectrum-disorders-pervasive-developmental-disorders/index.shtml) in early intervention programs yielded sustained improvements in social and communication skills even in very young children who have ASD, according to a study funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), part of the National Institutes of Health. The study was published online December 8, 2010, in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
Although some research suggests ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Not-so-confidential confidantes
Research shows that locations of online photos may reveal your friendships