Print

Print


*NULab for Texts, Maps, and Networks*



*"What do the data tell us about election 2020?" PanelDecember 11, 1–2:30pm
(Eastern)*

Please join us for “What do the data tell us about election 2020?” a panel
that will feature: *Erika Franklin Fowler *(Wesleyan University), *Jill
Lepore* (Harvard University), *Solomon Messing* (ACRONYM), and *Kate
Starbird *(University of Washington). Each panelist will speak about their
research into topics such as the twentieth-century origins of
election-related data science, the false meta-narrative of voter fraud in
the 2020 election, the landscape of political advertising in 2020, and the
effect of COVID-19 on polling data. We will then have time for discussion
and questions among the panelists and attendees.

*This is a remote event and registration is required. RSVP here
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSehNoD0X0d__D25l1fr_XJ8GlHvPCxNcdWKCZwS0ggkrsVc7w/viewform>.
See the event page
<https://web.northeastern.edu/nulab/event/election-2020/> for more details.*

*Erika Franklin Fowler <https://efowler.faculty.wesleyan.edu/>* is
Professor of Government at Wesleyan University where she directs the
Wesleyan Media Project (WMP), which tracks and analyzes political
advertising in real-time during elections. Fowler specializes in
large-scale analyses of political and health-related communication – from
local media and campaign advertising in particular – in electoral and
health policy settings, and her interdisciplinary work on the content and
effect of messaging has been published in political science, communication,
law/policy, and medical journals. She is also co-author of *Political
Advertising in the United States*, and she has led WMP’s expansion into
computational analyses of digital advertising.

*Jill Lepore <https://scholar.harvard.edu/jlepore/biocv>* is the David
Woods Kemper ’41 Professor of American History and Affiliate Professor of
Law at Harvard University. A prize-winning professor, she teaches classes
in evidence, historical methods, the humanities, and American political
history. Lepore's research explores absences and asymmetries in the
historical record, with a particular emphasis on the history and technology
of evidence. Her most recent book, *IF THEN: How the Simulmatics
Corporation Invented the Future* (2020), investigates "the Cold War origins
of the data-mad, algorithmic twenty-first century." As a wide-ranging and
prolific essayist, Lepore writes about American history, law, literature,
and politics. She is a staff writer at *The New Yorker*, and host of the
podcast, The Last Archive.

* <https://solomonmg.github.io/>*
*Solomon Messing <https://solomonmg.github.io/>* is the Chief Scientist at
Lockwood Strategy (ACRONYM) and an Affiliated Researcher at Georgetown
University. Messing uses complex experimentation and modeling, behavioral
data from the web, and surveys to study how people understand and react to
social information. His most recent research involves using privacy tech to
unlock research/ML in corporate data warehouses. He is the author of *The
Impression of Influence*, written with Justin Grimmer and Sean Westwood.

*Kate Starbird <https://www.hcde.washington.edu/starbird> *is an Associate
Professor at the Department of Human Centered Design & Engineering (HCDE)
at the University of Washington (UW). Starbird's research sits in the
emerging field of crisis informatics—the study of how social media and
other communication technologies are used during crisis events. Currently,
her work focuses on the production and spread of online rumors,
misinformation, and disinformation in the context of crisis events.
Starbird is a co-founder of the UW Center for an Informed Public.

*NULab events are free and open to the public, but registration
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1WkrFMk9-bG6tUGBJRdKsUuOjxV0gT5ROnuLwvUtyZQc/edit>
is required. All fall 2020 NULab events will be virtual.*


*Please contact [log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]> with any
questions. See the NULab events page
<https://web.northeastern.edu/nulab/events/> for more information and other
fall 2020 events.*

########################################################################

To unsubscribe from the BOSTONDH list, click the following link:
https://listserv.neu.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=BOSTONDH