Monthly Archives: September 2018

Stephan Lewandowsky

School of Psychology Annual Lecture – 25 September

Beyond misinformation: Parallel Universes in a Post-Truth World is the title of the School of Psychology’s Annual Lecture on Tuesday 25 September.

The talk will be given by Professor Stephan Lewandowsky, FAcSS, FAPS, Chair in Cognitive Science and Royal Society Wolfson Research Fellow, Chair in Cognitive Science and Royal Society Wolfson Research Fellow.

If you would like to join us, please register by emailing George Oatridge by 23 September. The event will begin with an optional drinks reception in Keynes College Atrium at 17.00, followed by the talk at 18.00 in Keynes Lecture Theatre 1 (KLT1).

Abstract

Imagine a dystopian world in which it is not medical knowledge but a free-for-all opinion market on Twitter that determines whether a newly emergent strain of avian flu is really contagious to humans. There are signs that public discourse is evolving in this direction: Terms such as “post-truth” and “fake news”, largely unknown until 2016, have exploded into the media and into public discourse. I explore the implications of the growing abundance of misinformation in the public sphere, how it influences people and how to counter it. I argue that misinformation in the post-truth era can no longer be considered a localized “error” that can be corrected with appropriate communication tools. Instead, I suggest that responses to the post-truth era must include technological solutions that incorporate psychological principles, an interdisciplinary approach that we describe as “technocognition.”

Brief biography

Professor Stephan Lewandowsky is a cognitive scientist at the University of Bristol. He was an Australian Professorial Fellow from 2007 to 2012, and was awarded a Discovery Outstanding Researcher Award from the Australian Research Council in 2011. He held a Revesz Visiting Professorship at the University of Amsterdam in 2012, and received a Wolfson Research Merit Fellowship from the Royal Society upon moving to the UK in 2013. He was appointed a Fellow of the Academy of Social Science and a Fellow of the Association of Psychological Science in 2017. In 2016, he was appointed a fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry for his commitment to science, rational inquiry and public education.

His research examines people’s memory, decision making, and knowledge structures, with a particular emphasis on how people update information in memory. His most recent research interests examine the potential conflict between human cognition and the physics of the global climate, which has led him into research in climate science and climate modeling. As a result of his work in climate science he was appointed Visiting Scientist at the CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere laboratory in Hobart, Tasmania, in August 2017.  He has published more than 200 scholarly articles, chapters, and books, including numerous papers on how people respond to corrections of misinformation and what variables determine people’s acceptance of scientific findings. (See www.cogsciwa.com for a complete list of scientific publications.)   Professor Lewandowsky is an award-winning teacher and was Associate Editor of the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition from 2006-2008. He has also contributed around 50 opinion pieces to the global media on issues related to climate change “skepticism” and the coverage of science in the media. He is currently serving as Digital Content Editor for the Psychonomic Society and blogs routinely on cognitive research at www.psychonomic.org.

The talk is being hosted by Professor Karen Douglas, Professor of Social Psychology at Kent.

Winter berries

Pay during adverse weather – new University policy

A new policy on pay during adverse weather has been published by HR.

The new policy, ‘Pay during periods of severe weather conditions/major transport disruption’, replaces the HR Adverse Weather Guidance for Managers.

The  new policy outlines pay arrangements and responsibilities for all University staff during adverse weather conditions and is based on the recognition and appreciation that staff make every reasonable effort to attend work during bad weather.

In line with all previous and current policies, the University will not normally close during bad weather, but there may be circumstances when a reduction to essential services only is declared.

All managers and staff are encouraged to read through the new policy ahead of winter.

Simon Elliott on Roman ragstone in the Kent Messenger

Dr Simon Elliott, Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Classical & Archaeological Studies, featured in a double-page spread in the Kent Messenger newspaper (dated 26 August 2018) in an article exploring ‘Roman History in Kent’.

The article looks at Simon’s research on ragstone quarries, an extensive industry in the region in Roman times.

‘Ragstone is grey-green sandy limestone from the Hythe Beds in the Lower Greensand geological formation – which we today identify as the Weald,’ explains Simon in the article.

‘It was utilised across the south east of the province of Britannia – the Roman name for Britain – in huge quantities, either as dressed facing stone in-fill rubble, or to create hard road surfaces, principally because it is hard-wearing but also workable.The sheer scale of this industry is particularly striking, with enormous quantities of stone utilised.’

Read full article here.

Sophia Labadi to Deliver Keynote Speech

Dr Sophia Labadi will deliver a Keynote Speech at the Annual meeting of the European Association for Archaeologists on Saturday 8 September. With over 11 000 members, this is one of the biggest associations for archaeologists in Europe. Dr Labadi’s Keynote, entitled ‘Is Heritage Irrelevant?’, reflects on the two key aims of the 2018 European Year of Cultural Heritage, first on the contribution of heritage to cultural diversity and second on the contribution of heritage to the economy. In order to do so, she discusses the results of her latest books that discuss these issues.

Find out more about the European Association for Archaeologists.

In Conversation with Lord Adonis

Season four of In Conversation with Gavin Esler begins this autumn, with the first talk featuring Lord Adonis, live at the Gulbenkian on Thursday 20 September.

The special subject for this event is ‘Brexit – can it be overturned?’

The talk starts at 18.30 and tickets cost £5 (£4 for staff/students), and are available from the Gulbenkian Box Office.

Make sure to join the conversation beforehand; you can submit questions on Twitter using #GavinAsks or by email via events@kent.ac.uk.

