31
Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University [email protected]

Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University [email protected]

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Social and Scientific Implications of

Science Blogging

Janet D. Stemwedel

Department of Philosophy

San José State University

[email protected]

Page 2: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Scientific communication as essential to scientific practice

• Sharing results

• Articulating theories

• Training new scientists

Page 3: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Scientific communication as essential to scientific practice

• Asking non-scientists for resources

• Sharing vital information with the public

• Shaping general scientific education

Page 4: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Scientific communication through traditional channels

Peer reviewed literature

• Back and forth between scientists

• Long timescale

• Incentive to be secretive about findings, methods

• Competing interests of peer reviewers

Page 5: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Scientific communication through traditional channels

Conference presentations

• Back and forth between scientists

• Shorter timescale, but ephemeral

• Those not at the conference aren’t generally part of the conversation

Page 6: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Scientific communication through traditional channels

Press releases/popular presentations

• Not much back and forth between scientists and lay audience

• At the mercy of science journalists

• Challenges of “framing” to communicate effectively

Page 7: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Knowledge-building requires good communication.

• Objectivity achieved by comparing results/interpretations with many other scientists, trying to screen out biases.(H.E. Longino, Science as Social Knowledge, 1990)

• Many scientific questions require interdisciplinary approaches.

• Avoiding duplication, dead-ends.

Page 8: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Worries about traditional channels of communication

• Comes at culmination of research project, not while it is being conducted

• What is reported reflects the biases of reviewers and journal editors

• Amount of information that isn’t reported (especially what didn’t work)

Page 9: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Promising features of blogs

• Back and forth on a short timescale (through comments, discussions on other blogs)

• Less ephemeral than non-virtual conversations

• Potential to involve people from many places, disciplines, backgrounds

Page 10: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Promising features of blogs

• Free of some pitfalls of peer review (e.g., conservative tendencies with respect to judging new findings)

• Quality control?• A window into scientific knowledge

building as a process (vs. “finished” knowledge)

Page 11: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 12: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 13: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 14: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Community functioning within the tribe of science

• Training in theory, instrumentation, experimental strategies, etc.

• Within the community, who do we pay attention to? (vs. Mertonian norm of universality)

• Mentoring (on grant-writing, manuscripts, setting and solving problems, how to be a good scientist)

• Engagement with collaborators• Engagement with competitors

Page 15: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Community functioning within the tribe of science

Talking explicitly about scientist-to-scientist interactions frequently ignored or done in private.

Huge challenge to prospective scientists to grasp the nature of the community they’ll be joining!

Page 16: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Blogs as windows into the workings of scientific

communities.• What is it like to be a scientist in a

particular field, work setting, career stage, geographical location, etc?

• Is there anyone else like me?(Ability to build a virtual community in the absence of critical mass for a “real” community.)

Page 17: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 18: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 19: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 20: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Blogs as windows into the workings of scientific

communities.

• How prevalent is this practice?

• Do others in the community find this practice as problematic as I do?

• How could things be different?

Page 21: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 22: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 23: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Blogging as a different kind of conversation.

• Audience of the willing– Will anyone read this?– Anyone can read this!

Page 24: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Echo chamber vs. pitched battled

• Option to control disclosure of personal details– Who’s an authority?– Risk of getting dooced

Page 25: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 26: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Can blogs shift the culture?

• Competitions between individuals for scarce resources vs. cooperation on a joint goal (increasing and improving shared body of knowledge)

• Starting to take mentoring seriously

• Regularizing discussions of community norms and structures

Page 27: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Interaction with the larger society

• “Audience of the willing” means non-scientists can read scientists’ blogs -- cultivating interest among non-experts

• Direct communication (rather than filtering through a journalist, competing for column space or air time

• Lay readers have access to scientists of whom they can ask questions

Page 28: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com
Page 29: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Interaction with the larger society

• Ongoing discussions that reveal science as a process

• Transparency (hard work, not cheating and wasting our money)

• Scientists revealed as humans with lives outside the lab

Page 30: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Interaction with the larger society

Engagement between scientists and non-scientists may:

• Change how non-scientists understand science and scientists

• Change how scientists understand their own tribe

• Expand our sense of community

Page 31: Social and Scientific Implications of Science Blogging Janet D. Stemwedel Department of Philosophy San José State University dr.freeride@gmail.com

Scientists, not blogs, hold the key to the future of science

Any tool can be a weapon if you hold it right. -- Ani Di Franco

BUT blogs can make it easier to find and engage with like-minded members of your tribe with whom to steer things in a better direction.