Prof. Gregory V. Wilson
4 weeks ago by tsuomela
"My main interest is the overlap between software engineering
and computational science."
people
academic
computer-science
software
software-studies
science
computational-science
from delicious
and computational science."
4 weeks ago by tsuomela
A Companion to Relativism // Reviews // Philosophical Reviews // University of Notre Dame
6 weeks ago by tsuomela
The question we most need addressed is not what epistemic modals mean, but what to do with other people's.
book
review
philosophy
relativism
epistemology
expertise
people
testimony
trust
from delicious
6 weeks ago by tsuomela
PebbleRoad: Organizing digital information for others
6 weeks ago by tsuomela
"When we interact with web and intranet teams, we find many struggling to move beyond conceptual-level discussions on information organization. Hours on end are spent on discussing the meaning of "metadata", "controlled vocabulary" and "taxonomy" without any strategic understanding of how everything fits together. Being so bogged down at this level they fail to look beyond to the main reason for their pursuit—organizing information for others (the end users) so that they can find the information easily."
information-science
organization
other
people
digital
from delicious
6 weeks ago by tsuomela
BJ Fogg's Website
january 2012 by tsuomela
" My expertise is creating systems to change human behavior. I call this “Behavior Design.”
I devote about 50% of my time to Stanford and 50% to industry innovation. For me, working in both worlds makes sense: My Stanford work makes me better in industry. And what I learn in industry improves my Stanford research. I’m always eager to help other innovators. "
people
technoloy
innovation
persuasion
from delicious
I devote about 50% of my time to Stanford and 50% to industry innovation. For me, working in both worlds makes sense: My Stanford work makes me better in industry. And what I learn in industry improves my Stanford research. I’m always eager to help other innovators. "
january 2012 by tsuomela
tiara.org
january 2012 by tsuomela
Tiara.org is the personal homepage of Alice Marwick, aka alicetiara. I am a social software researcher based in Boston and New York City.
people
research
social-media
weblog-individual
from delicious
january 2012 by tsuomela
Michael Frank Goodchild
october 2011 by tsuomela
"Michael F. Goodchild is Professor of Geography at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and Director of UCSB’s Center for Spatial Studies. He received his B.A. degree from Cambridge University in Physics in 1965 and his Ph.D. in geography from McMaster University in 1969, and has received four honorary doctorates."
people
geography
academia
school(UCSB)
volunteer
vgi
from delicious
october 2011 by tsuomela
Zimmer, Michael | School of Information Studies | UW-Milwaukee
october 2011 by tsuomela
With a background in new media and Internet studies, the philosophy of technology, and information policy, Zimmer studies the social, political, and ethical dimensions of new media and information technologies. His research and teaching focuses on:
- Ethics and Information Technology
- Information Policy
- Web Search Engines
- Web 2.0 and Library 2.0
- Privacy and Surveillance Theory
- Information and Web Literacy
- Access to Knowledge
- Internet Research Ethics
people
academic
information-science
ethics
information-ethics
philosophy
school(UWisconsin)
from delicious
- Ethics and Information Technology
- Information Policy
- Web Search Engines
- Web 2.0 and Library 2.0
- Privacy and Surveillance Theory
- Information and Web Literacy
- Access to Knowledge
- Internet Research Ethics
october 2011 by tsuomela
Corey Robin
october 2011 by tsuomela
Author of The Reactionary Mind
weblog-individual
political-science
people
conservatism
october 2011 by tsuomela
University of Pennsylvania Political Science Department - Mutz, Diana
september 2011 by tsuomela
"Diana C. Mutz, PhD Stanford University, teaches and does research on public opinion, political psychology and mass political behavior, with a particular emphasis on political communication. At Penn she holds the Samuel A. Stouffer Chair in Political Science and Communication, and also serves as Director of the Institute for the Study of Citizens and Politics at the Annenberg Public Policy Center. She has published articles in a variety of academic journals including American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, Public Opinion Quarterly, Journal of Politics and Journal of Communication. She is also the author of Impersonal Influence: How Perceptions of Mass Collectives Affect Political Attitudes (Cambridge University Press, 1998), a book awarded the Robert Lane Prize for the Best Book in Political Psychology by the American Political Science Association. "
people
research
political-science
psychology
social-psychology
perception
september 2011 by tsuomela
Jonathan Furner
september 2011 by tsuomela
Jonathan Furner is an associate professor in the Department of Information Studies (part of the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, GSE
people
academic
information-science
philosophy
history
sts
school(UCLA)
september 2011 by tsuomela
Yale Law School | Dan M. Kahan
august 2011 by tsuomela
Dan Kahan is the Elizabeth K. Dollard Professor of Law at Yale Law School. In addition to risk perception, his areas of research include criminal law and evidence.
