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DTSTART:19450814T190000
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END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Europe focus
CATEGORIES:Humanities
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Information Session
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20240904T153436Z
DESCRIPTION:What's the Fear of Fear of Fear? Another Look at R.W. Fassbind
 er's Middle Period
DTSTAMP:20241023T182743Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241024T184500
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T182743Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b27e154-011b-28480e6b-00000098:Reuben-Co
 oke 130 Zener Auditorium
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Guest Lecturer: Brad Prager\, Professor\, University of Missouri
UID:CAL-8a00048d-91324965-0191-bdac6005-0000787fdemobedework@mysite.edu
URL:https://german.duke.edu/events/guest-lecturer-brad-prager-professor-un
 iversity-missouri
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Information Session:/user/pu
 blic-user/Other/Information Session
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Europe focus:/user/public-us
 er/Topic of Event Focused on a Country or Continent (if applicable)/Europ
 e focus
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Humanities:/user/public-user
 /Topics/Humanities
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=kata.gellen@duke.edu:Kat
 a Gellen
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:dt96 for German Studies (agrp__ArtsandSciences_Germ
 an)
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-WEBCAST:https://german.duke.edu/events/guest-lecturer-brad
 -prager-professor-university-missouri
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Europe focus
CATEGORIES:Humanities
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20241023T182441Z
DESCRIPTION:Hitchcock's German Flop\nThis lecture compares the two films t
 hat constitute Alfred Hitchcock's first and only dual-language film proje
 ct. He released Murder! (1930) in English and Mary (1931) in German. Hitc
 hcock scholars and the director himself have maintained that Mary was a f
 lop because it was "too English" for the German screen. A focus on the th
 ematization of the voice\, gender\, and race permits an examination of th
 e significant discrepancies between the two versions and their possible m
 eanings. Mary was not only abridged\, but the motive for murder was signi
 ficantly altered-from concealing racialized identity to concealing a crim
 inal past.
DTSTAMP:20241023T182811Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241101T170000
LAST-MODIFIED:20241023T182811Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b27e154-011b-28480e6b-00000098:Reuben-Co
 oke 130 Zener Auditorium
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Guest Lecturer: Olivia Landry\, Associate Professor \, Virginia Co
 mmonwealth University
UID:CAL-8a00048d-91324965-0192-ba9fb697-00003c14demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Lecture_Talk:/user/public-us
 er/Lectures_Conferences/Lecture_Talk
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Europe focus:/user/public-us
 er/Topic of Event Focused on a Country or Continent (if applicable)/Europ
 e focus
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Humanities:/user/public-user
 /Topics/Humanities
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=mert.reisoglu@duke.edu:M
 ert Bahadir Reisoglu
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Olivia Landry
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:dt96 for German Studies (agrp__ArtsandSciences_Germ
 an)
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-WEBCAST:https://german.duke.edu/events/guest-lecturer-oliv
 ia-landry-associate-professor-virginia-commonwealth-university
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Brown Bag
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20241029T185701Z
DESCRIPTION:"Considering Within-Asian Group Variation Shapes Metastereotyp
 ing Outcomes"  \nSpeaker: Mohammad Wiswall (Duke University) \n"The Asian
  American demographic is incredibly diverse\, whether it be culturally\, 
 linguistically\, or ethnically. However\, stereotyping research often ove
 rlooks Asian diversity by equating "Asian" with just East Asian (e.g.\, C
 hinese\, Japanese and Korean)\, thus rendering other Asian subgroups such
  as South Asians (e.g.\, Bengali\, Indian\, and Pakistani) as invisible. 
 In an attempt to empirically understand how controlling for Asian diversi
 ty may shape meta-stereotype (i.e.\, what I think you think about me) exp
 ectations based on gender\, we compare the stereotype expectations of Whi
 te people to the meta-stereotypes of East Asian and South Asian people. W
 ithin this talk\, we discuss the implication of our results for interraci
 al interactions between White majority members and Asian minority members
 ." \n\n"A mini writing workshop to help make your scientific papers easie
 r to write and more engaging to read" (Professional Development)\nSpeaker
 : Dr. Korrina Duffy (University of Colorado)\n"The first part of this min
 i writing workshop breaks down the specific sections of a scientific pape
 r (think: introduction\, methods\, results\, discussion\, conclusions) an
 d how they map onto the structure of a story\, with tips on how to make e
 ach section as compelling as possible. The second part provides an exampl
 e of how to approach the writing process to make the process of drafting 
 a scientific paper as efficient (and as unintimidating) as possible."
