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Feeling stuck creating your Data Nugget? Here are some of our favorite resources to help you get started.

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What Makes Online Content Viral?

Why are certain pieces of online content (e.g., advertisements, videos, news articles) more viral than others? this article takes a psychological approach to understanding diffusion. Using a unique data set of all the New York Times articles published over a three-month period, the authors examine how emotion shapes virality. the results indicate that positive content is more viral than negative content, but the relationship between emotion and social transmission is more complex than valence alone. Virality is partially driven by physiological arousal. Content that evokes high-arousal positive (awe) or negative (anger or anxiety) emotions is more viral. Content that evokes low-arousal, or deactivating, emotions (e.g., sadness) is less viral. these results hold even when the authors control for how surprising, interesting, or practically useful content is (all of which are positively linked to virality), as well as external drivers of attention (e.g., how prominently content was featured). experimental results further demonstrate the causal impact of specific emotion on transmission and illustrate that it is driven by the level of activation induced. taken together, these findings shed light on why people share content and how to design more effective viral marketing campaigns. 

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The And, But, Therefore of Storytelling - Randy Olson TED Talk

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The Essence of Storytelling - Green Ninja Video

In order to help students better tell their stories, we invited Dreamworks Story artist Jeff Biancalana to come give a talk about story structure. Jeff’s talk was part of a Green Ninja/BAESI workshop titled Climate Change, Scientific Storytelling, and the Green Ninja. 

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The Privileged Status of Story by D.T. Willingham

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The Power of Story by E.O. Wilson

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Templates

  • To make a Data Nugget based on your own data, download the experimental data Template and look over the items necessary to create one. Text in red must be provided by the researcher, along with images of the research being conducted, a table of data, and graphs or figures of the data.

  • To submit your Data Nugget for review, fill out our Google spreadsheet or email the completed Microsoft Word template to eschultheis@gmail.com. You will hear back from us shortly with comments and edits if necessary.

  • We have developed a new template, specifically for observational data, that can be downloaded here. This template provides students with background information and an observational dataset, and then challenges them to develop their own questions, hypotheses, and experimental design. This template is a perfect fit for citizen science and long-term datasets!

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Making your own Data Nugget - Workshop slides

Powerpoint slides from our recent workshops detailing how to make your own Data Nugget.

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