people
academic
law
school(Yale)
risk
perception
culture
cognition
august 2011 by tsuomela
Rebecca MacKinnon
july 2011 by tsuomela
I am currently a Bernard Schwartz Senior Fellow at the New America Foundation in Washington, DC, where I conduct research, writing and advocacy on global Internet policy, free expression, and the impact of digital technologies on human rights. Due to my background and prior experience (see below), I am also considered a leading expert on Chinese Internet censorship. My first book, Consent of the Networked, a treatise on the future of liberty in the Internet age, will be published by Basic Books in January 2012.
people
internet
censorship
freedom
july 2011 by tsuomela
Duke University | English: People
july 2011 by tsuomela
"Cathy N. Davidson's main contributions have been in the areas of history and theory of technology, including history of the book, history of industrialism and postindustrialism, and history of new technologies and society. As Vice Provost of Interdisciplinary Studies, innovative new cross-campus technologies for research and teaching were part of charge and she has had an impact in this area both at Duke and nationally, including as a leader in national policy on digital media and learning. Her interest in issues of race, gender, and sexuality cross all her work, from eighteenth-century literature to envisioning the future of digital media and learning institutions in a digital age. "
people
academic
school(Duke)
technology
history
july 2011 by tsuomela
Phoebe's Home Page
july 2011 by tsuomela
I'm a computer scientist and cultural theorist at the Center for Art and Media Technology in Karlsruhe, Germany. This is my home page.
Work: I work in the areas of media research and artificial intelligence, complementing technical work with cultural analysis of technology.
people
media
technology
computer
art
Work: I work in the areas of media research and artificial intelligence, complementing technical work with cultural analysis of technology.
july 2011 by tsuomela
Sheldon Krimsky - Bio
july 2011 by tsuomela
"Sheldon Krimsky is professor of Urban
people
research
academia
sts
science
risk
technology
july 2011 by tsuomela
Prof. Naomi Ellemers, PhD - Staff - Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
july 2011 by tsuomela
"Naomi Ellemers studied at the University of California at Berkeley, and the University of Groningen, the Netherlands, where she obtained her first degree in Social Psychology in 1987. She obtained her PhD from the same university in 1991, on a thesis entitled "Identity management strategies". From 1991 to 1998 she was employed as Assistant Professor and Associate Professor of Psychology at the Free University of Amsterdam. As of 1999 she has been Full Professor of Social and Organizational Psychology at the University of Leiden, the Netherlands. Her research on group processes and intergroup relations addresses a range of topics including the effects of status differences between groups, diversity in teams and organizations, career development of women and minorities, and motivation and commitment in work teams."
people
academia
communication
volunteer
socialization
organizations
non-profit
social-psychology
country(Germany)
july 2011 by tsuomela
Michael Kramer -Faculty - Department of Communication - College of Arts and Science - University of Missouri
july 2011 by tsuomela
"Dr. Michael Kramer's research centers on three main areas: employee transitions in organizational settings, emotion management in organizations, and group communication processes, particularly in non-profit organizations such as community theater, although he has recently begun investigating the relationship of researchers to institutional review boards. His work on employee transitions examines newcomers, transferees, recently promoted employees, employees being dismissed, and employees experiencing a merger or acquisition. He has typically focused on uncertainty reduction theory as part of this research. His book, Managing Uncertainty in Organizational Communication, presents his conceptualization of uncertainty in human interaction (2004, Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers). Michael is extremely diverse in the research methods he uses, ranging from quantitative research, to content analysis, to ethnographic work."
