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Dear all,

(With apologies for cross-posting.) Please join us on *February 19th at
1–2:30pm in 440 Curry Student Center* for a talk by Dariusz Jemielniak of
Kozminski University: “Collaborative Society: How Technology Amplifies on
Natural Cooperative Tendencies.” We often hear how technology is isolating
and polarizing society, but Professor Jemielniak illuminates the positive
sides of technology, discussing how it can facilitate cooperation and
multiply tendencies to engage in prosocial behavior.

The event details are below—please see the event page and attached flyer
for full details:
https://web.northeastern.edu/nulab/event/dariusz-jemielniak/.

*Abstract:*
Collaboration may be an evolutionary mechanism that emerged as a result of
the way our early ancestors acquired cooperative practices regarding food.
Sharing resources seems natural to us; indeed, much human sharing follows
strong social norms of equity and fairness. As Matthew D. Lieberman shows,
even our brains react in deeply social and cooperation-oriented ways. We
are, in fact, wired to be super-cooperators. Homo sapiens may have evolved
via selection for prosociality in a process Brian Hare calls the “survival
of the friendliest.” This quite powerful drive to cooperate with others
starts early in life; studies show that the preference for prosocial
behavior in humans begins as early as infancy.

Human collaboration enabled by technology can occur in specific contexts
such as peer production and collaborative consumption, or more generally
through online sharing and exchange platforms. Emerging technologies,
thanks to their direct collaboration-enabling features and their engagement
of much broader populations, act as super-multipliers for many effects of
collaboration that would otherwise be less noticeable. This phenomenon
emanates from what I call collaborative society: an emerging trend that
changes the social, cultural, and economic fabric of human organization
through technology-fostered cooperative behaviors and interactions.

*Biography:*
Dariusz Jemielniak <http://www.jemielniak.org/>is Full Professor of
Management at Kozminski University (Poland) where he heads the MINDS
(Management in Networked and Digital Societies) department. He is also
associate faculty at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society
(Harvard) and a Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees member. He has
recently been elected as corresponding member to the Polish Academy of
Sciences, as the youngest person in social sciences and humanities in
history.

He is the author of “Common Knowledge?” (2014, Stanford University Press),
winner of the Dorothy Lee Award for Outstanding Scholarship in the Ecology
of Culture in 2015, and the Chair of the Polish Academy of Sciences
academia award in 2016. He has two upcoming books: “Collaborative Society”
(2020, MIT Press, co-authored by A. Przegalinska) and “Thick Big Data”
(2020, Oxford University Press).

He has held annual appointments at Cornell University (2004-2005), Harvard
University (2007, 2011-2012, 2015-2016, 2019-2020), University of
California Berkeley (2008), and MIT (2015-2016, 2019-2020). His research
focuses on open collaboration, peer production, and sharing economy.

This event is free and open to the public, but if you are not a member of
the Northeastern community, please email Sarah Connell,
[log in to unmask], to register.

Lastly, please take a moment and share this information with anyone who may
be interested.

Kind regards,
Laura Johnson

-- 
*Laura Johnson (she/her)*
Ph.D. Student, English
Coordinator, NULab for Texts, Maps, and Networks
<https://web.northeastern.edu/nulab/>
Northeastern University

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