Diary of a Knowledge Broker by Steve Bosserman

Independent investigation of the truth; collaboration for social justice

Independent investigation of the truth; collaboration for social justice


Warning: include(/usr/www/users/ikonos/communicationagents/steve_bosserman/includes/blogtitle.htm) [
function.include]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /usr/www/users/aadams84/www.newmediaexplorer.org/steve_bosserman/includes/theme_display.htm on line 7

Warning: include() [function.include]: Failed opening '/usr/www/users/ikonos/communicationagents/steve_bosserman/includes/blogtitle.htm' for inclusion (include_path='.:/usr/local/lib/php') in /usr/www/users/aadams84/www.newmediaexplorer.org/steve_bosserman/includes/theme_display.htm on line 7

News Blog

Site Map

Dynamics of Power

Egalitarian Education

Human Equivalence

Knowledge Broker

Organization Design

Participatory Democracy

Social Agriculture

Social Justice

Strategic Framing

 

 


Articles Archive

 

Communication Agents:

 


January 10, 2006

A Richer Concept of Ground Truth

In a previous post, I explored the role people play as "social sensors" in the generation of "ground truth." A colleague of mine, Ross MacDonald, who is co-authoring a book with me about collective leadership in the non-profit sector, suggested that ground truth is a far richer concept than what I had explained in my posting. He offered to write a series of "articles" about ground truth that would provide different ways of seeing how this concept could be understood and applied in diverse social settings. Because ground truth is so essential to healthy adaptation in social systems and is integral to the design of successful frameworks for change, his offer could not have been more timely and appreciated. What follows is the posting of his first article. I thank you in advance for giving his ideas careful consideration. We both look forward to your comments! And now, Ross...

In his aforementioned blog posting, Steve Bosserman provides a brief but thoughtful definition of ground truth in a predominantly social context. This response is the first in a series of short articles exploring more fully the concept of ground truth. The entries are based on my work creating sustainable links within and among community groups, government entities, businesses, education, and individuals—especially those people who have been historically ignored or poorly served. This first entry looks closely at the term "ground truth" in order to further sensitize our understanding of its applications to adaptive learning in social systems.

Ground truth refers to the information provided by people and instruments on site which assesses the accuracy and value of information and inferences derived from more removed sources, such as aerial photographs and satellite imagery. Consider for example that the French seem to be the first to use balloons for military aerial reconnaissance during a conflict with Austria in 1794. We will assume for the moment that a person making observations from a balloon constitutes remote sensing and imagine as well that civilian informants, reconnaissance patrols, and secret agents provided additional data on the ground. Taken together, observations from the scared soul in the balloon and additional reports from those on the ground enabled more effective strategic and tactical adjustments. This deliberate triangulation of information is the fundamental process for seeking ground truth.

Uses of the term ground truth are easily found today in a wide range of fields including agriculture, anthropology, biology, earth sciences, geography, landscape design, library sciences, medicine, music, physics, and zoology. A team of geologists, for example, might physically examine the ground at a specific site to confirm the nature and possible causes of temperature changes detected from satellite imaging. Should the team document a change in underground geothermal activity on site, then the remotely-detected temperature shift is better understood. As remote sensing technology has advanced, it has became less dependent on human operators / observers, leading to an increased demand for humans to do something on site to authenticate data and sharpen inferences. As a result the term ground truth is entering the public parlance.

So the term "ground truth" is both a label for a process and a label for a product. The process of ground truth is to have a person or persons at a given site with instruments so as to verify and sensitize remotely sensed phenomena. The product of ground truth is more accurate and reliable information.

The very label ground truth has appeal—but if understood superficially it is more of an appeal to shallow hubris than to good thinking. The term lays claims to "truth," and truth, after all, connotes a definitive and irrefutable reality. How satisfying it is to capture the high ground by positioning one's belief as truth! A famous scene from Woody Allen's movie "Annie Hall" illustrates. In this scene, Alvy (played by Allen) and his charming girlfriend Annie (Diane Keaton) are waiting in line for a movie. Alvy becomes increasingly annoyed with what he believes are the empty and inaccurate pontifications of a pseudo-intellectual also in line. Alvie, convinced that the pedantic snob is completely mis-representing Marshall McLuhan, enacts an everyman fantasy when he pulls the real Marshall McLuhan (playing himself) from out of a billboard. McLuhan, at Alvie's direction, beratingly refutes the veracity of the annoying snob, stating "You know nothing of my work!"—much to the satisfaction of Alvie and everyone else who has wished for such a moment.

Ahh, ground truth! However, as subsequent blog entries will explore, this level of truth is indeed elusive. As tempting as Alvie's triumph is to all of us, we should be skeptical of such absolute truths whether seen in the fiction of a movie, proclaimed from intolerant political or religious pulpits, or announced in scientific press conferences. It is important to distinguish multiple truths and their small "t's" from "The Truth" and its capital "T." A future blog entry will reveal the higher value of multiple truths to understanding and improving human social systems over the misleading value of a claim to a single Truth.