people
academia
communication
socialization
organizations
non-profit
business
july 2011 by tsuomela
Jacobi Daniel
june 2011 by tsuomela
"Daniel Jacobi est professeur des universités (CE). Il est chercheur dans le laboratoire Culture
people
academic
french
communication
media
sts
science
june 2011 by tsuomela
dunwoody | School of Journalism
may 2011 by tsuomela
"Sharon Dunwoody is Evjue-Bascom Professor in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, as well as Interim Associate Dean for Graduate Education in the Graduate School. Among other affiliations, she is a member of the Governance Faculty of the university’s Gaylord Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies and is a faculty affiliate of the Science and Technology Studies program.
As a scholar, she focuses on the construction of media science messages and on how those messages are employed by individuals for various cognitive and behavioral purposes. Illustrative of this large domain are her current research streams:
How do individuals use information to inform their judgments about environmental risks?
What role do perceptions of both journalists and scientists play in the construction of news about science?"
people
academia
journalism
mass
communication
media
science
media-studies
As a scholar, she focuses on the construction of media science messages and on how those messages are employed by individuals for various cognitive and behavioral purposes. Illustrative of this large domain are her current research streams:
How do individuals use information to inform their judgments about environmental risks?
What role do perceptions of both journalists and scientists play in the construction of news about science?"
may 2011 by tsuomela
Pixel Nitrate - Joaquin Baldwin's Animation Portfolio
april 2011 by tsuomela
Joaquin Baldwin is an Annie Award-nominated director and animator from Paraguay, currently living in Los Angeles. He has received more than 100 awards for his animated films Sebastian's Voodoo and Papiroflexia, both produced at the UCLA Animation Workshop. Joaquin is a proud recipient of a full graduate scholarship from the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation.
art
animation
people
april 2011 by tsuomela
Daniel Nettle's personal page
april 2011 by tsuomela
Author of Personality:what makes you the way you are... "I am a behavioural scientist interested in applying ideas from ecology and evolution to human behaviour. I have worked on such topics as cooperation, reproductive decisions, parenting and families, personality, and health. My research uses theoretical modelling, as well as behavioural data from several countries, especially the UK. I"
people
evolution
biology
behavior
human
modeling
psychology
april 2011 by tsuomela
Forest Research - Anna Lawrence
april 2011 by tsuomela
Author of "The first cuckoo in winter: British phenology recording, credibility and meaning"
people
research
citizen-science
forestry
environment
monitor
citizen
participation
phenology
biology
diversity
country(UK)
april 2011 by tsuomela
UT Knoxville | College of Arts
march 2011 by tsuomela
"My research focuses on disasters. I have conducted in –depth research on several major disasters including Love Canal, the Exxon-Valdez oil spill, the 1993 Mississippi Flood, the Hanta Virus outbreak of 1993, ground water contamination in Woburn, MA, and Hurricane Katrina. I am presently conducting research on the TVA ash spill in Kingston, TN. My research on disasters has focused on several different aspects of these events: environmental health, scientific uncertainty, disaster mitigation response and preparedness, disaster policy, long-term recovery, clean-up efforts, human rights, environmental justice, displacement, economic dislocation, crisis communication in extreme events, public health, bioterrorism, community response efforts, and the dichotomy between lay and expert opinion. I am currently finishing a book on unnatural disasters. My courses include: disasters, environmental health, bioterrorism
people
anthropology
disaster
crisis
school(UTenn)
march 2011 by tsuomela
Carole Palmer's HomePage
march 2011 by tsuomela
"I conduct research on fundamental problems in the use of scientific and scholarly information and teach courses on information behavior, scientific information practices and problems, and user study design. My program of research is about mobilizing information for researchers, and it focuses on two interrelated areas: information work in the research process and context-rich digital research collections.
