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Monday, November 10th, 2014

    Time Event
    12:00a
    Social networking

    Every day we make simple decisions — what to eat, what to wear — that may be influenced by the views of people around us.

    But are they? You might have certain tastes because of the influence of your friends — or they might be your friends because you share similar tastes. 

    The same issue exists for larger matters, such as medical decisions, voting, and where we live. Are you affected by peer influence? Or is it just a case of what’s known as homophily, the general association of like-minded people?

    In practical terms, the difference matters: If you know how people are making decisions, you can figure out whether you need to get their attention directly on, say, a public-health issue, or more indirectly, by targeting a whole network of peers.

    “Sorting out whether it’s peer effects or homophily will help you decide which of these strategies is most effective,” offers Sinan Aral, an MIT expert in the dynamics of social networks.

    That’s not just a theoretical concern for Aral, the David Austin Associate Professor of Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management, whose research group is embarking on a large-scale test to see if peer effects can encourage people to get HIV screening in South Africa. While just getting an HIV test has a stigma for many, as Aral notes, that stigma could be greatly reduced with peer encouragement.

    In all cases, though, it takes careful research to separate individual decisions from peer effects in a social network. In a study published last year in the journal Science, Aral and colleagues analyzed whether online discussion-board comments influence us. By randomly manipulating the ratings of more than 100,000 comments and seeing how readers then responded to those comments, the researchers found a “herding” effect for comments that were given positive ratings, but no such effect for comments bearing negative ratings.

    In response, the popular site Reddit changed the way it discloses ratings of its comments, citing the “herding” issue.

    “There are a number of situations in society where we have these feedback loops, between public opinion and individual decision-making, where the types of social influence can really generate some very stark outcomes and important decisions,” Aral says. “I really see this as a basic science.”

    Aral’s research examines information diffusion in large networks, and analyzes how such diffusion affects behavior in society. If there is a social influence on individual behavior, Aral contends, then population-scale behavior change will ebb and flow through our social networks. Understanding this process could help us promote beneficial actions, like HIV testing, and attempt to prevent negative ones, like election violence.

    Aral joined the MIT faculty in 2013 after six years as an assistant professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business. But he’s quick to mention that his research takes place within a network of peers — colleagues who are like-minded enough to be interested in the same problems, and independent-minded enough to have different ideas about them.

    “This collaborative discovery process is, for me, such an absolute treat and privilege,” Aral says. “I’m really grateful to be able to work with the colleagues and students I work with, because I consider those relationships to be the most enjoyable part of my job. They are such a big part of my scientific journey. This is another example of peer effects: how other scientists’ opinions and work influences me. It’s a microcosm of my interests.”

    Up for debate

    If Aral’s research interests seem broad, that may reflect his educational background. Born in Turkey, Aral attended Northwestern University as an undergraduate, partly because he was a successful high-school debater who wanted to join a strong debate team in college.

    “In a sense, debate was excellent preparation for scientific thinking,” Aral says. “Debate has standards of evidence, and the necessity of looking at your arguments from all sides and considering their strengths and weaknesses, to really try to understand where the fault may lie in your line of thinking. And that’s a good way of thinking about scientific research, because you always want to be your toughest critic.”

    At Northwestern, Aral majored in political science, and singles out a class on constitutional law taught by Jerry Goldman as especially formative.

    “He ran kind of a Socratic class, knew all of the students by name, cold-called students, and you had to be very prepared,” Aral recalls. “There was a lot of critical thinking and intellectual argumentation.”

    Aral next went to the London School of Economics for a master’s degree in information science, and received another master’s in public policy — on information technology policy — from Harvard University. He then moved to MIT Sloan’s PhD program, where he earned his degree in managerial economics.

    Aral remembers clearly the exact moment that launched his research career along its current trajectory: He was sitting in MIT’s Dewey Library, reading his statistics textbooks, and looking at methods that assumed all the observations in a data set were independent and identically distributed. At the same time, he was taking a course in the sociology of business strategy, full of diagrams of networks representing “the tremendous interdependence that exists in our world.”

    At that moment, Aral said, he realized there was “a lot more learning to do here about how social networks work, and how we can conduct statistical inference” about them.

