Podcast appearances and mentions of sarah pink

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Best podcasts about sarah pink

Latest podcast episodes about sarah pink

Antropología pop
#49 ¿Qué es la Antropología del Diseño? Mi experiencia en la gestión pública.

Antropología pop

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2023 18:06


Hoy les comparto algunas coordenadas para pensar que es y como surgió la Antropología del diseño, como una de las formas que tiene la disciplina aplicada al mundo fuera de lo académico. Bibliografía recomendada: Cualquiera de la antropóloga Sarah Pink. Telegram: https://t.me/biografiamutante https://instagram.com/biografiamutante https://twitter.com/soyunabiografia https://www.tiktok.com/@biografiamutante https://medium.com/@biografiamutante Facebook: http://bit.ly/FbFdeF Escucha mi MÚSICA

The Smart Community Podcast
Where to Next for Smart Cities and Communities Part 31

The Smart Community Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2022 15:46


Hi #smartcommunityfriends! I'm back with another bonus episode of the Smart Community Podcast sharing various guests answers to the question, ‘Where to next with Smart Cities and Communities?” And this time I'm sharing with you the answers from these guests: Peter Bjorn Larson from Episode 319 Johanna Hoffman from Episode 320 Suzanne and Ashish Prabhudesai from Episode 321 Sarah Pink from Episode 322 Some themes that come through in the guest answers are around making the future better for the humans and the environment, collaborating and integrating across sectors and organisations, and of course using technology intentionally, effectively and responsibly. We have so many tools and technologies now and the Smart City message has come a long way in the industries that are connected to it, but we still have a lot of work to do to make sure we aren't getting caught up in tech for tech's sake but making real impact and bringing citizens into the conversation. There are also so many ways we are still working in silos or getting stuck in pilot mode, so continued collaboration and participation is a must within organisations, between organisations, between the public and private sector, and with the general public as well. And of course what is the point of any of this Smart Community approach if we aren't aiming to make the future a better place, more liveable, accessible and sustainable for humans and the planet. Sarah tells us about some of the projects her team is working on in this realm, and Johanna reminds us that the decisions we make now will have ramifications for our children's children. As Suzanne says, “It's about ensuring that people are not slaves of the technology, but are making use of it to drive better outcomes, not just for now, but for the future, as well.” As always we hope you enjoyed listening to this episode as much as we enjoyed making it! Find the full show notes at: www.mysmart.community Connect with me via email: hello@mysmart.community Connect with My Smart Community via LinkedIn or Twitter and watch on YouTube The Smart Community Podcast is produced by Perk Digital.

communities smart cities smart communities sarah pink perk digital my smart community smart community podcast
The Smart Community Podcast
Connecting Technology with Human Values, with Sarah Pink

The Smart Community Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2022 33:53


Hi #SmartCommunity friends! In this episode of the Smart Community Podcast, I have a great chat with Sarah Pink, Founding Director of the Emerging Technologies Research Lab at Monash University in Melbourne. Sarah is a Futures and Design Anthropologist and in this episode she tells us about her background in both anthropology and as a documentary filmmaker, and how that has shaped her career. We then talk about some of the projects Sarah has been working on with the Emerging Technologies Research Lab, including some key insights from some of these projects. Sarah and I discuss why you need to start projects from a place of values and outcomes, rather than starting with the data, and how we can enable people to connect technologies with their human values. Sarah also tells us about a really interesting and powerful approach called ‘Thing Ethnography' that involves roleplaying people as technology in order to understand what people actually want from their technology, not just what technologists think they want. We finish our chat discussing the problem of Smart City debates being driven by people who don't understand real life contexts, and why we should be simulating future experiences to get a better understanding of how people behave in order to better plan for the future. As always, we hope you enjoy listening to this episode as much as we enjoyed making it. Connect with Sarah on LinkedIn or Twitter @pinkydigital Find out more about the Emerging Technologies Research Lab on the Monash Website or on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn Connect with me via email: hello@mysmart.community Connect with My Smart Community via LinkedIn or Twitter and watch on YouTube Podcast Production by Perk Digital

