A new developed by a 亚洲AV professor visualizes near-real-time data collected from media sources on the ground in Ukraine. The app allows users to filter an interactive map of rapidly developing events in specific neighborhoods throughout the besieged country. A link to the original media outlet accompanies each data point representing a military or nonmilitary event.
The map is called and is based on a dataset from University of Michigan professor Yuri Zhukov鈥檚 Violent Incident Information from News Articles (VIINA) project.
鈥淥ur app visualizes geolocated media stories from the event data,鈥 said , the associate professor who created the app. 鈥淲e think that journalists and citizens following the war will find it a useful way to access primary sources in a visually appealing way.鈥
McGrath, a political scientist and instructor of research methods and data science tools, had been 鈥渙bsessively reading about the war on American news outlets and on Reddit, and I was thrilled to have access [from Zhukov鈥檚 data] to all the Ukrainian and Russian sources that are reporting 鈥榦n the ground.鈥欌
He was encouraged to bring his computer coding skills to task by fellow Schar School associate professor , who secured Zhukov鈥檚 cooperation with the app.
鈥淚 see this as very much in the spirit of 鈥榓ctivist social science,鈥欌 McGlinchey said.
鈥淭he app presents readily understandable information to English-speaking audiences who otherwise could not make sense of the Ukrainian and Russian data sources,鈥 he added. 鈥淓qually important, our app has a good chance of flying under the radar of Russian state censorship, allowing audiences in Russia a clear picture of what truly is happening in Ukraine.鈥
The numbers and colors on the map indicate how many events/stories there are in that area. Red indicates more events; green, fewer events. Users click a cluster to zoom to the area; another click zooms even closer to the location of the media report.
鈥淓ventually, when you drill down enough, you鈥檒l see individual nodes, which represent actual news stories about an event that took place there,鈥 McGrath said. 鈥淲hen you click a node, you鈥檒l see metadata about the event, often including a link to the actual story.鈥
McGlinchey added that the professors are also working on a database of war crimes committed during the Ukraine crisis and another app that geolocates and provides data on those war crimes.