Helo, my name is...

 

Dhrumil Mehta (he/him)

Associate Prof. of Journalism @ Columbia U.

Deputy Director of Tow Center for Digital Journalism

Visiting Associate Prof of Public Policy @ Harvard Kennedy School

 

dhrumil.mehta@columbia.edu

 @datadhrumil

@dmil

Highlights:

Currently

  • Associate Prof. @ Columbia Graduate School of Journalism

  • Visiting Prof. @ Harvard Kennedy School

 

Previously

  • Database Journalist, Politics @ FiveThirtyEight

  • Software Development Engineer @ Amazon
  • Northwestern:
    • BA in Philosophy + Minor in Cognitive Science
    • MS in Computer Science

Data Journalism

Data-Driven Storytelling

 

 

 

Public Opinion and Polling

Media

Other stuff...

Interactive News

Data Scraping / Cleaning

Building Software

 

Bots

Internal Workflows

 

Bots

Reports Election Results

Bots

Lets readers see results that FiveThirtyEight deems unexpected

Expectations are calibrated before results ever start coming in.

"Research"

C+J Conference @ Stanford (2016)

Explaining Data

Open Data

https://www.datajournalismawards.org/project-listing/?project_id=2082

Machine Reading The News

My "research" agenda

How I'm Feeling

Imposter-y | what does "research" look like in journalism?

 

What I'm Seeking

  • Possible collaborators / folks with aligned research interests who I should reach out to
  • Feedback on the research agenda
  • General advice...
  • New friends...

 

 

Computationally analyzing text to better understand media and political environments.

I have a research interest in text analysis

Data journalism:

 


"Quantitative social science...on deadline."

 

- Andrew Flowers (former 538 quantitative editor)

 

But the "on deadline" part can be tricky...

 

Which is partly why methodological innovation is so hard to do in newsrooms, and often the new and innovative methodologies are limited to large newsrooms with time and space to experiment or with the power to put resources behind large enterprise projects.

 

 

... and even then we're often leaning on the work of our colleagues.

 

It's hard for newsrooms to do this kind of work regularly without a template for it.

  • There is only so much methodological innovation our editorial process can handle. The edit-burden for introducing a new methodology has to be justified by the importance or the story due to deadline / bandwidth constraints.
     
  • There is an "uncanny valley" of stories that could push the envelope in terms of methodology that can't get done because they require more innovation than can be justified (the first time).

Journalism Schools are well-placed to pioneer methodological innovation.

  • Co-location with academics of from disciplines makes taking inspiration from other disciplines easier
     
  • It's exciting work for student projects (and makes for great portfolio pieces)!
     
  • Students often spend several weeks on a project or two...there is room for iteration.
     
  • J-schools are well placed to take knowledge from across newsrooms who are doing this kind of work, and consolidate / explain / democratize / "templatize" it for newsrooms.

 

The Media Really Has Neglected Puerto Rico

The Media Really Started Paying Attention To Puerto Rico When Trump Did

 

Tracking Candidate Mentions

Increasing Sophistication

2017

2019

Now

Metrics with Fewer Assumptions

Adjective <--> Referent Pairs

LLMs

 

What I'm Seeking

  • Folks with aligned research interests who I should reach out to
  • Feedback on the research agenda / framing
  • General advice...
  • New friends...