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Distinguished
Speaker Series 2003-2004
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Residual Categories: A Challenge for Ethics, Information Systems, and Communication |
May 7, 2004
Faculty Host:
Gloria Mark, gmark @ ics.uci.edu
RSVP: Email RSVP required to Steve Ponting at sponting
@ ics.uci.edu by Monday, May 3.
Location: McDonnell Douglas Auditorium
(building #311)
Cost: No cost to attend.
Directions and parking information are available.
Abstract: This talk looks at both the experience and the process of
classification of chronic pain, a condition that often results in the use of
a residual category, such as "other" or "not elsewhere categorized." The
talk examines the changing science of chronic pain, and how that is being organized
by doctors, researchers and patients. How is uncertainty affected by the changing
status of residual categories as new science emerges? How does uncertainty
weave together with infrastructure in the production of residual categories?
How do changes in residual categories affect individual biographies? The talk
is an example of the "human-infrastructure interface",
and presents some theoretical and ethical challenges to designers of collaborative
information systems.
About the Speaker: Susan Leigh Star ("Leigh") received her Ph.D. from the University of California, San Francisco, where she studied the sociology of medicine and science. Her first book, Regions of the Mind: The Quest for Scientific Certainty (Stanford) studied the creation and maintenance of scientific facts about the brain, triangulating basic and clinic research. She has written many scientific articles within the sociology of science and information science; the latter often in cooperation with computer scientists. She is known for developing the concept of "boundary object." She has studied museums, biologists, artificial intelligence researchers, nurses and the role of amateurs in field research. Lately, she is the co-author of Sorting things Out: Classification and Its Consequences (with Geoffrey Bowker), from MIT Press. This looks at how large-scale category systems are created, again returning to questions of triangulation of knowledge from different sources.