English

Tinkering Against Scaling

Computers and Society 2025-04-24 v1 Human-Computer Interaction

Abstract

The ascent of scaling in artificial intelligence research has revolutionized the field over the past decade, yet it presents significant challenges for academic researchers, particularly in computational social science and critical algorithm studies. The dominance of large language models, characterized by their extensive parameters and costly training processes, creates a disparity where only industry-affiliated researchers can access these resources. This imbalance restricts academic researchers from fully understanding their tools, leading to issues like reproducibility in computational social science and a reliance on black-box metaphors in critical studies. To address these challenges, we propose a "tinkering" approach that is inspired by existing works. This method involves engaging with smaller models or components that are manageable for ordinary researchers, fostering hands-on interaction with algorithms. We argue that tinkering is both a way of making and knowing for computational social science and a way of knowing for critical studies, and fundamentally, it is a way of caring that has broader implications for both fields.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2504.16546,
  title  = {Tinkering Against Scaling},
  author = {Bolun Zhang and Yang Shen and Linzhuo Li and Yu Ji and Di Wu and Tongyu Wu and Lianghao Dai},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.16546},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

43 pages, 4 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T23:08:17.644Z