"
people
information-science
school(UIllinois)
"
march 2011 by tsuomela
New Views on R. Buckminster Fuller
march 2011 by tsuomela
"A serious scholarly look at the work of R. Buckminster Fuller is long overdue. While Fuller himself wrote and published many volumes, and several biographies have been written about him, there is little research that contributes to a critical understanding of his work and its historical significance. The 1,300-plus linear feet of material contained in the Fuller Archive at Stanford, including papers, photographs, audio and video recordings, and models, has been recently organized and described by the Department of Special Collections, and is ready to be explored by a new generation of scholars.
Fuller's work has often suffered from lopsided treatment. Some laud him as a planetary prophet whose design science work foretold sustainable architecture and nanotechnology
book
publisher
design
people
FullerBuckminster
Fuller's work has often suffered from lopsided treatment. Some laud him as a planetary prophet whose design science work foretold sustainable architecture and nanotechnology
march 2011 by tsuomela
C.W. Anderson
february 2011 by tsuomela
I’m an ethnographer who studies the news, and how changes in technology, culture and economics are shaping journalism.
people
academia
media
journalism
ethnography
february 2011 by tsuomela
Richard J. Bernstein - Vera List Professor of Philosophy
february 2011 by tsuomela
"One of the best definitions of a philosopher was once given by a teacher of mine. A philosopher is someone who asks the questions that a curious imaginative child asks, but is not satisfied with the type of answers that parents normally give. In our reflective moments we all ask philosophic questions about the meaning of life, how things hang together, what we can know, how we should live, what we ought to do. As a philosopher, I passionately struggle with these questions. As a teacher, I encourage my students to do the same."
people
philosophy
school(NewSchool)
february 2011 by tsuomela
Welcome! | Janet Vertesi
february 2011 by tsuomela
A Ph.D. graduate from Cornell University in Science and Technology Studies.
people
research
astronomy
sts
information
collaboration
ethnography
Mars
february 2011 by tsuomela
Richard Einhorn Composer
november 2010 by tsuomela
Composer of "The Origin"
THE ORIGIN is a multimedia oratorio in celebration of the life and work of Charles Darwin, one of the world's greatest and most influential thinkers. Scored for soloists, chorus, orchestra, female Balkan vocal group, and video projections, the piece centers upon the making of Darwin's masterwork: The Origin of Species.
music
composer
people
THE ORIGIN is a multimedia oratorio in celebration of the life and work of Charles Darwin, one of the world's greatest and most influential thinkers. Scored for soloists, chorus, orchestra, female Balkan vocal group, and video projections, the piece centers upon the making of Darwin's masterwork: The Origin of Species.
november 2010 by tsuomela
Kevin Crowston | Syracuse University School of Information Studies
november 2010 by tsuomela
"Kevin Crowston is a Professor of Information Studies at the Syracuse University School of Information Studies (aka the iSchool). He received his A.B. (1984) in Applied Mathematics (Computer Science) from Harvard University and a Ph.D. (1991) in Information Technologies from the Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
His research examines new ways of organizing made possible by the use of information technology. He approaches this issue in several ways: empirical studies of coordination-intensive processes in human organizations (especially virtual organization)
people
academic
research
citizen-science
collaboration
information-science
school(Syracuse)
His research examines new ways of organizing made possible by the use of information technology. He approaches this issue in several ways: empirical studies of coordination-intensive processes in human organizations (especially virtual organization)
november 2010 by tsuomela
Michael Adams
november 2010 by tsuomela
Canadian pollster who uses social values research method.."measures fundamental values and worldviews and examines how they change over time. Probing beyond the opinions people express about the issues in the headlines, values research uncovers profound, long-term evolutions in the way people see themselves, each other, and the world."
people
research
canada
polling
surveys
values
november 2010 by tsuomela
Home Page - Stephen M. Gardiner
november 2010 by tsuomela
Stephen M. Gardiner is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and the Program on Values in Society at the University of Washington, Seattle. He specializes in ethics, political philosophy and environmental ethics. He also has interests in ancient philosophy, bioethics, and the philosophy of economics.
