{"64955":{"#nid":"64955","#data":{"type":"event","title":"GVU Brown Bag: Sherry Turkle","body":[{"value":"\u003Ch4\u003EAlone Together\u003C\/h4\u003E\u003Cp\u003E\u003Cstrong\u003EAbstract: \u003C\/strong\u003E\u003C\/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003ETechnology proposes itself an architect of our intimacies. And these days, technology offers us substitutes for direct face-to-face connection with people in a world of machine-mediated relationships on networked devices. As we instant message, e-mail, text, and Twitter, technology redraws the boundaries between intimacy and solitude. We talk of getting \u201crid\u201d of our e-mails, as though these notes were so much excess baggage. Teenagers as well as adults avoid the telephone, fearful that it reveals too much. Besides, it takes too long; across the generations, we would rather text than talk.\u003C\/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003ETethered to technology, we are shaken when that world unplugged does not signify, does not satisfy. Yet after an evening of avatar-to-avatar talk in a networked game, we may feel at one moment, in possession of a full social life, and in the next, curiously isolated, in tenuous complicity with strangers.\u003C\/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003EThe world of our connections comes with so many bounties. But we begin to see that some things are amiss: sometimes we are too busy communicating to think, too busy communicating to create, and paradoxically, too busy communicating to connect with the people who matter.\u003C\/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003E\u003Cstrong\u003EBio: \u003C\/strong\u003E\u003C\/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003ESherry Turkle is a professor of Sociology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is well known for her writings concerning the sociological implications of human computer interaction, specifically the usage of MUD, MOO, and on-line chat systems. \u0026nbsp;She has written several well-known books and numerous papers on this subject and is quoted often in magazines and books.\u003C\/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003EHer most recent book, \u0026nbsp;Life on the Screen: Identity in the Age of the Internet, further explores the use and, in some cases, overuse of the Internet to communicate. \u0026nbsp;It is a well written book full of interesting case studies of various heavy users of the Internet, some of which claim that they cannot cope with the difficulties of real life human interaction. She also explores the existence of multiple selves and the usage of multiple identities when on-line, (e.g. why some women assume male gender roles when on-line, why shy people become extroverts in chat rooms, etc.)\u003C\/p\u003E\u003Cp\u003EProf. Turkle has received numerous awards and accolades. In 1995, she was selected member of \u0026nbsp;\u002250 for the Future: the Most Influential People to Watch in Cyberspace,\u0022 by Newsweek Magazine. More recently, she has been named one of top \u002250 Cyber Elite by Time Digital Magazine,\u0022 and had \u0022Seeing Through Computers\u0022 selected as one of Top 20 Articles of the year by the American Library Association\u0027s Library Instruction Round Table.\u003C\/p\u003E","summary":null,"format":"limited_html"}],"field_subtitle":"","field_summary":[{"value":"\u003Cp\u003EMIT professor Sherry Turkle talks about communication technologies and how they redraw the boundries between intimacy and solitude.\u003C\/p\u003E","format":"limited_html"}],"field_summary_sentence":[{"value":"MIT professor Sherry Turkle talks about communication technologies and how they redraw the boundries between intimacy and solitude."}],"uid":"27197","created_gmt":"2011-03-15 13:58:03","changed_gmt":"2016-10-08 01:54:34","author":"Renata Le Dantec","boilerplate_text":"","field_publication":"","field_article_url":"","field_event_time":{"event_time_start":"2011-03-31T13:00:00-04:00","event_time_end":"2011-03-31T14:00:00-04:00","event_time_end_last":"2011-03-31T14:00:00-04:00","gmt_time_start":"2011-03-31 17:00:00","gmt_time_end":"2011-03-31 18:00:00","gmt_time_end_last":"2011-03-31 18:00:00","rrule":null,"timezone":"America\/New_York"},"extras":[],"groups":[{"id":"1299","name":"GVU Center"},{"id":"47223","name":"College of Computing"},{"id":"50876","name":"School of Interactive Computing"}],"categories":[],"keywords":[{"id":"4096","name":"brown bag"},{"id":"1946","name":"GVU"},{"id":"10621","name":"hcc"},{"id":"8494","name":"HCI"}],"core_research_areas":[],"news_room_topics":[],"event_categories":[{"id":"1795","name":"Seminar\/Lecture\/Colloquium"}],"invited_audience":[],"affiliations":[],"classification":[],"areas_of_expertise":[],"news_and_recent_appearances":[],"phone":[],"contact":[],"email":[],"slides":[],"orientation":[],"userdata":""}}}