    “It’s about contributing knowledge to the world”

    Aral still thinks there is a lot to learn about peer effects: “We don’t understand how they work very well,” he says. On the other hand, he also thinks there has been tremendous progress in the field, and that more will soon arrive, thanks to the massive amounts of data now available to researchers.

    To be sure, Aral acknowledges, “The notion of big data is sometimes very vague.” However, he adds, “It’s not just the size of the data, it’s the granularity of the observations, the almost continuous-time data on human behavior” now being produced. That provides the potential to see decision-making in social networks in unprecedented detail.

    The ability to process large amounts of data also allows Aral and other social-network researchers to run larger-scale experiments than was previously possible. For the South Africa study, his team will be studying the effects of hundreds of millions of messages about HIV testing.

    “With larger experiments, you can estimate the distribution of [responses],” Aral says. “You can look at how different subpopulations respond differently, and that can help you tailor the policy to make it more effective. That’s part of the promise.”

    Aral’s scholarly future promises many more data points, more research studies — and the same lack of preconceptions he has tried to maintain since his days as a student debater.

    “It’s not about defending your argument,” Aral says. “It’s about contributing a piece of knowledge to the world.”

    3:00p
    The missing piece of the climate puzzle

    In classrooms and everyday conversation, explanations of global warming hinge on the greenhouse gas effect. In short, climate depends on the balance between two different kinds of radiation: The Earth absorbs incoming visible light from the sun, called “shortwave radiation,” and emits infrared light, or “longwave radiation,” into space.

    Upsetting that energy balance are rising levels of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide (CO2), that increasingly absorb some of the outgoing longwave radiation and trap it in the atmosphere. Energy accumulates in the climate system, and warming occurs. But in a paper out this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, MIT researchers show that this canonical view of global warming is only half the story.

    In computer modeling of Earth’s climate under elevating CO2 concentrations, the greenhouse gas effect does indeed lead to global warming. Yet something puzzling happens: While one would expect the longwave radiation that escapes into space to decline with increasing CO2, the amount actually begins to rise. At the same time, the atmosphere absorbs more and more incoming solar radiation; it’s this enhanced shortwave absorption that ultimately sustains global warming.

    “The finding was a curiosity, conflicting with the basic understanding of global warming,” says lead author Aaron Donohoe, a former MIT postdoc who is now a research associate at the University of Washington’s Applied Physics Laboratory. “It made us think that there must be something really weird going in the models in the years after CO2 was added. We wanted to resolve the paradox that climate models show warming via enhanced shortwave radiation, not decreased longwave radiation.”

    Donohoe, along with MIT postdoc Kyle Armour and others at Washington, spent many a late night throwing out guesses as to why climate models generate this illogical finding before realizing that it makes perfect sense — but for reasons no one had clarified and laid down in the literature.

    They found the answer by drawing on both computer simulations and a simple energy-balance model. As longwave radiation gets trapped by CO2, the Earth starts to warm, impacting various parts of the climate system. Sea ice and snow cover melt, turning brilliant white reflectors of sunlight into darker spots. The atmosphere grows moister because warmer air can hold more water vapor, which absorbs more shortwave radiation. Both of these feedbacks lessen the amount of shortwave radiation that bounces back into space, and the planet warms rapidly at the surface.

    Meanwhile, like any physical body experiencing warming, Earth sheds longwave radiation more effectively, canceling out the longwave-trapping effects of CO2. However, a darker Earth now absorbs more sunlight, tipping the scales to net warming from shortwave radiation.

    “So there are two types of radiation important to climate, and one of them gets affected by CO2, but it’s the other one that’s directly driving global warming — that’s the surprising thing,” says Armour, who is a postdoc in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences.

    Out in the real world, aerosols in air pollution act to reflect a lot of sunlight, and so Earth has not experienced as much warming from shortwave solar radiation as it otherwise might have. But the authors calculate that enough warming will have occurred by midcentury to switch the main driver of global warming to increased solar radiation absorption.

    The paper is not challenging the physics of climate models; its value lies in helping the community interpret their output. “While this study does not change our understanding of the fundamentals of global warming, it is always useful to have simpler models that help us understand why our more comprehensive climate models sometimes behave in superficially counterintuitive ways,” says Isaac Held, a senior scientist at NOAA’s Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory who was not involved in this research.

    One way the study can be useful is in guiding what researchers look for in satellite observations of Earth’s radiation budget, as they track anthropogenic climate change in the decades to come. “I think the default assumption would be to see the outgoing longwave radiation decrease as greenhouse gases rise, but that’s probably not going to happen,” Donohoe says. “We would actually see the absorption of shortwave radiation increase. Will we actually ever see the longwave trapping effects of CO2 in future observations? I think the answer is probably no.”

    The study sorts out another tricky climate-modeling issue — namely, the substantial disagreement between different models in when shortwave radiation takes over the heavy lifting in global warming. The authors demonstrate that the source of the differences lies in the way in which a model represents changes in cloud cover with global warming, another big factor in how well Earth can reflect shortwave solar energy.

    The work was supported by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Adminstration, the James S. McDonnell Foundation, and the National Science Foundation.

    10:48p
    Dresselhaus and Solow win Presidential Medal of Freedom

    Institute Professors Mildred Dresselhaus and Robert Solow are among 19 new winners of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.

    The honors were announced today by President Barack Obama. Dresselhaus and Solow, both of whom are Institute Professors Emeritus, will receive the awards at a White House ceremony on Nov. 24.

    “I look forward to presenting these 19 bold, inspiring Americans with our nation’s highest civilian honor,” Obama said in a White House announcement.

    The Presidential Medal of Freedom is presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States; to world peace; or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.

    “From activists who fought for change to artists who explored the furthest reaches of our imagination; from scientists who kept America on the cutting edge to public servants who help write new chapters in our American story, these citizens have made extraordinary contributions to our country and the world,” Obama said.

    "Millie Dresselhaus and Bob Solow have been recognized with extraordinary professional honors in their respective fields, including the rank of Institute Professor Emeritus, the highest distinction granted by the MIT faculty," MIT President L. Rafael Reif said. "But the Presidential Medal of Freedom is different: In receiving it, Millie and Bob demonstrate that their approach to scholarship — bold, rigorous, highly creative, and actively applied to the problems of the world — represents citizenship in the highest sense. We could not be more grateful for all they have given us, and the world, as scholars, teachers, colleagues, and friends."

    The White House called Dresselhaus “one of the most prominent physicists, materials scientists, and electrical engineers of her generation. … She is best known for deepening our understanding of condensed matter systems and the atomic properties of carbon, which has contributed to major advances in electronics and materials research.”

    “Robert Solow is one of the most widely respected economists of the past 60 years,” the White House said of the MIT economist, who received the Nobel Prize in economics in 1987. “His research in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s transformed the field, laying the groundwork for much of modern economics. He continues to influence policymakers, demonstrating how smart investments, especially in new technology, can build broad-based prosperity, and he continues to actively participate in contemporary debates about inequality and economic growth.” 

    Atmospheric chemist Mario Molina, an Institute Professor Emeritus who was on the faculty of the Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences from 1989 to 2006 before moving to the University of California at San Diego, won the Presidential Medal of Freedom last year. The late Harold "Doc" Edgerton, then a professor of electrical engineering, won the honor in 1946 for his contributions to the American victory in World War II — specifically, for advances in night aerial photography that were crucial to the success of the Normandy invasion.

    In addition to Dresselhaus and Solow, the other new Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients announced today are:

    • Alvin Ailey, choreographer and dancer
    • Isabel Allende, novelist
    • Tom Brokaw, journalist, newscaster, and author
    • James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner, civil rights activists in the “Freedom Summer” of 1964
    • John Dingell, congressman from Michigan
    • Ethel Kennedy, activist for social justice and human rights
    • Suzan Harjo, writer, curator, and Native American activist
    • Abner Mikva, public servant in all three branches of federal government
    • Patsy Takemoto Mink, congresswoman from Hawaii
    • Edward Roybal, congressman from California 
    • Charles Sifford, professional golfer
    • Stephen Sondheim, theater composer and lyricist
    • Meryl Streep, actress
    • Marlo Thomas, actress, producer, author, and social activist 
    • Stevie Wonder, singer-songwriter

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