Casey Helgeson, Assistant Research Professor in Penn State’s Earth and Environmental Systems Institute, gives a lunchtime talk for Dartmouth faculty and researchers.
Dartmouth faculty and researchers are invited to join us for a lunch time talk, "Improving Convergence Science through Managing Values" with Casey Helgeson, Assistant Research Professor in Penn State’s Earth and Environmental Systems Institute. The talk takes place in the Svante Arrhenius Conference Room, third floor, Irving Institute. Limited spaces are available, please let us know if you plan to attend.
Scientific research is full of subjective value judgments. This idea is commonplace in the philosophy and sociology of science but less accepted among STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) researchers themselves. While good practice in general, acknowledging, managing, and communicating these values may be particularly vital to the success of convergence research. The NSF defines convergence research as (1) involving deep integration across disciplines, and (2) driven by a specific and compelling problem—often a “real-world” problem of immediate societal importance. Explicit and systematic attention to the motivating values of all parties can help lower barriers to disciplinary integration and align research capacity with real-world needs. In this talk, Helgeson will provide a brief and accessible primer on the roles of values in science before presenting three examples of work managing such values to improve both scientific and societal project outcomes. The examples come from projects addressing potential responses to climate risks, though the approaches illustrated are generalizable to convergence research more broadly.
About the Speaker: Casey Helgeson is an assistant research professor in Penn State’s Earth and Environmental Systems Institute. Previously, he held postdoc positions at the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) and London School of Economics. He holds a PhD in Philosophy and BS in Mathematics from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Casey’s work addresses the place of human values within research design practices. He focuses on climate-risk research with the goal of ensuring such research can support inclusive and values-based decision making about climate adaptation.
Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.