Keyfitz Lecture in Mathematics and the Social Sciences: Stephanie Dick
Description
Stephanie Dick is an Assistant Professor in the School of Communication at Simon Fraser University. Her research and teaching are informed by her background in STS and History of Science, with a focus on computing, mathematics, and artificial intelligence since the Second World War. She is the co-editor, with Janet Abbate, of Abstractions and Embodiments: New Histories of Computing and Society which was published with Johns Hopkins University Press in 2022. Her first book project, Making Up Minds: Computing and Proof in the Postwar United States explores attempts to reproduce human intelligence, mathematical intelligence in particular, in computers and the theories of human cognitive faculties that informed these efforts. Stephanie also studies the history of policing and police uses of technology, especially the establishment of the first centralized law enforcement databanks in the 1960s, the political and technological construction of “criminality” within them, and their role in mass incarceration and ongoing racial injustice in policing. Stephanie is now embarking on a large-scale collaborative research program called “Ritual and Algorithm” that explores entanglements between mathematical, psychological, and occult theories of the human mind in the 20th century.
Stephanie is a co-investigator on the Data Fluencies Grant at the Digital Democracies Institute, which supports her historical research into early law enforcement databanks in Canada. She co-edits the “Mining the Past” column at the Harvard Data Science Review; she serves on the Editorial Board of the IEEE Annals of the History of Computing; she is a member of the Scholarly Council at the Center for Critical Internet Inquiry at UCLA; she was a co-organizer on the Mellon Sawyer Seminar, “Histories of AI: A Genealogy of Power” at the University of Cambridge. Stephanie is a teacher, and Teaching Advisory Board member with the Freedom Summer Collegiate Program in the Mississippi Delta. Before joining the faculty at SFU, Stephanie was an Assistant Professor of History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania, and a Junior Fellow with the Harvard Society of Fellows.
More info: https://www.sfu.ca/communication/people/faculty/stephanie-dick.html .
Schedule
| 17:30 to 18:30 |
Stephanie Dick, Simon Fraser University |