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241108T120000
DTSTAMP:20241029T185701Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241108T110000
LAST-MODIFIED:20241029T185701Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b27e154-011b-28480e6b-00000098:Reuben-Co
 oke 130 Zener Auditorium
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:SocDev Brownbag
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0192-d9a377cc-000043dademobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Brown Bag:/user/public-user/
 Other/Brown Bag
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Mohammad Wiswall & Dr. Korrina Duffy
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=ilayda.orhan@duke.edu:Il
 ayda Orhan
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:cnf13 for Psychology and Neuroscience (agrp__Artsan
 dSciences_PsychologyandNeuroscience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=2c918083-7c1b2592-017c-346ad897-00001fff:Fillippa\,
  Chelsea
CREATED:20240917T174434Z
DESCRIPTION:Political discourse is the soul of democracy\, but misundersta
 nding and conflict can fester in divisive conversations. The widespread s
 hift to online discourse exacerbates many of these problems and corrodes 
 the capacity of diverse societies to cooperate in solving social problems
 . Scholars and civil society groups promote interventions that make conve
 rsations less divisive or more productive\, but scaling these efforts to 
 online discourse is challenging. This talk will describe a large-scale ex
 periment that demonstrates how online conversations about divisive topics
  can be improved with foundation models. Specifically\, my colleagues and
  I employed a fine-tuned large language model to make real-time\, evidenc
 e-based recommendations about how to bridge social divides during online 
 conversations between two people discussing gun control in an online foru
 m. Respondents could accept such recommendations\, ignore them\, or revis
 e their posts after seeing the suggested edits. Our results indicate this
  intervention improved reported conversation quality\, promoted democrati
 c reciprocity\, and improved the tone of conversations\, without systemat
 ically changing the content of the conversation or moving people's policy
  attitudes. Finally\, I will discuss a half year replication of this expe
 riment on a large social media platform and discuss other opportunities t
 o employ foundation models to reduce conflict in online settings and stud
 y complex social systems.
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241115T160000
DTSTAMP:20240917T174547Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241115T150000
LAST-MODIFIED:20240917T174547Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b27e154-011b-28480e6b-00000098:Reuben-Co
 oke 130 Zener Auditorium
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:“Leveraging LLM-assistants to mediate conflict in online discussio
 ns about divisive topics”
UID:CAL-8a00048d-91324965-0192-01160ae3-00005635demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Chris Bail\, Professor of Sociology\, Political Science
 \, and Public Policy at Duke University
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X1:87
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y1:0
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-X2:1707
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-Y2:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-WIDTH:1620
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-CROP-HEIGHT:1080
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE-ALT-TEXT:Chris Bail
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:cnf13 for Psychology and Neuroscience (agrp__Artsan
 dSciences_PsychologyandNeuroscience)
X-BEDEWORK-IMAGE:/public/Images/11.15 PN discussion_20240917054434PM.jpg
X-BEDEWORK-THUMB-IMAGE:/public/Images/11.15 PN discussion_20240917054434PM
 -thumb.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Brown Bag
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20241119T185624Z
DESCRIPTION:I will present research examining how cultural and regional va
 riation can be understood as adaptations to differing socio-ecological co
 ntests. Differing social ecologies present individuals with unique adapti
 ve tasks to which they must orient their behaviors and cognition\, and un
 derstanding the nature of these tasks and the strategies adapted to them 
 can allow researchers to both explain and predict variation in behavioral
  and cognitive tendencies across cultures and social contexts. First\, I 
 will discuss how relational mobility\, defined as the amount of opportuni
 ties that individuals have to enter into and exit from social relationshi
 ps in a given social ecology\, can be useful to explain cultural variatio
 n in behavioral and psychological processes. I will present the results o
 f previous and ongoing studies that use the framework of relational mobil
 ity to understand cultural differences in psychological processes\, and d
 iscuss the utility and challenges associated with this approach. I will a
 lso discuss more recent research examining the role of ecological pathoge
 n in understanding state-level variation in interracial dating and marria
 ge.
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241122T120000
DTSTAMP:20241119T185624Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241122T110000
LAST-MODIFIED:20241119T185624Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b27e154-011b-28480e6b-00000098:Reuben-Co
 oke 130 Zener Auditorium
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:Partners and pathogens: Socio-ecological approaches for understand
 ing cultural variation in psychology and behavior
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0193-45c87233-00001741demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Brown Bag:/user/public-user/
 Other/Brown Bag
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Dr. Joanna Schug
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=patrick.reyes@duke.edu:P
 atrick Gilbert Mercado Reyes
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:cnf13 for Psychology and Neuroscience (agrp__Artsan
 dSciences_PsychologyandNeuroscience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Other
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Brown Bag
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20241119T185832Z
DESCRIPTION:Research on self-regulation has often focused on how people ex
 ert control over their thoughts\, emotions\, and behavior. Relatively les
 s attention has been paid to how or if people manage their motivational s
 tates in the service of achieving valued goals. I will discuss a program 
 of research that focuses on the role of people's beliefs about motivation
  (i.e.\, their metamotivational knowledge) in effective goal pursuit. At 
 the heart of this framework is the idea that qualitatively distinct motiv
 ational states often involve performance tradeoffs\, such that a given mo
 tivational state (eagerness) may be relatively beneficial for some tasks 
 (creative brainstorming)\, but detrimental for others (detailed editing).
