2015 Fellows
Seth Frey
Mentors: Luke Chang, PBS; Mary Flanagan, Digital Humanities; Eugene Santos, Engineering; Brendan Nyhan, Government
Seth Frey is a computational social scientist researching online societies. He is coming to the Neukom Institute from a postdoctoral position at Disney Research, a corporate research lab serving the Walt Disney Company. He earned a B.A. in Cognitive Science from the University of California, Berkeley, and a Ph.D. in "Cognitive Science and Informatics" from Indiana University. He researches higher-level reasoning and social cognition in order to improve the design and analysis of complex decision environments.
Talks, Papers, Etc.
- Human Computation: Can you moderate an unreadable message? 'Blind' content moderation via human computation Seth Frey, Maarten W Bos, Robert W Sumner
- Blind Content
- Nautilus: The Unexpected Humanity of Robot Soccer
- Talk: MUCSC 04.09.16
- Presented "Evaluating governance style in online designer societies" at Conference on Complex Systems, Tempe, Arizona, 9/28/2015 to 10/2/2015
- "Notable Paper" presented "Human flocking behavior in three different games of strategic iterated reasoning" at Conference on Complex Systems, Tempe, Arizona, 9/28/2015 to 10/2/2015
- Presented "Strategic information encryption among experts of No Limit Texas Hold'em" at Conference on Complex Systems, Tempe, Arizona, 9/28/2015 to 10/2/2015
- Presented "Emotional Influence and the Social Dimensions of Emotional Regulation" at Computational Social Science Workshop, Tempe, Arizona, 10/1/2015.
- Presented "Quantifying and Predicting Collaboration in Shared Virtual Worlds" at the Player Modeling Workshop of the Eleventh AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Interactive Digital Entertainment, Nov 14, 2015
- Invited Talk, "Expert Information Processing as Strategic Information Encryption" School of Computer Science Colloquium, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, 12/4/2015
Emily Klancher Merchant
Mentors: Robert Bonner, History; Leslie Butler, History; Richard Wright, Geography
Emily holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of Michigan, where she also completed a graduate certificate in Science, Technology, and Society and the predoctoral training program in Population Studies. Emily is currently writing a book manuscript and a series of articles based on her dissertation, “Prediction and Control: Global Population, Population Science, and Population Politics in the Twentieth Century,” which combined archival, oral, and computational methods of analysis to trace the history of demography and global population politics from 1920 to 1984.
As a Neukom fellow, Emily will continue work on the project's online companion, “A Digital Reading of Twentieth-Century Demography” developing it into a resource for the history of demography and for the use of computational methods in the history of science.
Publications
- Population and Development Review 43.1 (2017): 83-117: Merchant, Emily Klancher. "A Digital History of Anglophone Demography and Global Population Control, 1915–1984."
- Scatterplot: guest post: new census race classifications are about civil rights, not discrimination
- HistPhil: How Foundations Got The U.S. Government Invested In International Population Control
- “La Raza: Mexicans in the United States Census,” Journal of Policy History 28(4). Co-authored with Brian Gratton.
- "Measuring and Mitigating Agricultural Greenhouse Gas Production in the United States, 1870-2000,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 12(34): E4681-E4688. Co-authored with William J. Parton, Myron P. Gutmann, Melannie D. Hartman, Paul R. Adler, Frederick M. McNeal, and Susan M. Lutz.
- “An Immigrant’s Tale: The Mexican-American Southwest, 1850-1950,” Social Science History 39(4): 521-550. Co-authored with Brian Gratton.
- HistPhil: How Foundations Got The U.S. Government Invested In International Population Control
Conference Presentations
- “The Technopolitics of Population Control.” Policy History Conference, Nashville, TN.
- "Birth control or population control: Systemic contraceptive technologies and global biopolitics after World War II." Organization of American Historians, Providence, RI.
- "Making a case for universal expertise: Demographers in the British Empire After World War II." Social Science History Association, Baltimore, MD.• "Making global population data and making population data global after World War II." Social Science History Association, Baltimore, MD.
- "La raza: Mexicans in the United States Census." Social Science History Association, Baltimore, MD. With Brian Gratton.
Laurel Symes
Mentors: Thalia Wheatley, PBS; Hannah ter Hofstede, Biology
Laurel earned a B.S. in Biological Sciences from Denison and a PhD in Biological Sciences at Dartmouth. As a Neukom Fellow, Laurel is using machine learning and neural networks to study recognition and decision-making in organisms that range in neural complexity from insects to humans. Animals (including people) use sensory systems to decipher amazingly complex problems. The ability to detect, process, and react to cues in the environment underlies nearly every aspect of an animal’s life, including finding food, avoiding threats, and choosing mates. Laurel’s research addresses fundamental questions in neurobiology and behavior: how do organisms recognize relevant stimuli? How does the process of recognition evolve, diverge, and interact with the context in which decisions are made?”
Workshop
Publications & Popular Articles
- NPR: Sound Matters: Sex And Death In The Rain Forest
- Effects of anthropogenic noise on male signaling behavior and female phonotaxis in Oecanthus tree crickets
- Signal diversification in Oecanthus tree crickets is shaped by energetic, morphometric, and acoustic trade-offs
- Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology: Effects of acoustic environment on male calling activity and timing in Neotropical forest katydids