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Computing Taste Nick Seaver

Computing Taste By Nick Seaver

Computing Taste by Nick Seaver


Condition - Good
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Computing Taste Summary

Computing Taste: Algorithms and the Makers of Music Recommendation by Nick Seaver

Meet the people who design the algorithms that capture our musical tastes.

The people who make music recommender systems have lofty goals: they want to broaden listeners' horizons and help obscure musicians find audiences, taking advantage of the enormous catalogs offered by companies like Spotify, Apple Music, and Pandora. But for their critics, recommender systems seem to embody all the potential harms of algorithms: they flatten culture into numbers, they normalize ever-broadening data collection, and they profile their users for commercial ends. Drawing on years of ethnographic fieldwork, anthropologist Nick Seaver describes how the makers of music recommendation navigate these tensions: how product managers understand their relationship with the users they want to help and to capture; how scientists conceive of listening itself as a kind of data processing; and how engineers imagine the geography of the world of music as a space they care for and control.

Computing Taste rehumanizes the algorithmic systems that shape our world, drawing attention to the people who build and maintain them. In this vividly theorized book, Seaver brings the thinking of programmers into conversation with the discipline of anthropology, opening up the cultural world of computation in a wide-ranging exploration that travels from cosmology to calculation, myth to machine learning, and captivation to care.

Computing Taste Reviews

Artists and music journalists have been coining genres for decades, based on sounds shared between artists. This new era for genre is derived from listener data and labelled by engineers who, Seaver says, never expected to become authorities on the matter. This speaks to the contradiction at the heart of Computing Taste: it's both easier and harder to pinpoint a person's music taste than you might expect. It all depends on what you think taste is. Spotify can tell us how many times we loop a favorite song, make reasonable assumptions about the genres that speak to us, and deduce from GPS data what we might want to hear in the gym as opposed to the office. But Seaver stresses that a key anthropological question remains unwrapped: why do people love the songs that they do? -- Katie Hawthorne * Guardian *
Streaming music services are the norm today, but people don't often think about how they work or how they recommend the next song. Seaver peeks behind the musical curtain in this book about the humans behind the algorithms. . . . Music lovers and those who like books about artificial intelligence will enjoy Seaver's deep dive into the culture, data, and science of music recommendation systems. Computing Taste offers insight into algorithmic music recommendations that's entertaining and easily digestible. * Library Journal *
Seaver's nimble account of how contemporary music recommendation systems are conceived and crafted takes readers beyond easy oppositions of humans and algorithms to explore the captivating dynamics of taste and technics, hearing and computing, guidance and coercion. -- Natasha Dow Schull, author of Addiction by Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas
Computing Taste tells a fresh story in the increasingly crowded scholarship on artificial intelligence and culture. It will be immensely useful for those outside of computer science and engineering who want to understand how people think and work in the AI industry. -- Jonathan Sterne, author of Diminished Faculties, MP3, and The Audible Past
Seaver's exquisite and essential book brings us into an expert community aspiring to find the delicate balance between caring for and controlling the sprawling phenomenon of taste. The ethnographically engaging Computing Taste offers a complex rendering of the makers of music recommendation systems who believe that algorithms can predict and shape musical taste while also wrestling with the reductive absurdity of such a claim. Seaver's theoretical creativity both pushes critical studies of technology in new directions and makes this book a joy to read. -- Lisa Messeri, author of Placing Outer Space: An Earthly Ethnography of Other Worlds
Who are the programmers writing the music recommendation recipes that structure so many of our auditory habits in these digital days? How do these new taste makers script listeners into the musical multiverses their algorithms create? Seaver brilliantly tunes us to the cadences of these people's works and lives, decoding the mix of cosmologies, capital, and computation that channel how and what we hear today. -- Stefan Helmreich, author Sounding the Limits of Life: Essays in the Anthropology of Biology and Beyond
Perhaps there's no accounting for taste, but as Seaver demonstrates in Computing Taste, his resonant and resourceful ethnography of music recommendation algorithms, musical taste can indeed be counted and coded. By listening to the sociotechnical dynamics of that translation process-the means by which aesthetic, subjective, social, and situational choices are transcribed into human-orchestrated algorithms-Seaver helps us appreciate not only the myriad harmonic parts that music and machines play in our personal and social lives, but also the many modes and contexts in which we listen. -- Shannon Mattern, author of A City Is Not a Computer: Other Urban Intelligences

About Nick Seaver

Nick Seaver is assistant professor of anthropology at Tufts University. He is coeditor of Towards an Anthropology of Data.

Table of Contents

Prologue: Open Plan
Introduction: Technology with Humanity
Chapter 1 Too Much Music
Chapter 2 Captivating Algorithms
Chapter 3 What Are Listeners Like?
Chapter 4 Hearing and Counting
Chapter 5 Space Is the Place
Chapter 6 Parks and Recommendation
Epilogue: What Are We Really Doing Here?
Acknowledgments
Notes
Works Cited
Index

Additional information

CIN0226822974G
9780226822976
0226822974
Computing Taste: Algorithms and the Makers of Music Recommendation by Nick Seaver
Used - Good
Paperback
The University of Chicago Press
2022-12-06
224
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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