The "ground" in the label ground truth also explicitly lays claim to a tempting position: the false pride of being on solid turf in one's assertions. Being grounded stands in implied contrast to an ethereal disconnection from practical matters. As in Truth with a capital "T," there is a temptation in the label of "ground" to validate one's belief by simply planting a sign claiming one owns the Truth. Very familiar but counterproductive language often accompanies such hollow claims: "I've been doing this for thirty years and believe you me . . ." In this kind of claim, a person is essentially saying, "because I am more grounded than anyone else" ("thirty years doing this"), "my truth is The Truth" ("believe you me"). By falsely laying claim to the most solid ground, this kind of approach attempts to gain validity by rendering other truths invalid. Such a mixture of brute power with self-aggrandizing opinions is directly antithetical to the search for multiple perspectives and more sophisticated reasoning about them which characterizes ground truth inquiry.

An interesting case is Lloyd Bentson's famous retort to Dan Quayle's self-comparison to John F. Kennedy during the October 1988 vice presidential debate. Bentsen's ground truth about the comparison? "Senator, I served with Jack Kennedy. I knew Jack Kennedy. Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. Senator, you're no Jack Kennedy." Bentsen grounds his position by reminding us that he "served with", "knew" and was friends with Kennedy. Although the Dukakis-Bentsen ticket suffered a landslide loss, Bentsen struck a public chord. Many people and certainly many democrats believed as well that Quayle paled in comparison to JFK. Bentsen's remark aligned with the less dramatically staged opinions of many others, profoundly stigmatizing Quayle's vice presidency. But we must remember that regardless of what one thinks of Quayle and regardless of how well Bentsen positioned his analysis; Bentsen's statement was only one observation from one source. That so many agreed with it and that it had such a profound effect derives from the alignment of all those ground truths, not just from Bentsen's moment on stage.

Ground truth refers to both a product and a process which, despite potential for prideful misappropriation, is of tremendous value for improving organized human activities.
At its best, ground truth labels a set of practices by which multiple sources yield better knowledge and so empower humans to adapt and improve their practices. This is the very work we do in my company, ground truth consulting. In my next entry, I will discuss particular ground truth processes and underlying ethical principle by discussing two specific projects: a Himalayan eco-tourism project in the north of India and an upcoming, collaboratively produced book on academic leadership.

 


posted by Steve Bosserman on Tuesday January 10 2006

URL of this article:
http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/steve_bosserman/2006/01/10/a_richer_concept_of_ground_truth.htm

 

 

 


Related Articles

Riff on Michael Shuman
For thousands of people around the world each day the Google News Alerts service deposits the results of key word searches among the thousands of news sources in Google's global network in email inboxes, mine included. Among the terms I have setup for searches is "community currencies." This morning the following item appeared: Candidates for Ward 1 Raise the Hammer - Canada ... His ideas of how credit unions, commercial... [read more]
October 21, 2006 - Steve Bosserman

Declaring Independence
Last week when I was visiting friends in a small, rural German village, my host's eighteen year-old daughter, Lara, asked if I knew the "Declaration of Independence." "Of course," I quickly stated while punctuating that harrumph with the added self-assuring thought to myself, "What American doesn't know the Declaration of Independence." "We're studying it in school," she added. "Our teacher is making us memorize the introduction. Why do we have... [read more]
July 04, 2006 - Steve Bosserman

Understanding Diversity as a Dynamic
Diversity is closely linked to organization effectiveness and feeds the dynamics associated with garnering social power, distributing authority, and exercising leadership. Ross MacDonald, introduced in previous blog postings here and here, and Monica Bernardo co-authored a recent paper published in the Journal of Developmental Education, Fall 2005, Vol 29, No 1 highlighting their research on "diversity" and "ground truth." Ross is warmly welcomed back to this blog to draw from... [read more]
February 19, 2006 - Steve Bosserman

 


Readers' Comments


Thanks, Sepp, for your comments about my first ground truth bloglet hosted by Steve Bosserman. My experience tells me that assessment of dynamics surrounding change in human social systems is inherently biased in favor of the more powerful. My intent is to give primacy to people who are on site AND who are affected or otherwise involved in the dynamics under consideration AND whose lower status may lead to their ideas, feelings and experiences being discounted. My perspective is definitely that of a social scientist concerned about unequal power dynamics and social change. In these situations, any claim of TRUTH is inherently so bloated as to be false. Such truth claims reflect the distorting exercise of power in which some segment of a group proclaims a perspective as "The Truth" or at least "more true" -- simply because they have the power to do so. Often, those with more power are unaware of the disproportionate power they exercise. Ironically, those who best understand the dynamics of power are those who have it exercised on them. For example, the few upper level female managers likely can tell you much more about unequal power dynamics in their field than can their numerous male colleagues who simply exercise it in the course of every day business. In an inquiry process, giving primacy to a broad set of those "on the ground" (particularly attending to those with less power) can help compensate for the inherent tendency for those with more power to have disproportionate say over what is "true." Therefore, while I think you and I are saying something similar, I can live with "overshooting." It reflects a deliberate push against the tide of "business as usual" in social systems -- and such a push is an essential component of any social change effort.

