morethanjustparks.substack.com/p/blm-announ... there's info on who to complain to to try to stop this at the end of the article, lets share this message and try our best to stop it.
@hwaight
Assistant Professor University of Oregon Sociology | Former Postdoc NYU CSMaP | Ph.D. Princeton Sociology | Research on media, information, politics, China, computational social science | Opinions are my own | https://hwaight.github.io/
morethanjustparks.substack.com/p/blm-announ... there's info on who to complain to to try to stop this at the end of the article, lets share this message and try our best to stop it.
Less than two years ago, Texas Tech University suspended me for speaking out against genocide. Today I found out I was denied tenure.
Last week the story was that TikTok censored anti-Trump/ICE/Pretti videos after the U.S. ownership change. We investigated with a large set of US TikTok data and found some interesting results, short thread...
ICE is changing tactics in Maine: "Now, the volunteers in Maine say federal agents have started showing up at their homes and intimidating them or threatening arrest. Some of them, masked and wearing tactical gear, have issued stark warnings not to follow them." www.pressherald.com/2026/01/23/i...
Donβt let the holidays hide this story Hereβs part of the plot to steal the midterms. stateline.org/2025/12/18/t...
There is an absolute fucking scandal going down at The New School, wherein at appears that the university is funnelling to a MEMBER OF THE SCHOOLβS BOARD while purging faculty and staff.
This should be headline news.
x.com/uaw7902/stat...
We recently wrote a follow blog post summarizing this
@amjsoc.bsky.social
article. Please follow this link to read more: blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/20...
Sociology we have to talk about ASA/Footnotes' decision to publish an article about how *checks notes* a sociologist in upper admin *checks notes* used Sociology to *checks notes* cut the Sociology Program at their university. π
www.asanet.org/footnotes-ar...
#academicsky
New blog post summarizing my recent paper with Adam Goldstein in the AJS: blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog/20...
Thanks @shugars.bsky.social !!!
the USA built a system of higher education so good that smart/rich people from across the world came here, spending billions to learn here, subsidizing education for Americans while spending money to live in our cities and towns. our government arbitrarily decided we should stop doing that
Thank you @thomasdavidson.bsky.social and Danny Karell for all your hard work on this! Really thankful to have been a part of this special issue!
A screenshot of the Sociological Methods & Research website showing the special issue title
Iβm delighted to share that the August 2025 special issue of Sociological Methods & Research on Generative AI is out now. Along with my co-editor, Daniel Karell, we put together this issue to build on the conference we organized last year.
Here's a thread on each of the ten papers:
Thank you for fighting for our public land @wyden.senate.gov !
β¨Newβ¨ postdoc opportunity to collaborate with @mollycopeland.bsky.social and myself on an exciting project on geography, community, and mental health at @ndsociology.bsky.social. Happy to talk to anyone interested. Please resky (or whatever retweeting is called here)!
apply.interfolio.com/169206
our sources included Russian, English, and Ukrainian
Excited to share βQuantifying Narrative Similarity Across Languagesβ was just published! Amazing work by my wonderful coauthors β read more below!
and by you!! @jasong.bsky.social really enjoyed working with you on this paper
Our replication package is available at this link: doi.org/10.7910/DVN/...
This article will appear in print in the August SMR special issue on generative AI. Special thanks to Daniel Karell and @thomasdavidson.bsky.social for organizing this special issue! All the articles in the issue are fantastic, please read them all.
Our paper shows that large language models can be used for complex labeling tasks unattainable by previous measures. We furthermore find fine tuning to hold particular promise for these types of tasks. We also provide a framework for out-of-sample validation of our rare event estimand.
The column recall holdout estimates the percent of 47 holdout pairs recovered by each estimator. The Precision score is the percent of predicted (out of sample) positive cases which were labeled as TPs by human coders. The F1 score is the harmonic mean of two scores. The column total predicted pairs includes the total number of pairs each estimator predicted to be βsame claim, same subjectβ pairs. The bolded estimates indicate the highest performing estimators across all types by metric.
We benchmarked the performance of our approach against a range of existing measures of related estimands. Our measure outperformed these relevant alternatives. We show the performance of our large language model estimators (βSBERT-LLMβ) versus considered alternatives in the table below.
Among U.S. media outlets, the percent articles in our bioweapons corpus that share narratives with Russian state media, Ukranian media outlets, and other U.S. sources. Low quality U.S. media websites (left) are more likely than mainstream popular U.S. news sources (right) to print stories that contain the same narratives as Russian state media articles.
We use this method in a case study of U.S. news website coverage of the war in Ukraine. We show that low quality U.S. news sites were more likely than mainstream U.S. news sites to have overlapping claims (narrative similarity) with Russian newspapers.
We leverage recent advances in NLP to measure whether two newspaper articles are making the same claims about the same underlying subjects. We use document embeddings to reduce the number of comparisons to a tractable number and large language models for pair annotation.
Researchers are often interested in tracking the flow of ideas and claims across texts. This is a very challenging target to estimate, however, as due to copyright and journalistic norms authors will often reuse information and ideas without using the same words, phrases or even language.
I am thrilled to share a new article in Sociological Methods & Research, βQuantifying Narrative Similarity Across Languagesβ. My co-first author Sol Messing and our collaborators developed a new approach to measuring βnarrative similarityβ between texts: journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
Thanks Erik!
Excellent new work by one of our graduate students