people
philosophy
climate
environment
ethics
intergenerational
future
school(UWashington)
november 2010 by tsuomela
Wendy Espeland, Undergraduate, Sociology Dept., WCAS
october 2010 by tsuomela
Wendy Espeland works in the areas of organizations, culture, and law. Her book, The Struggle for Water: Politics, Rationality and Identity in the American Southwest was awarded the Best Book Prize by the Culture Section of the American Sociological Association, the Rachel Carson Award from the Society for the Social Studies of Science, and the Louis Brownlow Book Award from the National Academy of Public Administration. She is currently writing a book about the effects of commensuration, the process of translating qualities into quantities. In it she investigates how media rankings have influenced higher education, how efforts to measure homosexuality have shaped gay and lesbian politics, and the commensurative practices necessary in order to transform air pollution into a commodity that is traded on futures markets.
people
academic
sociology
school(Northwestern)
october 2010 by tsuomela
Don Fallis | School of Information Resources and Library Science
october 2010 by tsuomela
I received my PhD in Philosophy at the University of California, Irvine. In particular, I studied the philosophy of mathematics. When I came to work in a library and information science program, I had to reinvent myself both as a teacher and a researcher. However, the necessary transformation was not as drastic as I might have expected.
In my previous studies, I looked at how mathematicians acquire knowledge. Now I am looking at how people in general acquire knowledge from other people. In particular, I am doing research on how people acquire knowledge from other people through information sources such as books and the Internet. I regularly teach a course that looks at how to make it easier for people to evaluate the quality of information.
people
research
school(ArizonaU)
information-science
philosophy
In my previous studies, I looked at how mathematicians acquire knowledge. Now I am looking at how people in general acquire knowledge from other people. In particular, I am doing research on how people acquire knowledge from other people through information sources such as books and the Internet. I regularly teach a course that looks at how to make it easier for people to evaluate the quality of information.
october 2010 by tsuomela
Daphne R. Raban - homepage
september 2010 by tsuomela
My Research Interests are:
* The subjective value of information
* Economics of information goods
* Information markets (fee-based, free, social, public goods, prediction, aggregation)
* Information business models
* Voluntary payments for information
* Motivations for information sharing
* Information overload
people
research
information-economics
value
information
information-science
school(UHaifa)
country(Israel)
org(ASIST)
* The subjective value of information
* Economics of information goods
* Information markets (fee-based, free, social, public goods, prediction, aggregation)
* Information business models
* Voluntary payments for information
* Motivations for information sharing
* Information overload
september 2010 by tsuomela
Duke University | Economics: Kuran
july 2010 by tsuomela
Social Mechanisms - I have written on the evolution of preferences and institutions, with contributions to the study of hidden preferences, the unpredictability of social revolutions, the dynamics of ethnic conflict, the evolution of morality, perceptions of discrimination, and cultural change. Many of these works deal with the repercussions of concealing knowledge.
Middle East, Islam, and Economics - Another of my research interests concerns the economics of the Middle East.
people
academic
economics
political-science
research
social-proof
social-psychology
Middle East, Islam, and Economics - Another of my research interests concerns the economics of the Middle East.
july 2010 by tsuomela
InvisiblePeople.tv
july 2010 by tsuomela
A weblog of videos and profiles of homeless people. "Everyone on the streets has their own story, some made bad decisions, others were victims, but none of them deserve what they have been left with, and it is a reflection of our own society that we just leave them there."
homelessness
people
profile
economics
politics
july 2010 by tsuomela
Gregory D. Wilson: ISU English Department
july 2010 by tsuomela
I am an assistant professor of rhetoric and professional communication. I became interested in the rhetoric of science through the idea of incommensurability--the idea that ties us rhetoricians in knots and yet isn't at all a deal-breaker for other fields that study science (sociology, anthropology, history, policy studies, etc.). Having done a lot of applied work in industry and government outside of the academy, the idea that technical professionals from different disciplines "just couldn't talk to each other" was a non-starter. I've spent a lot of my applied career trying to frame incommensurability as a set of difficulties not a set of impossibilities and to help engineers and scientists collaborate and communicate.
sts
science
communication
rhetoric
people
school(IowaState)
academic
incommensurability
kuhn
thomas
july 2010 by tsuomela
HUMAN Library | Home
june 2010 by tsuomela
The Human Library is an innovative method designed to promote dialogue, reduce prejudices and encourage understanding.The main characteristics of the project are to be found in its simplicity and positive approach.
