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Assistant Dean for Programs and Assessment Sharon Stoerger discusses educational uses of AI, how it is transforming student assessment, approaches educators are taking to prepare students for STEM careers, and ways institutions are embracing this new technology.
Dr. Hill will discuss the past and future of peer-production platforms like Wikipedia. The talk will be hosted jointly by the CSS Lab and the NetSCI Lab.
DEWG event this spring on Zoom on Friday, March 8, 1-2:30 p.m. EST. Rutgers Digital Ethnography Working Group is pleased to welcome University of California Press Senior Editor, Michelle Lipinski, for an online dissertation-to-book event designed to demystify the pathway from dissertation to book publication through engaging discussion and Q&A.
MI Colloquium presents Misinformation on Encrypted Social Networks - Innovations in Data Collection, and Solutions.
A new study by Professor of Journalism and Media Studies Lauren Feldman et al. indicates that vivid images of climate change-related flooding in news reporting can increase public engagement with climate change, whereas news stories that highlight political divides about the link between flooding and climate change can lower public engagement.
One of the highlights of the #BeCOMM campaign will be the COMMchella Music Festival which will take place on Wednesday, April 3, 2024 at The Yard on the Rutgers College Avenue campus from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. The event will showcase six popular music acts including several that feature current Rutgers communication majors. COMMchella is free for all attendees, including Rutgers University students, faculty, and staff.
Lee, a faculty member at Korea University, is an expert in mediated communication and organizational communication network research.
Rutgers Center for Advanced Infrastructure and Transportation will develop a clearinghouse of the latest innovations in bridge safety that incorporates artificial intelligence technology.
A new study by Rutgers SC&I Associate Professor Caitlin Petre and Ph.D. Candidate Nicole Weber explores how understanding the evolution of book sellers, supermarkets, and public libraries as purveyors of public information can help inform current thinking about social media platforms.