Posted by: Sepp Hasslberger on January 12, 2006 12:17 PM

 


Thanks, Sepp, for your comments about my first ground truth bloglet hosted by Steve Bosserman. My experience tells me that assessment of dynamics surrounding change in human social systems is inherently biased in favor of the more powerful. My intent is to give primacy to people who are on site AND who are affected or otherwise involved in the dynamics under consideration AND whose lower status may lead to their ideas, feelings and experiences being discounted. My perspective is definitely that of a social scientist concerned about unequal power dynamics and social change. In these situations, any claim of TRUTH is inherently so bloated as to be false. Such truth claims reflect the distorting exercise of power in which some segment of a group proclaims a perspective as "The Truth" or at least "more true"

Posted by: Ross MacDonald on January 27, 2006 09:18 PM

 


Thanks, Sepp, for your comments about my first ground truth bloglet hosted by Steve Bosserman. My experience tells me that assessment of dynamics surrounding change in human social systems is inherently biased in favor of the more powerful. My intent is to give primacy to people who are on site AND who are affected or otherwise involved in the dynamics under consideration AND whose lower status may lead to their ideas, feelings and experiences being discounted. My perspective is definitely that of a social scientist concerned about unequal power dynamics and social change. In these situations, any claim of TRUTH is inherently so bloated as to be false. Such truth claims reflect the distorting exercise of power in which some segment of a group proclaims a perspective as "The Truth" or at least "more true" -- simply because they have the power to do so. Often, those with more power are unaware of the disproportionate power they exercise. Ironically, those who best understand the dynamics of power are those who have it exercised on them. For example, the few upper level female managers likely can tell you much more about unequal power dynamics in their field than can their numerous male colleagues who simply exercise it in the course of every day business. In an inquiry process, giving primacy to a broad set of those "on the ground" (particularly attending to those with less power) can help compensate for the inherent tendency for those with more power to have disproportionate say over what is "true." Therefore, while I think you and I are saying something similar, I can live with "overshooting." It reflects a deliberate push against the tide of "business as usual" in social systems -- and such a push is an essential component of any social change effort.

Posted by: Sepp Hasslberger on January 31, 2006 09:26 PM

 















Security code:




Please enter the security code displayed on the above grid


Due to our anti-spamming policy the comments you are posting will show up online within few hours from the posting time.



 

RGTV News

 

 

 

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

 

2251



Enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz


 

Recent articles
Greenhouses That Change the World

Cycles of Communication and Collaboration

What Is an "Integrated Solution"?

Thoughts about Value-Add

A Broader Framework in Which Localization Occurs

A Voice for Localization


Archive of all articles on this site


Most recent comments

Giving It Away, Making Money

Greenhouses That Change the World

Greenhouses That Change the World

Greenhouses That Change the World

A Broader Framework in Which Localization Occurs

 

Candida International

What Does MHRA Stand For??

Bono and Bush Party without Koch: AIDS Industry Makes a Mockery of Medical Science

Profit as Usual and to Hell with the Risks: Media Urge that Young Girls Receive Mandatory Cervical Cancer Vaccine

 

Health Supreme

Multiple sclerosis is Lyme disease: Anatomy of a cover-up

Chromotherapy in Cancer

Inclined Bed Therapy: Tilt your bed for healthful sleep

 

Share The Wealth

Artificial Water Fluoridation: Off To A Poor Start / Fluoride Injures The Newborn

Drinking Water Fluoridation is Genotoxic & Teratogenic

Democracy At Work? - PPM On Fluoride

"Evidence Be Damned...Patient Outcome Is Irrelevant" - From Helke

Why Remove Fluoride From Phosphate Rock To Make Fertilizer

 

Evolving Collective Intelligence

Let Us Please Frame Collective Intelligence As Big As It Is

Reflections on the evolution of choice and collective intelligence

Whole System Learning and Evolution -- and the New Journalism

Gathering storms of unwanted change

Protect Sources or Not? - More Complex than It Seems

 

Consensus

Islanda, quando il popolo sconfigge l'economia globale.

Il Giorno Fuori dal Tempo, Il significato energetico del 25 luglio

Rinaldo Lampis: L'uso Cosciente delle Energie

Attivazione nei Colli Euganei (PD) della Piramide di Luce

Contatti con gli Abitanti Invisibili della Natura

 

Best sellers from