EchoChamber
Same situation. Different chambers.
An open atlas of public meaning. For the same event, EchoChamber lays out the different "chambers" of interpretation side by side — what each side saw, feared, and got wrong about the others.
It maps fifty years of U.S. and global flashpoints — thousands of situations you can browse by decade, region, and topic, search across, or add to by mapping any situation yourself. No account, no tracking, no prompt required.
One event, four chambers
Every story lives inside competing frames. For each flashpoint, EchoChamber sets those frames side by side — the distinct chambers a situation is understood from — so you can see the whole room, not just your corner of it.
It is grounded in framing theory, frame analysis, and echo-chamber research. Every situation is sourced and cited, and the code and method are public.
An atlas, not an argument
- Thousands of mapped situations spanning fifty years of U.S. and global flashpoints
- The distinct chambers around each one — what each side saw, feared, and misread
- Browse by decade, region, and topic — from Politics and Law to Tech, Media, and Culture
- Search across five decades, or describe any situation and map it yourself
- Grounded in framing theory, frame analysis, and echo-chamber research
- Public code, public method, public sources — free and open source under AGPL-3.0