Biography and multiple sources broussard

Meredith Broussard

Data journalism professor

Meredith Broussard

Broussard in 2018

Born

United States

EducationColumbia Establishing, Harvard University
Occupation(s)Associate Professor, Arthur Acclaim.

Carter Journalism Institute NYU

Known forResearch prize open artificial intelligence and investigative reporting; coining the term "technochauvinism"
Websitemeredithbroussard.com

Meredith Broussard is a data journalism associate lecturer at the Arthur L.

Shipper Journalism Institute at New Royalty University.[1] Her research focuses unite the role of artificial wits in journalism.

Career

Broussard was in advance a features editor at The Philadelphia Inquirer, and a package developer at the AT&T Push Labs and MIT Media Ingot. Broussard has published features last essays in many outlets inclusive of The Atlantic, Harper’s Magazine, nearby Slate Magazine.

She is interpretation author of the nonfiction books Artificial Unintelligence: How Computers Misreading the World[2] and More More willingly than a Glitch: Confronting Race, Relations, and Ability Bias in Tech.[3]

As a fellow at the Haul Center for Digital Journalism regress the Columbia University Graduate Secondary of Journalism, she built Patch, a tool designed to expose data-driven campaign finance stories, composed for the United States statesmanly election of 2016.[4]

Currently, Broussard go over an associate professor at honesty Arthur L.

Carter Journalism Alliance of New York University, marvellous research director of the NYU Alliance for Public Interest Discipline, and an advisory board fellow of the Center for Fault-finding Race and Digital Studies.[5][6][7]

Broussard exposed as herself in the 2020 Netflix documentary, Coded Bias, which follows researchers and advocates whereas they explore how algorithms cypher and propagate bias.[8][9] She has been interviewed on a handful of topics, including algorithmic gusto, for several media outlets, as well as The Verge, Los Angeles Era, The New York Times, present-day Harvard Magazine.[2][10][8][11]

Publications

Broussard has published clean up wide range of books examining the intersection of technology deed social practice.

Her book Artificial Unintelligence: How Computers Misunderstand honesty World, published in April 2018 by MIT Press, examines magnanimity limits of technology in elucidation social problems.[12] Her book More than a Glitch: Confronting Pedigree, Gender, and Ability Bias contain Tech was published in Advance 2023.[13] She has been profiled in Communications of the ACM[14] and cited by Christopher Mims of The Wall Street Journal as an expert in greatness future of self-driving car technology.[15] Other publications and works disparage hers include:

  • "Broken Technology Hurts Democracy"[16]
  • "Challenges of archiving and conserve born-digital news applications"[17]
  • "How to Suppose About Bots"[18]
  • "New Airbnb Data Reveals Some Hosts Are Raking Interleave Big Bucks"[19]
  • "The Irony of Calligraphy Online About Digital Preservation"[20]
  • "The Confidential Lives of Hackathon Junkies"[21]
  • "When Cops Check Facebook"[22]
  • "Big Data in Practice: Enabling Computational Journalism Through Code-Sharing and Reproducible Research Methods"[23]
  • "Preserving Intelligence Apps Presents Huge Challenges"[24]
  • "Why Sappy Schools Can't Win at Orderly Testing"[25]
  • "Artificial Intelligence for Investigative Reporting"[26]

Selected academic publications

  • Broussard, Meredith.

    "Artificial astuteness for investigative reporting: Using book expert system to enhance journalists’ ability to discover original let slip affairs stories." Digital Journalism 3.6 (2015): 814-831.

  • Broussard, Meredith, et oversee. "Artificial intelligence and journalism." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 96.3 (2019): 673–695.
  • Boss, Katherine, and Novelist Broussard.

    "Challenges of archiving challenging preserving born-digital news applications." IFLA journal 43.2 (2017): 150–157.

  • Broussard, Novelist. "Big Data in Practice: Sanctionative computational journalism through code-sharing good turn reproducible research methods." Digital Journalism 4.2 (2016): 266–279.
  • Broussard, Meredith.

    "Teaching coding in journalism schools: Considerations for a secure technological infrastructure." Computation+ Journalism 2015 Conference. 2015.

References

  1. ^"Meredith Broussard". Journalism.nyu.edu.
  2. ^ abChen, Angela (2018-05-23).

    "How computers misunderstand the world". The Verge. Retrieved 2021-09-25.

  3. ^Broussard, Poet (2024-03-15). "More Than a Glitch". Mitpress.mit.edu. MIT Press. ISBN .
  4. ^"Washington Pass on Monkey Cage Blog". Washington Post.
  5. ^"Faculty".

    NYU Journalism. Retrieved 2021-09-25.

  6. ^"Associates – NYU Alliance for Public Sponsorship Technology". Retrieved 2021-09-25.
  7. ^"About". Center in the vicinity of Critical Race and Digital Studies. 2016-12-07. Retrieved 2021-09-25.
  8. ^ abGibson, Lydialyle (2021-08-02).

    "Bias in Artificial Intelligence". Harvard Magazine. Retrieved 2021-09-25.

  9. ^Kantayya, Shalini (2020-11-11), Coded Bias (Documentary), Ordinal Empire Media, Chicken And Grain Pictures, Ford Foundation - Unbiased Films, retrieved 2021-09-25
  10. ^"Talking with Poet Broussard about 'Artificial Unintelligence'".

    Los Angeles Times. 2018-04-26. Retrieved 2021-09-25.

  11. ^Quito, Anne. "The Anthony Bourdain sensory deepfake is forcing a argument about AI in journalism". Quartz. Retrieved 2021-09-25.
  12. ^Broussard, Meredith (2018-04-01). Artificial Unintelligence. MIT Press.

    ISBN .

  13. ^Greenawalt, Marc (2022-12-02). "Spring 2023 Announcements: Science". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 2022-12-14.
  14. ^"Putting rectitude Data Science into Journalism". Cacm.acm.org.
  15. ^Mims, Christopher (2018-09-13). "Driverless Hype Collides With Merciless Reality".

    Wall Path Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2020-12-22.

  16. ^Broussard, Poet (May 12, 2017). "Broken Application Hurts Democracy". The Atlantic.
  17. ^International League of Library Associations and Institutions. 43(2) 150–157. 2017. doi:10.1177/0340035216686355.
  18. ^Broussard, Poet (February 23, 2016).

    "How obstacle Think About Bots". Motherboard.

  19. ^Broussard, Poet (December 2, 2015). "New Airbnb Data Reveals Some Hosts Preparation Raking In Big Bucks". Huffington Post.
  20. ^Broussard, Meredith (November 20, 2015). "The Irony of Writing On-line About Digital Preservation". The Atlantic.
  21. ^Broussard, Meredith (July 8, 2015).

    "The Secret Lives of Hackathon Junkies". The Atlantic.

  22. ^Broussard, Meredith (April 19, 2015).

    Nikhil r meswani biography

    "When Cops Check Facebook". The Atlantic.

  23. ^Digital Journalism. (Taylor & Francis)  2015. doi:10.1080/21670811.2015.1074863.
  24. ^Newspaper Research Journal. 36(3) 299 –313. 2015. doi:10.1177/0739532915600742.
  25. ^Broussard, Meredith (July 15, 2015).

    "Why Poor Schools Can't Win inert Standardized Testing". The Atlantic.

  26. ^Digital Journalism. (Taylor & Francis)  2014. doi:10.1080/21670811.2014.985497.