The Making of Valid Data, People and Machines in Genetic Research Practice

26 07 2007

I have for a long time thought about writing about when my colleagues finish their defence, and become PhD’s. Well I seem to have forgotten about that in the thick of battle during the semester. Well, now I’m going to start backblogging.

The last dissertation I wrote about was Petra Jonvallen’s book Testing Pills, Enacting Obesity, the next one written in English from the department is Corinna Kruse’s The Making of Valid Data. People and Machines in Genetic Research Practice, which was defended on the 22 of September 2007.

Corinna’s dissertation is a multisited laboratory ethnography about how ‘samples are turned into data that is considered valid and useful by the research community.’ The dissertation dives into machines, norms, ideals, skills, as well as validity, agency reproducibility.

Theoretically Corinna’s study draws on Bruno Latour’s popular concept of immutable mobiles and Karen Barad’s framework of agential realism to discuss ‘various notions of humanness and machineness which shaped scientists’ practices and made the creation of valid data possible.’

A long-time overdue, Congratulations Corinna!





Text Analysis Software

24 07 2007

At the moment I’m starting work on new empirical material, which I hope will yield insights into the discourse of contemporary distance education. The empirical material consists of about 300 articles in PDF-format, a quite large amount of data.

I’m in the process of trying to find quantitative text-analysis software for analyzing these articles for trends in the data (preferably with the possibility to group different documents) for the purpose of providing input to a deeper qualitative analysis of a selection of the documents.

So far I’ve come up with the following freeware programs for Windows. Any other suggestions, please leave a tip in the comments.

TextSTAT

Kwic Concordance 

AntConc

Simple Concordance Program 

ConcApp 

Kwicfinder

Xaira

Poliqarp

MLCT: Multilingual Corpus Toolkit

CorpusSearch

aConcorde





Quote of the Day

24 01 2007

“Too much and too long, we seem to have surrendered community excellence and community values in the mere accumulation of material things. Our gross national product … if we should judge America by that – counts air pollution and cigarette advertising, and ambulances to clear our highways of carnage. It counts special locks for our doors and the jails for those who break them. It counts the destruction of our redwoods and the loss of our natural wonder in chaotic sprawl. It counts napalm and the cost of a nuclear warhead, and armored cars for police who fight riots in our streets. It counts Whitman’s rifle and Speck’s knife, and the television programs which glorify violence in order to sell toys to our children.

“Yet the gross national product does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages; the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures neither our wit nor our courage; neither our wisdom nor our learning; neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country; it measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile.”

Robert Francis Kennedy, Address, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, March 18, 1968

 





Open Search Plugins for Researchers

4 12 2006

function addEngine(engineURL) {
if (typeof window.external.AddSearchProvider == “function”) {
window.external.AddSearchProvider(engineURL);
} else {
alert(“Sorry, you need a Firefox 2.0 or newer to install a open search plugin.”);
}
}
//–>

I got tired of clicking three times every time I wanted to search our university library so I wrote a couple of open search plugins so that I could do the searches in the search bar in Firefox: one is for Google scholar with advanced search for humanities/social sciences; one is for the Swedish national library system LIBRIS; one is for finding personnel at my university; and the rest are for searching our university library catalog.

You need Firefox 2.0 to be able to use the search plugins. You can download Firefox 2.0 here. (It might work with Internet Explorer 7, but I haven’t tried it.)

Google Scholar Social Sciences Search

LIBRIS (National Swedish Library System)

Link�ping University Library: Catalog

Link�ping University Library: Databases

Link�ping University Library: Journals

Link�ping University Personnel Search





Instructional Technologies: Agency, Governing, and Imaginaries

20 12 2005

 

Session Invitation/Call for Papers


 

Reviewing Humanness: Bodies, Technologies and Spaces, EASST Conference, 2006

University of Lausanne, Switzerland, 23rd-26th August 2006
http://www2.unil.ch/easst2006/

Session organizers

Ulf Mellström, Linköping University, ulfme@tema.liu.se
Francis Lee, Linköping University, frale@tema.liu.se
Jörgen Nissen, Linköping University, jorgen.nissen@ituf.liu.se
Lennart Sturesson, Natl. Institute for Working Life,
    lennart.sturesson@arbetslivsinstitutet.se

Abstract

In the ongoing discourse on different spatialities and multiple versions of
imaginary through informational flows, educational and instructional technologies
as technological systems are rarely given visibility or recognition. Our aim
in this session is to give notion to the variety of ways that educational and
instructional technologies can be regarded as different forms of redistributed
thought, governing, and new versions of spatial imaginaries.