Humans of Purpose
260 Sarah Pink: Emerging Technology

Humans of Purpose

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2022 57:12


Sarah PinkProfessor Sarah Pink is the Director of the Emerging Technologies Research Lab at Monash University. She is also Co-Leader of the People Programme and Transport & Mobilities Focus Area at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making & Society. Sarah is a true emerging tech leader and polymath; as we discover during the podcast, she is also a documentary filmmaker. Our SponsorsWe are proudly sponsored by Neon Treehouse, the best digital agency on the planet earth. Delicious and healthy soda Kreol is the official drink of Humans of Purpose and you can get a 15% discount on purchases using promo code HUMANSOFPURPOSE. We would welcome your support and partnership to help us take the podcast forward. More about this below in Promotional Packages below.LinkedIn CommunityYou may not know this, but our highest and most engaged online community after Instagram is via our LinkedIn page. Join about 2,100 Humans of Purpose fans and followers and join in some great conversations, share your thoughts and see what other listeners from our community are saying about the podcast. Promotional PackagesOur promotional packages amplify purpose-driven and socially impactful organisations and enable you to reach our global audience of over 10,000 episode listens per month and our growing social media community. Connect with our wonderful socially conscious audience who are based in major Australian cities, of whom 76% are 25-44 years old and 74% are senior professionals in their field. As part of our social enterprise model, we offer just a handful of opportunities per year with just two opportunities left for 2022. Click Here to learn more about collaborating on a custom campaign package.HoP MembershipLove Humans of Purpose? We are a social enterprise and we rely on your support to cover our costs of production. You can help sustain our work by Signing Up as a monthly or annual Humans of Purpose member like our rock star supporters Andrew 1, Andrew 2, Chris, Nikki, Margaret, Ben, Misha, Sarah and Geoff. You'll get the following awesome perks in return each and every week:Early access all episodesAd free all episodesFull transcripts all episodes5 Key Insights all episodesAudio notes all episodesBrokered intros all podcast guests Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Big Ideas - ABC RN
Productivity and innovation in the future

Big Ideas - ABC RN

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 54:05


Change is constant in society, even if we can't see it. So how likely is it we can even begin to predict what the future might look like for productivity and innovation, and do we have the means to do so? 

Big Ideas
Productivity and innovation in the future

Big Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 54:05


Change is constant in society, even if we can't see it. So how likely is it we can even begin to predict what the future might look like for productivity and innovation, and do we have the means to do so? 

Response-ability.Tech
Recommender Systems and Inequality in the Creator Economy. With Matt Artz

Response-ability.Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2021 50:06 Transcription Available


Our guest today is Matt Artz. Matt is a business and design anthropologist, consultant, author, speaker, and creator. As a creator he creates podcasts, music, and visual art. Many people will know Matt through his Anthropology in Business and Anthro to UX podcasts. We talk about his interdisciplinary educational background — he has degrees  in Computer Information Systems, Biotechnology,  Finance and Management Information Systems, and Applied Anthropology — and Matt explains what drew him along this path.He shares his recent realisation that he identifies primarily as a technologist ("I am still at heart a technologist. I love technology. I love playing with technology") and his conflict around the "harm that comes out of some AI, but I'm also really interested in it and to some degree kind of helping to fuel the rise of it."This leads to us discussing — in the context of recommender systems and Google more broadly — how we are forced to identify on the internet as one thing or another, either an anthropologist, a technologist, or a creator but not all three. As Matt explains, "finding an ideal way to brand yourself on the Internet is actually very critical...it's a real challenge".We turn next to recommender systems and his interest in how capital and algorithmic bias contribute to inequality in the creator economy, which is based on his art market research as the Head of Product & Experience for Artmatcher.  Artmatcher is a mobile app that aims to address access and inclusion issues in the art market. The work being done on Artmatcher may lead to innovations in the way the approximately 50 million people worldwide in the Creator Economy get noticed in our "technologically-mediated world" as well as in other multi-sided markets (e.g. Uber, Airbnb) where there are multiple players. It's a model he hopes will ensure that people's "hard work really contributes to their own success".Design anthropology is one approach to solving this challenge, Matt suggests, because it is "very interventionist, very much focused on what are we going to do to enact some kind of positive change". As Matt says, "even if this [model] doesn't work, I do feel there's some value in just having the conversation about how can we value human behaviour and reward people for productive effort and how can we factor that back into the broader conversation of responsible tech or responsible AI?".He recommends two books, Design Anthropology: Theory and Practice, edited by Wendy Gunn, Ton Otto, Rachel Charlotte Smith, and Media, Anthropology and Public Engagement, edited by Sarah Pink and Simone Abram.Lastly, Matt leaves us with a hopeful note about what we can do in the face of "really hard challenges" such as climate change.You can find Matt on his website, follow him on Twitter @MattArtzAnthro, and connect with him on LinkedIn.

