SONIC Lab Multimedia Production

SONIC Lab Multimedia Production

Application Period: May 4th to June 8th
Duration: Approximately 130-195 hours between June 1st and August 30th
Compensation: $10-14 hourly
Contact: Meghan McCarter, Recruitment and Outreach Coordinator
Contact Email: m-mccarter@northwestern.edu
Contact Phone: (636) 284-5218
Location: SONIC Lab, Frances Searle Building 1-459, 2240 Campus Dr, Evanston, IL 60201

Organization Overview:

The Science of Networks in Communities (SONIC) research group advances social network theories, methods, and tools to better understand and meet the needs of diverse communities. SONIC develops cutting-edge techniques to study and improve social and knowledge networks in distributed working groups, online communities, virtual teams, and other large communities.

For more information, please visit our website.

Internship Description:

The Multimedia Production Intern will support all of SONIC Labs media need including:

  • Web-ready video production
  • Photography and graphic design
  • Creating all other media promoting the lab’s research or events

Required Qualifications:

This position is open to undergraduates or recent graduates enrolled who are eligible to work in the United States. Applicants over the age of 18 will be required to pass a background check. Candidates must be able to demonstrate:

  • Experience in video/photo production and editing
  • Strong communication skills
  • The ability collaborate on evolving projects while maintaining attention to detail
  • The willingness to learn new tools and skills.

Preferred Qualifications:

The ideal candidate has experience with one or more of the following:

  • Adobe Suite video/photo editing software (Premiere, Photoshop, Audition, Illustrator, Flash, AfterEffects)
  • Journalistic writing

Application Instructions:

To apply please upload a resume, cover letter, and three references to the m-mccarter@northwestern.edu.

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What we’re reading – and how it ties us together

Michael Levy of the Center for Environmental Policy and Behavior at UC Davis created a bipartite network of using his coworkers and their preferred journals to illustrate the functional clusters within the highly interdisciplinary lab. He then converted the visualization into a single mode network using ggnet – a ggplot implementation (via the GGally package) and calculated degree, betweenness, and eigenvector centrality for each journal for a more detailed picture of the overlapping interests within his community. He provides his r code for anyone who wants to apply try the excersize with their own lab.

Check out Michael Levy’s blog to read more and play with his code : http://environmentalpolicy.ucdavis.edu/blog/2015/03/386

CEPB's Journal Network

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SONIC Research Practices High School Internship

SONIC Research Practices High School Internship

Application Period: May 14th to June 8th, 2015
Duration: Approximately 120 hours between June 8th and August 28th
Compensation: $9-12 hourly
Contact: Meghan McCarter, Recruitment and Outreach Coordinator
Contact Email: m-mccarter@northwester.edu
Contact Phone: (636) 284-5218
Location: SONIC Lab, Frances Searle Building 1-459, 2240 Campus Dr, Evanston, IL 60201

Organization Overview:

The Science of Networks in Communities (SONIC) research group advances social network theory, and methodology through the development of cutting-edge techniques to study and improve knowledge networks in distributed working groups, virtual teams, and other large communities. For more information, please visit our website.

Project Description:

The MTS (Multi-Team System) Groupscope Project is an ongoing study of collaborative behavior. The goal of this study is to understand and improve upon the mechanism by which diverse groups coordinate to achieve a common goal.

Internship Description:

The MTS Research Aid will assist graduate researchers on an array of projects by:

    • proctoring data collection
    • extracting and storing data
    • organizing and processing data for analysis

Required Qualifications:

This position is open to rising high school seniors or recent graduates enrolled in an accredited degree-seeking program who are eligible to work in the United States. Applicants over the age of 18 will be required to pass a background check. Candidates must demonstrate:

      • keen written and verbal communication skills,
      • fastidious organization and attention to detail
      • the ability to and work collaboratively

Preferred Qualifications:

The ideal candidate possesses:

      • confidence addressing a large group
      • familiarity with Microsoft Office Suite
      • experience with statistics, data manipulation and research/independent projects

Application Instructions:

To apply please upload your resume, cover letter, and three references to m-mccarter@northwestern.edu

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Noshir Contractor Serves as Keynote Speaker at ARS 2015 Workshop

ARS 2015

At the ARS 2015 in Anacapri, Italy on April 29th, Noshir Contractor was the keynote speaker for the Large Networks and Big Data Workshop. His speech was titled “Leveraging Network Science to Address Great Societal Challenges”. Topics included how network science is the solution to making sense of big data and monitoring and anticipating global problems to design effective solutions.

Learn more about ARS 2015 or Noshir’s speech

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Prasad Balkundi to Present in SONIC Speaker Series on May 7th, 2015

Prasad BalkundiSONIC Lab is proud to welcome Prasad Balkundi, who will present a talk on Thursday, May 7th, 2015 at 2:00 PM in the SONIC Lab in the Frances Searle Building 1-459. All are welcome to attend. To schedule a one-on-one meeting with Professor Balkundi please schedule a time here. Please contact Nancy McLaughlin with any questions or comments.

Culture, Boundaries and Attitudes: A Meta-Analytic Test of Tie-Strength Theory

Although the strength-of-weak-tie theory is foundational in social network research, studies have reported inconsistent results sometimes supporting the weak tie theory and other times contradicting it. To address these inconsistencies, we explicate three boundaries of weak-tie theory: culture, labor markets, and outcomes. First, the theory was developed and tested extensively in Western nations, raising the issue of whether cultural context affects outcomes. Second, the theory was tested using lower-level applicants finding jobs across organizations, raising the issue as to the applicability of the theory for job movement within organizations for high-ranking employees. Third, beyond the question of finding a job, the question arises as to strength-of-tie effects on a broader set of outcomes such as access to information and job attitudes. Based on a meta-analysis of 101 studies (n = 23,303) we found that strong ties were more potent than weak ties in conformist cultures. Second, strong ties within the organization were more beneficial than weak ties. Also, managers benefitted more from strong ties. Third, strong ties facilitated immediate effectiveness and positive job attitudes whereas weak ties enhanced distal effectiveness for low-end employees.

About Prasad Balkundi

Prasad Balkundi is an associate professor of management at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York. He received his PhD in business administration from Pennsylvania State University. His research interests include social networks and leadership in teams and his work has appeared in the Academy of Management Journal, Academy of Management Review, Journal of Applied Psychology and Leadership Quarterly.

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Strong vesus weak: A meta-analysis of tie strength and individual effectiveness

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Balazs Vedres to Present in SONIC Speaker Series on April 22nd, 2015

Balazs VedresSONIC Lab is proud to welcome Balazs Vedres, who will present a talk on Wednesday, April 22nd, 2015 at 10:00 AM in the SONIC Lab in the Frances Searle Building 1-459. All are welcome to attend. To schedule a one-on-one meeting with Professor Vedres please schedule a time here. Please contact Nancy McLaughlin with any questions or comments.

Escaping Network Gravity: Innovative Team Structures in Video Game Development and Recorded Jazz

The main mechanisms governing social tie formation and operation are at odds with recognizing new ideas. Homophily, closure, skewed degree distributions, and limited vision are four main forces of network gravity. This talk brings cases where these gravity forces were overcome by organizational design and emergent institutions. Using data on more than 100,000 video game developers from the 1980’s to the present, and 400,000 jazz musicians from 1890 to the present I show mechanisms of achieving generative tension, productive diversity, and sustained exploration. I will highlight the role of structural folds, and the significance of overlapping yet cognitively diverse communities.

About Balazs Vedres

Vedres’ research furthers the agenda of understanding historical dynamics in network systems, combining insights from network science, historical sociology, and studies of complex systems in physics and biology. His contribution is to combine historical sensitivities to patterns of processes in time with a network analytic sensitivity to patterns of connectedness cross-sectionally. A key element of this work was the adoption of optimal matching sequence analysis to historical network data. His research results were published in the top journals of sociology, with two recent articles in the American Journal of Sociology exploring the notion of structural folds: creative tensions in intersecting yet cognitively diverse cohesive communities. Vedres’ recent research follows video game developers and jazz musicians as they weave collaborative networks through their projects and recording sessions. Vedres is the recipient of several awards and prizes. He is the founder and director of the Center for Network Science at Central European University.

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Escaping Network Gravity

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Libby Hemphill to Present in SONIC Speaker Series on April 16th, 2015

Libby HemphillSONIC Lab is proud to welcome Libby Hemphill, who will present a talk on Thursday, April 16th, 2015 at 2:00 PM in the SONIC Lab in the Frances Searle Building 1-459. All are welcome to attend. To schedule a one-on-one meeting with Professor Hemphill please schedule a time here. Please contact Nancy McLaughlin with any questions or comments.

What Can Congress’s Twitter Use Teach Us About Framing and Polarization?

Social media offers politicians an opportunity to bypass traditional media and directly influence their audience’s opinions and behavior through issue framing. I examine how members of the U.S. Congress use Twitter to accomplish framing and explore the effects of their behavior on mainstream media coverage. Social media also offers researchers trace data for detecting topic communities and political polarization that would otherwise not be revealed until legislative votes take place. I will discuss how my colleagues and I used politicians’ social media behavior, especially the affiliation networks that result from their hashtag use, to create new measures of political polarization that make it possible for us to gauge polarization throughout the legislative process.

About Libby Hemphill

Libby (PhD, University of Michigan) directs the CaSM Lab. She is an Assistant Professor of Communication and Information Studies at the Illinois Institute of Technology. Libby is broadly interested in computer-mediated communication, social media, digital humanities, and organizational behavior.

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What can Congress’s Twitter use teach us about framing and polarization?

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Noshir Contractor Delivers Presentation at Northwestern University Office for Sponsored Research

At the Northwestern Office for Sponsored Research (NU OSR) in Evanston, Illinois on February 27th, Noshir Contractor delivered a Brown Bag presentation titled “Using Computational Social Science to Address Grand Societal Challenges”. The office is Northwestern’s arm for assisting and developing funded programs in support of the university’s research mission.

Learn more about the Office for Sponsored Research

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2015 Computational Social Science Conference Coming to NU

Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management is hosting the Computational Social Science Conference from May 15th to 17th. The purpose of the summit is to advance sociological knowledge through computational methods. The conference will host workshops, a datathon, and prominent speakers such as David Ferrucci (Bridgewater Associates), Katy Börner (Indiana University), Sandra González-Bailón (University of Pennsylvania), and Michael Macy (Cornell University). The conference is for social science researchers, open data activists, tech workers, and think tank analysts and is co-hosted by Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems and SONIC.

Learn more about the conference and events

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