01471cam a2200289Ic 4500001001300000003000600013007000300019008004100022020002200063020002500085035002200110050002700132100003100159245010500190260003300295300002300328500004100351504006700392505030200459520019000761650003300951650003000984650003001014942001201044952011201056999001301168on1078671298OCoLCta210202r20182017xxka 001 0 eng d a1408894734 (pbk.) a9781408894736 (pbk.) a(OCoLC)1078671298 aQA76.9.D343bS747 20181 aStephens-Davidowitz, Seth.10aEverybody lies :bwhat the internet can tell us about who we really are /cSeth Stephens-Davidowitz. aLondon :bBloomsbury,c2018. axi, 338 p. :bill. aReprint. Originally published: 2017. aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 289-318) and index.0 aIntroduction: The outlines of a revolution -- Your faulty gut -- Was Freud right? -- Data reimagined -- Digital truth serum -- Zooming in -- All the world's a lab -- Big data, big schmata? What it cannot do -- Mo data, mo problems? What we shouldn't do -- Conclusion: How many people finish books? aA former Google data scientist presents an insider's look at what the vast, instantly available amounts of information from the Internet can reveal about human civilization and society. 4aData miningxSocial aspects. 4aBig dataxSocial aspects. 4aInternetxSocial aspects. 2lcccBK 00104070aPNLIBbPNLIBcGENd2021-06-17oQA76.9.D343 S747 2018pPNLIB21060619r2021-06-17w2021-06-17yBK c805d805