In it’s initial form the Human Library is a mobile library set up as a space for dialogue and interaction. Visitors to the Human Library are given the opportunity to speak informally with “people on loan”; this latter group being extremely varied in age, sex and cultural background.
The Human Library enables groups to break stereotypes by challenging the most common prejudices in a positive and humorous manner. It is a concrete, easily transferable and affordable way of promoting tolerance and understanding.
prejudice
education
participation
culture
library
people
events
social
community
stererotypes
tolerance
In it’s initial form the Human Library is a mobile library set up as a space for dialogue and interaction. Visitors to the Human Library are given the opportunity to speak informally with “people on loan”; this latter group being extremely varied in age, sex and cultural background.
The Human Library enables groups to break stereotypes by challenging the most common prejudices in a positive and humorous manner. It is a concrete, easily transferable and affordable way of promoting tolerance and understanding.
june 2010 by tsuomela
David Ropeik Author and Consultant
june 2010 by tsuomela
David Ropeik - Author, award-winning television reporter, teacher, consultant, public speaker; all of David’s work has been directed toward the same goal; to develop in-depth knowledge about an area of public interest, to synthesize that knowledge, and to provide that synthesis in a clear, entertaining, relevant way so people can benefit from that information. For the past decade, his focus has been on applying a better understanding of the way people perceive risk to the challenge of risk communication and overall risk management.
people
risk
perception
management
business
psychology
author
bias
june 2010 by tsuomela
about - Heather Piwowar
may 2010 by tsuomela
My research passion is understanding the prevalence and patterns of research data sharing and reuse. I hope my work contributes to more efficient and effective research data reuse through improved incentives and mandates.
weblog-individual
research
open-science
data-curation
phd
people
project(Utenn)
may 2010 by tsuomela
Vlatko Vedral's Home Page
may 2010 by tsuomela
As Professor of Quantum Information Theory at the Universities of Oxford and Singapore I spend an awful lot of my time thinking about what quantum mechanics actually means and how it affects everything that we see around us. For example:
* Entropy, energy and thermodynamics: what makes our universe tick?
* The origin of information: who makes it and how can we use it?
* Bizarre quantum effects such as 'entanglement': just how spooky is this stuff?
* Harnessing quantum physics for improved information processing: how much extra 'oompf' does quantum physics give us?
* What does new evidence of quantum effects at the macroscopic level mean for us and the universe that we see around us?
* New applications of quantum information - going beyond teleportation, super fast computing and super secure cryptography. Of course i am not the first to think about these issues.
people
physics
quantum-mechanics
information
philosophy
* Entropy, energy and thermodynamics: what makes our universe tick?
* The origin of information: who makes it and how can we use it?
* Bizarre quantum effects such as 'entanglement': just how spooky is this stuff?
* Harnessing quantum physics for improved information processing: how much extra 'oompf' does quantum physics give us?
* What does new evidence of quantum effects at the macroscopic level mean for us and the universe that we see around us?
* New applications of quantum information - going beyond teleportation, super fast computing and super secure cryptography. Of course i am not the first to think about these issues.
may 2010 by tsuomela
Christian Sandvig's Homepage
april 2010 by tsuomela
My research investigates communication and information technology infrastructure and public policy -- especially the way that legal, social, and technical elements work together (or don't work together) to shape systems of communication like the Internet. Usually, I read. Sometimes, I write. Often, I drink coffee. I might be found in a cafe drinking coffee and reading, or at home drinking coffee and writing. Or just drinking coffee.
people
academic
research
infrastructure
communication
sts
faculty
april 2010 by tsuomela
Fred Feldman
april 2010 by tsuomela
author of Confrontations with the Reaper and various articles on desert and ethics.
people
academic
philosophy
school(UMass)
ethics
desert
death
april 2010 by tsuomela
Rubin Landau, Oregon State University
april 2010 by tsuomela
Home to video lectures on scientific computing and physics.
people
science
academic
lecture
physics
video
computational-science
mathematics
april 2010 by tsuomela
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