How AI and crowdsourcing help social scientists sample diverse populations
Check out the on-demand sessions from the Low-Code/No-Code Summit to learn how to successfully innovate and achieve efficiency by upskilling and scaling citizen developers. In 2010, three psychologists from the University of British Columbia published a paper with an intriguing title: The WEIRDest people in the world? Paradoxically, the paper was about Americans. The three scientists had devoted their research careers to cross-cultural variability of human psychology and traveled the seven seas to study small-scale tribal societies. In the paper, they voiced a growing concern about how heavily the humanities -- psychology, economics, sociology, political science and others -- were relying on samples of Americans.
Nov-25-2022, 05:10:05 GMT
- Country:
- South America > Venezuela (0.04)
- North America
- Canada > British Columbia (0.24)
- United States (0.14)
- Europe
- Western Europe (0.04)
- United Kingdom (0.04)
- Poland (0.04)
- Asia
- Middle East > Iran (0.04)
- Malaysia (0.04)
- Bangladesh (0.04)
- Africa
- Technology: