Dear all,
we are delighted to invite you to the next installment of the APSE talks
series, as well as to the accompanying reading circle prior to the talk.
The talk will be given by Remco Heesen (LSE).
When: Thursday, 10.04.2025, 15:00 - 17:00
Where: HS 3A, NIG (Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Wien)
The Division of Cognitive Labour under Poisson Productivity
When a community of academics faces a research problem and multiple
methodological approaches to solving it, how much effort should they
devote to each approach to maximise their chances of solving the problem
and minimise the time to a solution? This problem is known as the
division of cognitive labour (DCL). More specifically, Philip Kitcher,
Michael Strevens, and Kevin Zollman have asked whether and to what
extent academics' expectations of credit for solving the problem can act
as an invisible hand to produce an efficient DCL without a need for
top-down planning. Here I revisit this question using a modelling
framework (key ingredient: academic productivity follows a Poisson
distribution) that has more empirical support than Kitcher's, Strevens',
and Zollman's, and is also more flexible in that it can be used to
address broader questions about credit incentives. The somewhat
surprising finding is that in this framework the DCL problem becomes
essentially trivial. I'd like to discuss implications for how we think
about the model and/or the DCL problem.
Reading Circle (1:15-3 PM):
When: right before the talk - Thursday, 10.04.2025, 13:15 - 15:00
Where: same place - HS 3A, NIG (Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Wien)
We will focus our discussion on an article by Kevin Zollman (attached
pdf):
Zollman, K. J. S. (2007). The Communication Structure of Epistemic
Communities. Philosophy of Science, 74(5), 574-587.
https://doi.org/10.1086/525605
As an introduction we suggest this SEP article (especially Chapters 2,
3.1, 4.1 and 4.2):
Šešelja, Dunja, "Agent-Based Modeling in the Philosophy of Science", The
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2023 Edition), Edward N.
Zalta & Uri Nodelman (eds.), URL =
<https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2023/entries/agent-modeling-philscience/>.
For further reading regarding the topic:
Heesen, R. (2018). Why the reward structure of science makes
reproducibility problems inevitable. The Journal of Philosophy, 115(12),
661-674.
https://doi.org/10.5840/jphil20181151239
Kitcher, P. (1990). The Division of Cognitive Labor. The Journal of
Philosophy, 87(1), 5-22.
https://doi.org/10.2307/2026796
Thoma, J. (2015). The Epistemic Division of Labor Revisited. Philosophy
of Science, 82(3), 454-472.
https://doi.org/10.1086/681768
Best wishes,
Vinzenz Fischer