The Human Show: Innovation through Social Science
Wendy Gunn: on Research as a Future Making Practice

The Human Show: Innovation through Social Science

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2021 54:07


Wendy is a researcher in the field of design anthropology whose written work, research and design practices have contributed to the foundation of what we now perceive as design anthropology. She holds an MA and a PhD in Social Anthropology both at the University of Manchester. She taught at architecture department at the University of Strathclyde in Scotland. From 2005-2017 she was Associate Professor of design anthropology at University of Southern Denmark. Subsequently, she has held teaching and research positions in Australia, Belgium, USA and China. As a researcher, Wendy has cross-disciplinary expertise in design, architecture and anthropology and significant experience of conducting collaborative research as part of multidisciplinary design teams involving both public and private sectors. Central to her research is a close connection between theory and practice, research and teaching. She has developed research insights into how collaborative processes work as well as how anthropology can play an important role in design, whether in product, architectural and engineering design. Wendy's publications explore such processes through ethnographic documentation of design experimentation and analysis of emergent properties, involving learning, imagination and cooperation.In today's episode we talk to Wendy about her experience of shaping design anthropology and the ways collaborative research practices in this emerging field have evolved. How does she reconcile the designer, architect and anthropologist that dwell within her? In what ways has the cross-disciplinary collaboration given Wendy strength to navigate different kinds of design processes and practices? We inquire about the challenges and difficulties that this navigation sometimes implies. We reflect on research as a future making practice and on ways of being a researcher within that space. We close with stimulating questions and a research case: how do you conduct fieldwork without actually being there?  How can you as a researcher make research practices more sustainable? and how do you engage astronauts  in carrying out anthropological research? Mentioned in podcast:Tim Ingold, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tim_IngoldSara Green, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_Green_(anthropologist)Sarah Pink, https://research.monash.edu/en/persons/sarah-pinkKaren Barad, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen_BaradKathleen Stewart, https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1068/d9109Jacob Buur, https://portal.findresearcher.sdu.dk/en/persons/buurChristian Clausen, https://vbn.aau.dk/en/persons/100768

Ivan Tree Podcast
33.- #Librocast Etnografía digital de Sarah Pink con Diana Henao, UX Research Lead en Liberty Latin America

Ivan Tree Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2020 44:25


En este episodio hablamos sobre el libro Etnografía digital de Sarah Pink con Diana Henao, Antropóloga con más de 7 años de experiencia profesional como UX Research, cofundadora de antropolab; una comunidad para promover y compartir experiencias de profesionales dedicados a la antropología de los negocios, antropología digital, antropología y diseño, entre otras múltiples áreas en las que se relaciona la antropología.

