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    The Berkeley School of Information is a global bellwether in a world awash in information and data, boldly leading the way with education and fundamental research that translates into new knowledge, practices, policies, and solutions.

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    The School of Information offers four degrees:

    The Master of Information Management and Systems (MIMS) program educates information professionals to provide leadership for an information-driven world.

    The Master of Information and Data Science (MIDS) is an online degree preparing data science professionals to solve real-world problems. The 5th Year MIDS program is a streamlined path to a MIDS degree for Cal undergraduates.

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    Our Ph.D. in Information Science is a research program for next-generation scholars of the information age.

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    The School of Information's courses bridge the disciplines of information and computer science, design, social sciences, management, law, and policy. We welcome interest in our graduate-level Information classes from current UC Berkeley graduate and undergraduate students and community members. More information about signing up for classes.

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    Research by faculty members and doctoral students keeps the I School on the vanguard of contemporary information needs and solutions.

    The I School is also home to several active centers and labs, including the Center for Long-Term Cybersecurity (CLTC), the Center for Technology, Society & Policy, and the BioSENSE Lab.

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    I School graduate students and alumni have expertise in data science, user experience design & research, product management, engineering, information policy, cybersecurity, and more — learn more about hiring I School students and alumni.

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    collage of student winners
    Data Science Master’s Project Fosters Sustainability by Organizing Carbon Offset Data
    Master of Information and Data Science (MIDS) alums Kevin Ngoc Hoang, Xinyun (Roxy) Rong, Maggie Corry, and…
    headshot Elaine sedenberg
    UC Berkeley Honors Alum Elaine Sedenberg with 2025 Mark Bingham Award
    Dr. Elaine Sedenberg, an alumna of the UC Berkeley School of Information and a longtime contributor to the Center for…
    man facing robot
    Berkeley Researchers Discover That People Are Poorly Equipped To Detect AI-Powered Voice Clones, Develop New Deepfake Dataset
    Could you recognize an AI-generated voice from a real one? How about if two voices are the same? Turns out, the odds…
    headshot Elizabeth Resor
    MSCA Fellowship Brings Berkeley Researcher to TU Dublin for Pioneering AI Ethics Project
    Dr. Elizabeth Resor, a recent doctoral graduate from the UC Berkeley School of Information, has been awarded the…
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    School of Information 2025 Commencement
    May 19, 2025, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
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Featured Faculty Member

David Bamman

Associate Professor

Thursday, November 8, 2018

Professor David Bamman is a scholar on the cutting edge of natural language processing, digital humanities, and computational social sciences.

Earlier this year, Professor Bamman’s work using machine learning and data science for literary analysis received considerable attention in the Journal of Cultural Analytics, the media, and across the Twitter-sphere.

Professor Bamman recently received a $500,000 National Science Foundation (NSF) grant for “Building Subjective Knowledge Bases by Modeling Viewpoints” (co PI with Professor Brendan O’Connor of the University of Massachusetts Amherst).

Professor Bamman answered a few questions about his life and work:

What are you currently working on?

One dimension of my ongoing research is developing more sophisticated computational models of plot in literary texts using methods in natural language processing and machine learning. Most of the attention in NLP over the past few decades has focused on a relatively small set of domains (like newswire or product reviews), but literary texts present a host of interesting challenges for text understanding you don't see elsewhere. Plot is one of these; while itself is a complex abstraction, at the very least it involves people (characters), places (the setting where action takes place), and time (when those actions take place), all interacting through the depicted events that constitute the action of the story. In my group, we’re decomposing plot into solvable sub-problems, each of which can be researched and evaluated on its own terms. Our current area of focus is setting — trying to reconstruct the physical geography of a novel by grounding every event in the location that it took place.

“The most interesting work on the research side is not purely in the modeling and coding phase of these problems; it’s in defining and theoretically motivating what a good measurement looks like.”

On the computational social science side, one project we’re starting up now is developing what we’re calling “subjective” knowledge bases. Lots of work in NLP over the past five years has focused on “open information extraction” — trying to read through all of the text on the web to learn facts like “Obama was president in 2014.” Of course, people say lots of things on the web, and many of them aren’t factual, so this work is designed instead to learn a set of opinions and viewpoints as they’re asserted in text, and use those assertions to build a subjective knowledge base that can accommodate contradictory and conflicting statements from different authors. We’ll be looking at attitudes expressed on Twitter, Reddit and in a collection of 5 million historical books.

What research questions do you find most compelling?

The questions I work on all see text as a form of data — using literary novels to measure the amount of attention given to characters as a function of their gender; using political speeches to measure rhetorical strategies to solicit applause. In all of this work, measurement is an important concept — how do we design an algorithmic instrument that can measure some abstract and often ill-defined quantity like “attention” or “rhetorical strategy” from raw text?  Many of the methods we have in NLP can ultimately be seen through this lens when considering text as data — in some cases that instrument may already exist (in mature technologies like named entity recognition or syntactic parsing), but in the most interesting cases, we need to design a new one from the bottom up. The most interesting work on the research side is not purely in the modeling and coding phase of these problems; it’s in defining and theoretically motivating what a good measurement looks like. I tend to gravitate towards questions where that’s not clear from the outset.

“I work on empirical problems in the social sciences and humanities and collaborate with other researchers in those fields and it’s invigorating to be at a place like the I School where the students often have a depth of knowledge and critical insight that comes from those disciplines.”

What makes the I School and I School students unique?

The problems that my students work on are pretty technical on the NLP side, but the problems aren’t just algorithmic; they holistically involve every aspect of experimental design (from theoretically motivating a research problem, implementing its solution, and designing what real validation looks like). I School students are great at this entire process, and I think their interdisciplinary backgrounds are an important part of that; many of them majored in computer science plus something else (like music or comparative literature). I work on empirical problems in the social sciences and humanities and collaborate with other researchers in those fields and it’s invigorating to be at a place like the I School where the students often have a depth of knowledge and critical insight that comes from those disciplines.

How did you get into your field?

I started out as a Classics major in college; what put me on the path to my field was working as a researcher at the Perseus Project (a digital library of Greek and Latin at Tufts University, one of the flagships of the digital humanities) for a few years before getting my Ph.D. I had a background in computational linguistics at that point, but that experience really opened my eyes to what computational and empirical methods can do for the research questions asked in a discipline as traditional as Classics (there I worked on automatic syntactic parsing for Greek and Latin, building bilingual dictionaries using techniques from machine translation, and automatically identifying allusions in Latin poetry).

Related

New Professor David Bamman is a Scholar of Computational Humanities and Social Sciences
Bamman’s work applies natural language processing and machine learning techniques to empirical questions in the humanities and social sciences.
Big Data Meets Literary Analysis: Digital Humanities Research at the I School

Machine learning and big data don’t intuitively go hand-in-hand with studies of literary fiction; however, new research from Professor David Bamman, using a machine learning algorithm and natural language processing, revealed surprising trends related to…

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David Bamman
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David Bamman "NLP for the long tail" (CC BY-SA 2.0) by quinn.anya
Last updated: August 26, 2022
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