We would like to open up for a critical STS-intervention into educational systems
where technology plays a crucial part. From archaeological findings on ‘writings
in sand’ to contemporary on-line learning communities, artifacts and the way
they distribute and redistribute thought is a leitmotif for learning, teaching
and thinking in a number of layers in various forms of education, whether it
be university campus education, distance and correspondence education or youth
education. Such instructional and educational technologies are far from independent
from the thought systems to which they belong. Rather, ‘they model styles
of thought’ (Turkle 1997). In what ways are instructional and educational
technologies actually linked to governing systems of thought? Are there specific
regimes of practice in technologically mediated technology? In what ways are
information and communication technologies generally part of new ways of learning
or are there new ways of learning? This session is organized around three broad
themes in the intersection of education and STS. We invite papers that touch
on one or several of the themes, but also papers which transverse the themes
in apparent and non-apparent ways.

Theme 1: Governing and Practice. Technology in education creates multiple
and specific power relations between school, teacher, student and the state.
For example: In correspondence education, responsibility for discipline and
learning is shifted from state and school to the individual level through inscribed
technological devices; or online learning platforms prescribe certain sanctioned
teaching practices to the teacher which circumscribes the afforded spaces of
action sharply. Visual simulations in technical and medical education steer
the students’ incorporation of the ‘correct’, and easily visualized
knowledge. The question is how these practices are enacted? Which are the forms
of rationality that are employed in governing? Which visualizations and apparatuses
are used? How are the subjectivities that are presupposed and shaped in these
practices done?

Theme 2: Agency, Technology and Education. The question of agency
is closely linked to the assignment of responsibilities in the educational process.
In a mediated and technified education agency is distributed in complex and
heterogeneous network. The responsibility for learning flows in different directions
depending on the specific configuration of the network. The ordering of the
network thus creates different ways of understanding who is responsible for
educating and who is responsible for learning. Is this retraceable in contemporary
and historical practices?

Theme 3: Imaginaries, Globalization and Eduscapes: Contemporary knowledge
trajectories are a major force in globalization flows and students and scholars
migrate on a global scale due to various factors such as diasporic imaginaries,
money, knowledge thirst and dreams of a sustainable life. ICTs are the driving
force in the increase of spatiality. People commute worldwide according to such
‘eduscapes’. They study and teach on a global scale through distance
education, virtual campuses and collect degrees from different continents. In
this respect education going global is shrinking the world but also stratifies,
creating new and neo-colonial patterns of inequality and competition. In the
globalization and concurrent massification of higher education knowledge trajectories
are being redirected, but in what ways and through which means? We encourage
and invite critical contributions considering ICTs, education and different
form of knowledge trajectories.





Sweden’s Top Universities 2005

30 11 2005
Sweden’s Top 11 Universities
1 Karolinska Institutet Stockholm
2 Uppsala Universitet
3 Stockholms Universitet
4 Lunds Universitet
5 Göteborgs Universitet
6 Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan
Chalmers Tekniska Högskola
  Sveriges Lantbruksuniversitet
  Umeå Universitet
7 Linköpings Universitet
  Handelshögskolan i Stockholm

According to the Institute
of Higher Education at Shanghai Jiao Tong University
.





STS Wiki

30 11 2005

Bryan Pfaffenberger has launched a new STS Wiki.
I have been thinking along the same lines for a while, but Bryan actually didi
it! It’s a great initiative. A Wiki is a collaborative encyclopedia, where
visitors to the site can contribute. Using the STS Wiki you can find STS
departments
, look up other STS
scholars
(or add yourself), find other STS
blogs,
contribute with your knowledge about the STS field, or just use it
as an encyclopedia. Great work Bryan!








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