  Thus\, effective goal pursuit for both the self and others involves both
  discernment and flexibility in the regulation of motivation. I will pres
 ent evidence that on average\, people possess metamotivational knowledge 
 of trade-offs of qualitatively distinct motivational states (highlighting
  work on those states posited by regulatory focus theory and construal le
 vel theory) and recognize strategies that can upregulate adaptive motivat
 ional states. At the same time\, there is significant variability in the 
 normative accuracy of this knowledge\, which has implications both for in
 dividual success and for perceptions of effective leadership. I will disc
 uss current and future directions in this program of research.
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241206T120000
DTSTAMP:20241119T185832Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241206T110000
LAST-MODIFIED:20241119T185832Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b27e154-011b-28480e6b-00000098:Reuben-Co
 oke 130 Zener Auditorium
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:The Role of Metamotivation in Regulating Ourselves and Others
UID:CAL-8a000483-92c3adf6-0193-45ca64a1-00001742demobedework@mysite.edu
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Main:/user/public-user/Utili
 ties/Main
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Panel_Seminar_Colloquium:/us
 er/public-user/Lectures_Conferences/Panel_Seminar_Colloquium
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Brown Bag:/user/public-user/
 Other/Brown Bag
X-BEDEWORK-ALIAS;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-DISPLAYNAME=Social Sciences:/user/public
 -user/Topics/Social Sciences
X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Dr. Abigail A. Scholer
X-BEDEWORK-STUDENT-CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-PARAM-EMAIL=ilayda.orhan@duke.edu:Il
 ayda Orhan
X-BEDEWORK-SUBMITTEDBY:cnf13 for Psychology and Neuroscience (agrp__Artsan
 dSciences_PsychologyandNeuroscience)
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Business
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Lecture/Talk
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=00f1fcdb-0f068baf-010f-068baf83-00000004:None
CREATED:20250310T161245Z
DESCRIPTION:Join us on Tuesday\, March 25\, at 5 pm in Reuben-Cooke 130 to
  hear from Charles Evans\, former President of the Federal Reserve Bank o
 f Chicago. Dr. Evans will speak about current challenges facing the Fed a
 nd engage in Q&A with the audience.\n \nCharles Evans was president of th
 e Chicago Fed from 2007 until 2023. Prior to that\, he was the Bank's dir
 ector of research and senior vice president\, supervising its research on
  monetary policy\, banking\, financial markets\, and regional economic co
 nditions. Dr. Evans is a highly engaging speaker and an important voice o
 n central banks and monetary policy. Please join Prof. Meade and Duke Eco
 nomics in welcoming Dr. Evans to campus.
DTSTAMP:20250310T161245Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250325T170000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250310T161245Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b27e154-011b-28480e6b-00000098:Reuben-Co
 oke 130 Zener Auditorium
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy: Challenges in 2025
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT

CATEGORIES:Featured
CATEGORIES:Social Sciences
CATEGORIES:Lectures/Conferences
CATEGORIES:Utilities
CATEGORIES:Panel/Seminar/Colloquium
CATEGORIES:Main
CONTACT;X-BEDEWORK-UID=2c918083-7c1b2592-017c-346ad897-00001fff:Fillippa\,
  Chelsea
CREATED:20250312T190527Z
DESCRIPTION:I'll present an overview of some recent work in my lab seeking
  the cognitive foundations of number. First\, I'll present evidence again
 st "two systems" accounts in which large and small numbers draw on distin
 ct representational resources. People's behavior is predicted by one syst
 em with bounded information processing capacity\, and moreover the functi
 oning of this system is tightly integrated with perceptual processes such
  as visual memory. Second\, I'll present some of our cross-cultural work 
 suggesting that representation of integers\, large exact numbers\, are hi
 ghly dependent on culture\, and likely rely on a general algorithm- and s
 tructure-learning processes whose functioning can be seen across diverse 
 tasks. Finally\, I will outline some upcoming work that formalizes what i
 nferences are justified from behavioral data\, with the numerical represe
 ntations used in insect path integration as a key example.
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250328T160000
DTSTAMP:20250320T185152Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250328T150000
LAST-MODIFIED:20250320T185152Z
LOCATION;X-BEDEWORK-UID=18832edc-1b27e154-011b-28480e6b-00000098:Reuben-Co
 oke 130 Zener Auditorium
STATUS:CONFIRMED
SUMMARY:The Cognitive Foundations of Number
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X-BEDEWORK-SPEAKER:Steven T. Piantadosi
X-BEDEWORK-DUKE-SERIES:P&N Colloquium
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 tilities/Featured
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR

