Quantifying the social and economic impacts of climate change can be a challenging and technical process, but measuring these effects is critical to designing global and national climate policies. This challenge was taken up by a Social Science Matrix seminar during Summer 2015, as researchers and students from diverse disciplines met to determine how modern […]
Research Team
Human Rights and the University
In Fall 2015, Social Science Matrix is sponsoring a semester-long prospecting seminar on “Human Rights and the University.” The seminar is organized by the Human Rights Program (HRP), a program established in 2010 as an extension of the Human Rights Interdisciplinary (HRI) Minor that promotes interdisciplinarity and undergraduate research and education through a postdoctoral fellowship, […]
Research Team
Metaphor, Across Data Sets and Methodologies
In Fall 2015, Social Science Matrix will launch a new seminar focused on “metaphor studies,” a field that traces its modern origins to the UC Berkeley campus in 1980, when George Lakoff and Mark Johnson published Metaphors We Live By, thereby launching a wave of interdisciplinary studies on metaphor, language and cognition. “We know a […]
Research Team
A Polarizing Europe
The term “extremism” has been used often in the context of Europe over the past few years, from religious extremism that fuels terrorism and hate crimes to the movement of Europe's political parties toward the "extremes" of right and left. Indeed, the rise of "extremism" is a reflection of the upheaval in Europe broadly and […]
Research Team
Re-Representing the Earth Through Landscape, Infrastructure, and Data
How does technology demand a quantitatively driven representation of the earth? How has the increased capacity for technology to store and process data transformed the earth and our ideas about it? What destiny does so-called “Big Data” hold for the myriad crises of the earth? In Fall 2015, Social Science Matrix is sponsoring a research […]
Research Team
Social Death: Race, Risk, and Representation
First coined in 1985 by sociologist Orlando Patterson in his text Slavery and Social Death, the phrase “social death” refers to the condition of people not accepted as fully human by wider society. Patterson uses the term in relation to the “imprintable and…disposable status” of the slave, and the expression has since been applied by […]
Research Team
Superintelligence
In Fall 2015, Social Science Matrix will sponsor a seminar that will bring together presenters from diverse social sciencse, including economics, political science, and sociology, as well as humanities and technology disciplines, to reflect upon “superintelligence." Superintelligence refers to biological or artificial (or hybrid) agent(s) capable of general purpose intelligence beyond that of the smartest […]
Research Team
Work and Politics in the Digital Era
What does it mean for our economy—and society at large—that workplaces are increasingly becoming “virtual”? What are the implications for the labor market when computer-driven algorithms are in charge of hiring decisions, or when service employees are at risk of losing their jobs if their customer rating falls too low? In Fall 2015, Social Science […]
Research Team
Prosopography: Toward a Toolkit
In Fall 2015, Social Science Matrix will be launching a year-long research seminar focused on “Developing Tools and Collaborations in Prosopographical and Historical Social Network Research Environments”. While its name might be a mouthful, this seminar—a continuation of a 2014 Matrix prospecting seminar—has a goal to develop “research toolkit” that will help faculty, staff, and […]
Research Team
Technology for Measurement
Today’s social scientists have access to a diverse toolbox of software for analyzing data, but when it comes to gathering the data in the first place, surprisingly few standardized solutions are available. To tackle this challenge, Social Science Matrix is sponsoring a year-long research seminar called “T4M,” or “Technology for Measurement,” which seeks to examine […]
Research Team
The Neuroscience of Price Bubbles
In 1936, John Maynard Keynes famously wrote of the “animal spirits” that tend to override rational decision-making in economics. “Our decisions to do something positive,” Keynes wrote, “can only be taken as the result of animal spirits—a spontaneous urge to action rather than inaction, and not as the outcome of a weighted average of quantitative […]
Research Team
Biomedical and Social Science Collaborative
In Spring 2015, Social Science Matrix sponsored a prospecting seminar to support the Biomedical and Social Science Collaborative (BMSSC), which brought together faculty and graduate students from the fields of biostatistics, medicine, and political science to study issues related to governance and global health delivery. At the heart of this seminar is a concern that […]