Social science meets computer science at Yahoo!

By Jonathan Anderson / January 13th 2010

The San Francisco Chronicle published an interesting article on Monday about how "Yahoo Labs has bolstered its ranks of social scientists, adding highly credentialed cognitive psychologists, economists and ethnographers from top universities around the world. At approximately 25 people, it's still the smallest group within the research division, but one of the fastest growing."

Highlights:

The recruitment effort reflects a growing realization at Yahoo, the second most popular U.S. online site and search engine, that computer science alone can't answer all the questions of the modern Web business. As the novelty of the Internet gives way, Yahoo and other 21st century media businesses are discovering they must understand what motivates humans to click and stick on certain features, ads and applications—and dismiss others out of hand.

It's encouraging that Yahoo Labs is "focused now on the benefit that computer technology provides to people, as opposed to focused on what technology can invent," said Len Shustek, an angel investor and chairman of the Computer History Museum in Mountain View.

For a company that provides such a mishmash of applications and features to generally low-sophistication users, aren't they arriving a bit late at this realization?

Read the full article here.

Comments

Lee Baldwin (not verified) 18 January 2010, 12:00 (Permalink)

... better late than never! Mish mash is right. But these days all the biggies seem to be losing their way... Apple, Google, Yahoo... and ya know sometimes a problem can be over-studied too, costing even more money for the wrong results.

www.sleepingdeer.com/yawp

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About the author(s)

Managing Editor, UX MagazineJonathan is a tech-focused jack of all trades and one of the Managing Editors of UX Magazine. He is also the author of the recent book Effective UI: The Art of Building Great User Experience in Software, published by O'Reilly Media. From 2005 to 2009, Jonathan helped found EffectiveUI, a leading UX strategy, design, and development agency focused on rich Internet, desktop, and mobile systems. Jonathan is on Twitter @first_day.