You can keep the conversation going on the night by joining a High Table dinner in Darwin Conference Suite after the talk for £35. Once you have booked tickets for the In Conversation, you will automatically be offered to join the dinner.

Money raised from the sale of tickets for the In Conversation will go towards the Kent Opportunity Fund. Find out more about the Fund here.

Rochester Building, Medway campus

Changes to central room bookings at Medway

The Timetabling Office has now taken over the booking of central rooms on the Medway campus during term-time. To streamline the process, we have made a number of changes:

  • Staff bookings for non-teaching events during term-time should be made via the staff booking form on the Timetabling Office website. Please note that bookings in standard teaching hours (09.00-18.00, Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and 09.00-13.00 Wednesday) for 2018-19 can only be made once the timetable has been released to students on 10 September; bookings outside the standard teaching hours can be made at any time.
  • Bookings for events during vacation should be made via the Conference Office: email conferences@kent.ac.uk or phone (01227 82) 8000.
  • Bookings for PC rooms in the evenings and at weekends during term-time and any time during vacation should be made by phoning (01227 82) 4888 or helpdesk@kent.ac.uk
  • Bookings for the meetings rooms in the Rochester building are overseen by the Office of the Vice-Chancellor (Medway) and are requested by emailing: rochesterrooms@kent.ac.uk
  • Requests for changes to standard room layouts should be made directly to Estates using the Archibus system. Your school/department will have a member of staff who has access to Archibus. Please ensure that you allow sufficient time in your booking request to the Timetabling Office/Conference Office/VC’s office to allow for the layout to be changed and then returned at the end of your event. If you change the layout yourself, please ensure it is returned to the standard layout as displayed in the room at the end of your booking.

If you have any other queries or concerns, please email timetabling@kent.ac.uk

Autumn Short Courses Programme at Tonbridge Centre

The Tonbridge Centre has launched its latest programmes of short courses. The programmes are  designed to provide study opportunities for personal interest or self-development, among like-minded people and without formal assessment. Courses include weekday and Saturday lectures, Study Days and weekly courses at Kent’s Tonbridge Centre and Medway Campus. Subjects include French Painting and Culture, Art and Politics, The Treaties of 1919-23, The Cambridge Spies, The Modern Commonwealth, the literature of Zola and Maupassant, and The Grand Tour.

 

Full details of the programnmes can be found by visiting www.kent.ac.uk/tonbridge

 

A staff discount is available on some courses: please call 01732 352316 in office hours or email tonbridgeadmin@kent.ac.uk for further information.

 

 

Autumn Short Course Programme at Tonbridge Centre

The Tonbridge Centre has launched its latest programmes of short courses. The programmes are  designed to provide study opportunities for personal interest or self-development, among like-minded people and without formal assessment. Courses include weekday and Saturday lectures, Study Days and weekly courses at Kent’s Tonbridge Centre and Medway Campus. Subjects include French Painting and Culture, Art and Politics, The Treaties of 1919-23, The Cambridge Spies, The Modern Commonwealth, the literature of Zola and Maupassant, and The Grand Tour.

Full details of the programnmes can be found by visiting www.kent.ac.uk/tonbridge and then follow the links to book online. General enquiries may be made by calling 01732 352316 or by email to tonbridgeadmin@kent.ac.uk .

Antonio Lázaro-Reboll co-edits collection on Jess Franco

Dr Antonio Lázaro-Reboll, Senior Lecturer in Hispanic Studies in the Department of Modern Languages, has just published a new collection: The Films of Jess Franco (Wayne State University Press, 2018), co-edited with Ian Olney, Associate Professor at the York College of Pennsylvania.

Jesús ‘Jess’ Franco (1930–2013) was a Spanish filmmaker, who directed around 160 films. He is best known as the director of jazzy, erotically charged horror movies featuring mad scientists, lesbian vampires, and women in prison, but he also dabbled in a multitude of genres from comedy to science fiction to pornography. Although he built his career in the ghetto of low-budget exploitation cinema, he managed to create a body of work that is deeply personal, frequently political, and surprisingly poetic.

Arguing that his multifaceted, paradoxical cinema cannot be pinned down by any one single approach, the new collection features twelve original essays on Franco’s movies, written from a variety of different perspectives. It opens up fresh avenues for academic inquiry by considering his oeuvre from a range of viewpoints, including transnational film studies, cinephilia studies, and star studies. The book effectively meets the challenge of Franco’s multidimensional cinema with multifaceted criticism – attentive to the shifting historical contexts, modes of production and consumption, and formats of Franco’s work – that supplements current Franco scholarship and suggests exciting new directions for its further development.

The Films of Jess Franco seeks to address the scholarly neglect of this legendary cult director and to broaden the conversation around the director’s work in ways that will be of interest to fans and academics alike.

For more details, please see the publisher’s page here.

 

Hanging file folder labeled with Pension

USS Consultation opens

The consultation process between the University and all current and eligible members of USS has now opened, running from 3 September until 2 November at 17.00.

Consultation will consider the cost-sharing proposal required to complete the latest pension valuation, details of which can be found on the dedicated USS consultation website. This consultation is entirely separate to, and will run in parallel with, the work of the Joint Expert Panel (JEP), set up to independently assess the basis of the 2017 valuation.

Several channels of communication have been created to facilitate the local consultation including meetings with staff and union representatives, University-wide communications and Kent’s own dedicated website.

Any questions that cannot be answered by the consultation materials and website can be asked by emailing the Kent HR Consultation team at hrussconsultation@kent.ac.uk