The Illusion of Average: Implications for Scientists

The Illusion of Average: Implications for Scientists

This talk is the first of three New Tools seminar.

By seeking out information on “averages,” researchers, funding organizations, and the public forgo vast amounts of information and risk building policies on plausible but misleading information. Imagine if, rather than discarded, information on individual and contextual differences were more systematically incorporated into the evidence-base. In what ways might research need to change to enable this alternative approach?

In this conversation, we focus on the changing role of scientists when “on average” provides increasingly less useful information. Specifically, we present “agile science” as an organizing structure for generating and curating scientific evidence that can feasibly better embrace individual and contextual differences. Agile science draws from a variety of domains, but, at its core, builds on the logic of modularity that is central to today’s complex computing systems (e.g., operating systems, the Internet). We provide some active case studies of this approach in behavioral science, and discuss changes to the current roles and activities of researchers implied by agile science process, particularly for generating evidence to support decision-making on the “right” health intervention for specific individuals, in context, and over time.

Talk 2:

The Illusion of Average: An Open Science Approach to Research (scheduled for Friday, Sept. 23)

Talk 3:

The Illusion of Average: Renewing Research Infrastructure (scheduled for Friday, Oct. 21) 

CSPO
202-446-0380
cspodc@asu.edu
http://cspo.org/cspo-in-dc/
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ASU Washington Center