MPavilion
MMeets—Living in a Lit World

MPavilion

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2020 60:02


Light is a crucial part of how we experience our surroundings, and lighting design brings this element into our homes, cities and shared spaces in particular ways. At its best, it can help us feel safe, empowered, convivial or enchanted; at its worst, it can engender unease or discomfort. But how can we better understand the ways in which light configures our worlds? And what do lighting designers, metropolitan authorities and city dwellers need to know about light and lighting to support our shared urban futures? Revisit this discussion with moderator and researcher/author Shanti Sumartojo; Danish light-culture expert Mikkel Bille; illumination-focused cultural geographer Tim Edensor, and Sarah Pink, founding director of Monash University’s Emerging Technologies Lab. This event is supported by RACV.

Anthropology@Deakin Podcast
Episode #21: Sarah Pink

Anthropology@Deakin Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2019 45:34


In this episode, we meet in an undisclosed location (David's home) with Professor Sarah Pink, the Director of the Emerging Technologies Research Lab at Monash University, to talk digital ethnography, collaboration and the small matter of... the Future! Sarah is well known to many as a key theorist of digital ethnography and design anthropology, and has studied everything from laundry to Big Data, urban lighting schemes, wearable technology, documentary film, driverless cars, and a host of other topics. She is the author and/or editor of near-countless books, including 'Atmospheres and the Experiential World' (with our recent guest Shanti Sumartojo), 'Digital Ethnography: principles and practice', 'Doing Sensory Ethnography', and 'Making Homes: Ethnography and Design'.

The Human Show: Innovation through Social Science
Sarah Pink: Professor of Design and Emerging Technologies: ethnographies on human futures

The Human Show: Innovation through Social Science

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2019 35:50


Sarah Pink is a design anthropologist, researcher, consultant and thought leader, whose work focuses on scholarship and intervention in the fields of technology design, digital technologies in everyday life and design for wellbeing. She is currently Director of the interdisciplinary Emerging Technology Research Lab at Monash University. Sarah's work engages with contemporary issues and challenges through a dialogue between academic scholarship, applied practice and intervention. She has been International Guest Professor at Halmstad University, Sweden since 2014 and Guest Professor at Loughborough University, UK since 2012. Her research has been funded by national research councils in Australia, UK, Sweden and Spain, and the EU, and through partnerships with organisations including Volvo Cars, Samsung, Unilever, Suncorp. She has designed and undertaken research in UK, Australia, Spain, Brazil, Sweden and Indonesia, and has collaborated across design, engineering and arts and documentary practice. Sarah is also an international leader in innovative digital, visual and sensory research, intervention and dissemination methodologies. In today's episode Sarah speaks of her past, current and potential future projects which look into human - technology relation from a more interdisciplinary perspective than human-computer interaction. We ask Sarah about her way to combine academic scholarship and applied work which can make an impact not only in organizations but in the society in a broader sense. She shares her insights on how anthropologists can engage in pushing research and development to a different level and to use design anthropological theories to think of human futures to which technologies have a positive contribution. She also speaks to the concept of trust and its relevance to multidisciplinary collaboration. Lastly, she shares a few words to those considering to join the conference as participants. Mentioned in Podcast: Emerging Technologies Lab, Monash University: https://www.monash.edu/mada/research/labs/emerging-technologies-lab Anthropology + Technology Conference, Bristol 2019: http://www.mundyandanson.co.uk/blog/anthropology-plus-technology-conference-bristol-2019/ MA Visual Anthropology program, University of Manchester: https://www.manchester.ac.uk/study/masters/courses/list/10029/ma-visual-anthropology/ Future anthropologies network (FAN): https://www.easaonline.org/networks/fan/ Digital Energies Future project by Australian Research Council: https://energyconsumersaustralia.com.au/wp-content/uploads/Digital-energy-futures-a-research-agenda-Yolande-Strengers.pdf Co-designing future smart urban mobility services - A Human Approach (AHA): https://www.vinnova.se/en/p/co-designing-future-smart-urban-mobility-services---a-human-approach-aha/ Sarah's work: https://monash.academia.edu/SarahPink Social media and other links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sarah-pink-aa9b14ba/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/pinkydigital?lang=en

