News from the Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences at Indiana University Bloomington.
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
PBS network scientist leads effort to launch the first center for network science in Russia
IU network researcher Stanley Wasserman in collaboration with faculty from the National Research University Higher School of Economics (NRU HSE) in Russia received a $1.5 million grant to set up an International Laboratory for Applied Network Research at the Russian university.
The grant, which was awarded by the HSE, provides funding from 2014 to 2016, at which point, Wasserman believes, the lab, given its strengths, will continue to gain support, with either additional funding from the university or external grants. Quite a few network science institutes now operate at universities in the US. This is the first one in Russia.
Wasserman, who holds a joint appointment in the departments of Statistics and Psychological and Brain Sciences in the College of Arts and Sciences, will serve as the academic supervisor for the lab—consulting, teaching, and collaborating with faculty and students at the school and ensuring the lab’s connectedness with the broader world of network science. He has also been named a Research Professor at HSE.
As a leading methodologist in the field of network analysis, Wasserman designs studies and analyzes data for researchers around the world in such varied areas as management, community psychology, and public health. He is also the coordinating editor of Network Science, a major new journal in the field published by Cambridge University Press. His book "Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications" is a classic in the field, still in print after almost 20 years, and widely used in university courses. His work has also contributed to putting Indiana University on the leading edge of advancements in the field itself. He was one of the first network scientists at IU, and through conference grants, collaborations, and teaching, he continues to be an important network research presence on campus.
Wasserman’s relationship with the Higher School of Economics in Russia began two years ago when he taught a standing-room only introductory seminar on network analysis at the school. At that point, says Valentina Kuskova, director of the new lab, he and others recognized the enormous demand in Russia for knowledge of the discipline and set out to develop the current laboratory.
Wasserman’s participation has been key to the project’s visibility and success, Kuskova explains. “This lab would simply not have been possible without him. Wasserman,” she states, “is a visionary. As a scientific supervisor, he goes beyond providing ideas, inspiration, and encouragement. The results speak for themselves. We are well on our way to establishing and popularizing the field of network research in Russia.”
The new International Laboratory, one of twenty at the school, is itself a network made up of four hubs, each on different HSE campuses—two in Moscow, one in St. Petersburg, and one in Perm. United by common methodologies, tools, and techniques, the research applications span multiple disciplines and areas: political science, education, psychology, management, international business, sociology, and economics. The lab has already taught two week-long workshops in network analysis (one in Moscow in June and a second in St Petersburg in August) and has a number of joint projects well underway.
The lab also has several partnerships and joint research projects with other centers for network analysis in the United States. An international conference, organized by the lab, with invited workshops, is planned for November 2014.
Among some of the current research are studies of student academic achievement as a function of social networks, studies on the relationships between companies and their subsidiaries, studies of public health, and studies of current and historical political and social movements in Russia and the U.S.
Wasserman notes that changes in Russia and the Russian economy over the last 20 years have sparked new interests. “Until recently there was no need for a faculty of management in Russia. Now there are big companies and a need for savvy managers. One of my colleagues studies the energy industry, for example. Russia supplies most of Europe with oil and natural gas. She looks at how energy companies interact with each other and their subsidiaries.”
Over the last twenty years network analysis has become widespread across Europe. The first European conference on network research was in Barcelona in July 2014. In the 21st century, globalization and the recognition of interconnectedness, along with the emergence of the Internet and social media, make network methods an increasingly fitting way to examine many aspects of the social world.
The network under investigation might be social, economic or mathematical. It could examine the spread of ideas, products, diseases, a cultural fad or new technology. Yet, at the center of network science is the idea that connectivity, systematicity, and dependence between the units or actors of a network are essential to greater understanding of those units and their organization.
“In order to really study who behaves the way they behave and why, you need relational data,” said Wasserman, “This enables us to see social influence in action.”
To learn more about the lab and to speak with Wasserman, contact Liz Rosdeitcher at 812-855-4507 or rosdeitc@indiana.edu.
