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Flipping things upside-down in this episode, Emese Domahidi (TU Ilmenau) and Mario Haim (LMU Munich) discuss with Claudia Wagner (RWTH Aachen and GESIS) about whether and how computer science really needs the social sciences. Claudia's background as a trained computer scientist as well as her current role as Professor of Applied Computational Social Sciences allowed us to really dive into opposing expectations, clichés, hurdles, and especially the benefits of interdisciplinary work at the intersection between the computer and the social sciences. We also discuss the concepts of algorithmically infused societies as well as "up-ductive" feedback loops, to ultimately discuss best practices for the perfect interdisciplinary collaboration that is computational social science.
Reference
Wagner, C., Strohmaier, M., Olteanu, A., Kıcıman, E., Contractor, N., & Eliassi-Rad, T. (2021). Measuring algorithmically infused societies. Nature, 595, 197-204. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03666-1
Flipping things upside-down in this episode, Emese Domahidi (TU Ilmenau) and Mario Haim (LMU Munich) discuss with Claudia Wagner (RWTH Aachen and GESIS) about whether and how computer science really needs the social sciences. Claudia's background as a trained computer scientist as well as her current role as Professor of Applied Computational Social Sciences allowed us to really dive into opposing expectations, clichés, hurdles, and especially the benefits of interdisciplinary work at the intersection between the computer and the social sciences. We also discuss the concepts of algorithmically infused societies as well as "up-ductive" feedback loops, to ultimately discuss best practices for the perfect interdisciplinary collaboration that is computational social science.
Reference
Wagner, C., Strohmaier, M., Olteanu, A., Kıcıman, E., Contractor, N., & Eliassi-Rad, T. (2021). Measuring algorithmically infused societies. Nature, 595, 197-204. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03666-1