The Potscast
Each Piece Is A Survivor (ft Sarah Pink)

The Potscast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2019 10:10


Welcome to another episode of The Potscast where I ponder on the clay creation's journey from lump of clay to final firing and marvel at how amazing each piece is. Apologies for the naughty barking dog in the background. For more information go to: https://keramikbyamanda.wordpress.com/2019/04/23/each-piece-is-a-survivor-ft-sarah-pink/

Anthropology@Deakin Podcast
Episode #19: Shanti Sumartojo

Anthropology@Deakin Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2019 51:48


We didn't mean to leave you hanging, but we are back with Episode #19 and returning to our regular-ish monthly schedule. This episode features a conversation with A/Prof Shanti Sumartojo (Monash University) and our guest host Prof Andrea Witcomb (Deakin University) about affects, memory, and the the trickiness of working in a fleshy material world. Shanti's research explores how people experience their spatial surroundings, including both material and immaterial aspects, with a particular focus on the built environment, design and technology, using ethnographic methodologies. Her recent books include 'Atmospheres and the Experiential World: Theory and Methods' (with Sarah Pink) and 'Commemorating Race and Empire in the Great War Centenary' (with Ben Wellings). See: http://www.shantisumartojo.com/

empire shanti sarah pink
CAST IT (video)
Sarah Pink: Digital Ethnography

CAST IT (video)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2018 47:00


Sarah Pink is a Professor of Design and Media Ethnography at RMIT University, Australia, and the author or co-editor of several books about digital ethnography. To approach this area, we get Sarah’s help with some conceptual groundwork about the methods, values, and history of ethnography, and its relation to neighbouring fields such as anthropology or cultural geography. But the conversation focusses on digital ethnography: Information technology changes not only the methods of ethnography by providing tools or modes of expression, but also raises new questions by changing notions of embodiment, geographic place, and social relation, all of which are central themes for ethnographers. We also talk about how an field that largely eschews prediction and hypothesis can reason about future technology such as self-driving cars. Sarah’s book is Pink et al., Digital Ethnography: Principles and Practice, SAGE Publications, 2016.

CAST IT (audio)
Sarah Pink: Digital Ethnography

CAST IT (audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2018 47:00


Sarah Pink is a Professor of Design and Media Ethnography at RMIT University, Australia, and the author or co-editor of several books about digital ethnography. To approach this area, we get Sarah’s help with some conceptual groundwork about the methods, values, and history of ethnography, and its relation to neighbouring fields such as anthropology or cultural geography. But the conversation focusses on digital ethnography: Information technology changes not only the methods of ethnography by providing tools or modes of expression, but also raises new questions by changing notions of embodiment, geographic place, and social relation, all of which are central themes for ethnographers. We also talk about how an field that largely eschews prediction and hypothesis can reason about future technology such as self-driving cars. Sarah’s book is Pink et al., Digital Ethnography: Principles and Practice, SAGE Publications, 2016.

Medea Vox
Even self-driving cars will be tinkered with

Medea Vox

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2017 37:17


In recent years, the effects of digitalization are starting to appear. Sensor data and algorithms recognize who you are and then open the apartment door and turn on the lights. Data-driven AI helps you find what you want on Google, Amazon and Netflix. Datafication is everywhere. In this Medea Vox episode, Sarah Pink and Maria Engberg discuss the pitfalls of data-driven decision making, ethical data futures, and how people – of course – will tinker with the algorithms in their autonomous vehicles.

Medea Vox
Even self-driving cars will be tinkered with

Medea Vox

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2017 37:17


In recent years, the effects of digitalization are starting to appear. Sensor data and algorithms recognize who you are and then open the apartment door and turn on the lights. Data-driven AI helps you find what you want on Google, Amazon and Netflix. Datafication is everywhere. In this Medea Vox episode, Sarah Pink and Maria Engberg discuss the pitfalls of data-driven decision making, ethical data futures, and how people – of course – will tinker with the algorithms in their autonomous vehicles.