Thursday, September 4, 2014
An InExact Science
In her new podcast, PBS alumna Lisa Cantrell (PhD 2013) explores basic questions of psychological science—and human experience--through beautifully designed sonic landscapes
Art and
science often seem worlds apart. But when the two meet up in Lisa Cantrell’s
new podcast, An InExact Science,
sparks fly between them, igniting visions of a long, happy, well-lived future,
mutually beneficial to both.
Since she
graduated from PBS last year and began her new gig as a postdoctoral research
fellow at the University of California, Davis, Lisa Cantrell (PhD 2013) has
been dreaming up, plotting out and putting together episodes for her podcast
project, “An InExact Science.” The first podcasts will appear online by early
November at http://aninexactscience.podbean.com/.
In January they will begin airing on KDVS in Davis.
In An InExact Science, Cantrell plumbs the
mysteries of every day human experience by offering the perspectives of top
researchers in psychological science alongside the stories of “ordinary people”
(aka non-scientists). In this way, she
seeks to build “a small bridge,” as she calls it, “between what we sense every
day and the empirical evidence of science.”
“Why do we
experience happiness? How do we learn a first language and why is learning a
second sometimes hard? Under what circumstances do we feel regret? Why do we
remember certain events but not others? Why do we sometimes misremember? Where
does religious belief come from?”
These are
the questions that propel a podcast that, she announces in her promotional
video, will be “about us, FOR us, and will invite science to pull up a chair,
stay a while, have a cup of coffee—heck, stay for dinner! And explain at least
a little of why we experience the things we experience.”
But the
conversation is hardly one-sided. Language, memory, music, religion or
regret—whatever the topic might be—she will also expose what she calls “the
beautiful side, the phenomenological side, of what it feels like to experience
a particular thing” so that the topic is “not just objectified in the way that
science does to explain things.”
In putting
these views together, she seeks to produce something artfully and beautifully
designed. “I love listening to podcasts that are done really well,” she
explains, “the way they move information along and shape a topic. The shows
that are really good”—she mentions Radiolab, Snap Judgment, and 99%
Invisible—“create a space that has layers. You feel like you’re in a certain
room or environment just by the sounds that are happening. They have a
beautiful organization and structure.”
But not only
is the podcast artfully designed, it is also poised to prompt what she calls a
“science-art-what-up!” cycle. Alongside top researchers and a story-telling
public, she is enlisting local artists to produce promotional materials. (Go to
the website and you will find buttons, posters, t-shirts, coffee mugs.) And she
is drawing on the music of local musicians to include in her show. (One of the
first episodes includes music of the Bloomington band, Busman’s Holiday.)
Not
surprisingly perhaps, Cantrell herself comfortably occupies the worlds of both
art and science. A South Carolina native, she started college at Furman
University as a visual arts major, but shifted gears when she realized this
path would most likely provide little means of support. Not knowing what to do
next, she took time off from college and traveled in Latin America. She worked
in an adolescent rehabilitation center in Chile while living and painting in an
art collective, and she taught preschool English in Mexico.
The
experience brought home to her the mysteries of language learning, and on her
return to college, she took a psychology course that got her “super hooked,” as
she puts it, on the topic…
…Ultimately
landing her straight in the lab of one of the foremost researchers on language
learning and early development, PBS Distinguished Professor and Chancellor’s
Professor, Linda Smith. The first episode of An InExact Science, in fact, is on language and features an
interview with her former advisor. (Listen to a teaser for this episode here.)
Now she is
working in the Infant Cognition Lab of Lisa Oakes, a professor of psychology at
UC Davis, and is studying visual attention and memory in infants and the use of
eye-tracking methodology. In virtually all of her spare time, she can be found working
on the podcast, uniting art and science in what she hopes will be a long-term
relationship to a renewable and everlasting “science-art-what-up” cycle.
A Kickstarter
campaign to fund equipment and travel for the podcast will be ongoing until
September 12.
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