35 episodes

I Don’t Know Much Podcast discusses and explains topics related to public health and all things science! Episode themes vary from vaping to antibiotic resistance to tap water! This podcast will help you navigate credible information on healthcare concepts and get you excited about doing your own research on topics you care about. In some episodes, I speak with subject-matter experts to provide different perspectives and discussions surrounding public health topics. This podcast also highlights mini-series that address cool social concepts! Producer: Calvin Hillis; Cover art by IG: @devvvisuals

I Don't Know Much Miranda Zary

    • Education

I Don’t Know Much Podcast discusses and explains topics related to public health and all things science! Episode themes vary from vaping to antibiotic resistance to tap water! This podcast will help you navigate credible information on healthcare concepts and get you excited about doing your own research on topics you care about. In some episodes, I speak with subject-matter experts to provide different perspectives and discussions surrounding public health topics. This podcast also highlights mini-series that address cool social concepts! Producer: Calvin Hillis; Cover art by IG: @devvvisuals

    6. Did you know you're being watched? Consent Theatre with Cory Doctorow

    6. Did you know you're being watched? Consent Theatre with Cory Doctorow

    Cory Doctorow is a digital rights activist, a podcaster, and a writer. Cory speaks with conviction against commercial data practices, which he views as opaque and untrustworthy. Cory recently wrote an article on consent theatre, [1] a concept that explains the strategies used by data-based companies to obfuscate the depth of their surveillance practices to acquire unwitting consent of their users.

    [1] Cory Doctorow, “Consent Theater,” Medium, 2021, https://onezero.medium.com/consent-theater-a32b98cd8d96.

    • 58 min
    But I Do Know About Mental Health Predictors of Risky Driving (with Dr. Nevicia Case)

    But I Do Know About Mental Health Predictors of Risky Driving (with Dr. Nevicia Case)

    Risky driving includes speeding, tailgating, and failing to come to a full stop, all of which increase injury risk. Investigating what leads to risky driving, like mental health disorders such as depressed mood and alcohol abuse, is important for implementing interventions that help limit road traffic crashes. Dr. Nevicia Case discusses the findings from her most recent study that examined the mental health disorders and driving behaviours over time of individuals with previous driving under the influence offences.

    • 32 min
    5. In Google We Trust - Being Used By Technology vs. Using Technology with Dr. Darin Barney

    5. In Google We Trust - Being Used By Technology vs. Using Technology with Dr. Darin Barney

    Dr Darin Barney is a professor at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. His work examines the future of digital technologies in democratic life, [1] the state of citizenship is a digitally integrated society, [2] and the infrastructure of network societies. [3] Our discussion revolved around concerns of digital governance over social and political life, [4] algorithmic fragmentation of social reality, [5] and the commercialization of data as treating users as standing-reserve. [6]

    [1] Darin David Barney, Prometheus Wired: The Hope for Democracy in the Age of Network Technology (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2000).

    [2] Darin David Barney, One Nation under Google: Citizenship in the Technological Republic (Toronto: Hart House Lecture Committee, 2007).

    [3] Darin David Barney, The Network Society, Key Concepts (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2010).

    [4] Yu-Che Chen, Managing Digital Governance: Issues, Challenges, and Solutions.(Boca Raton: Taylor and  Francis, 2017), https://public.ebookcentral.proquest.com/choice/publicfullrecord.aspx?p=4921790;  Just and Latzer, 245.

    [5] Dean DeChiaro, “Social Media  Algorithms Threaten Democracy, Experts Tell Senators,” Roll Call, April  21, 2021, https://www.rollcall.com/2021/04/27/social-media-algorithms-threaten-democracy-experts-tell-senators/; Susan Morgan, “Fake News, Disinformation, Manipulation and Online  Tactics to Undermine Democracy,” Journal of Cyber Policy 3, no. 1  (January 2, 2018): 39–43, https://doi.org/10.1080/23738871.2018.1462395;  Ünver, 127–46.

    [6] Martin Heidegger and William Lovitt, The Question Concerning Technology and Other Essays (New York: Harper & Row, 1977).

    • 39 min
    But I Do Know About Self-Driving Cars (with Atrisha Sarkar)

    But I Do Know About Self-Driving Cars (with Atrisha Sarkar)

    Atrisha Sarkar, PhD candidate in Computer Science at University of Waterloo, Canada, helps us understand what a self-driving car is, how we test them, and why understanding human behaviour is important for this process. We also discuss game theory and how it has been used in her work to model human behaviour for autonomous vehicles.

    Important links: Atrisha Sarkar, WISE lab, Responsibility-Sensitive Safety

    • 55 min
    4. Digital Feudalism with Dr. Cheney-Lippold

    4. Digital Feudalism with Dr. Cheney-Lippold

    Dr. John Cheney-Lippold is an assistant professor at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA. His work uses a variety of philosophical concepts to provide an ontological review of the intersections between commercial and domestic surveillance, identity profiling, cultural participation, and the processes of becoming. [1] Dr Cheney-Lippold’s concept Algorithmic Identity illustrates how the intensity of identity profiling in commercial surveillance practices curates an identity based sense of reality for digital technology users. [2] Dr Cheney-Lippold reflects this new mode of media distribution that utilizes data to target identity categories deserves significant ontological considerations.



    [1] John Cheney-Lippold, We Are Data: Algorithms and the Making of Our Digital Selves (New York: New York University Press, 2017).



    [2] John Cheney-Lippold, 5; Natascha Just and Michael Latzer, “Governance by Algorithms: Reality Construction by  Algorithmic Selection on the Internet,” Media, Culture & Society 39, no. 2 (March 2017): 238–58, https://doi.org/10.1177/0163443716643157;  Smith, “On You: Networks, Subjectivity and Algorithmic Identity, 2018;  Cornelius Schubert, “The social life of computer simulations: On the social construction of algorithms and the algorithmic construction of the social,” in Simulieren und Entscheiden, ed. Nicole J. Saam, Michael  Resch, and Andreas Kaminski, Sozialwissenschaftliche Simulationen und die Soziologie der Simulation (Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden,  2019), 145–69, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-26042-2_6.

    • 25 min
    But I Do Know About Running to Give (with Run to Give)

    But I Do Know About Running to Give (with Run to Give)

    Are you a runner and looking for a community? Are you looking for a new low-cost activity? This episode discusses all things running from some local runners: how to get started, the mental, physical, and social benefits of running that they have experienced, and much more! Join me and Run To Give Co-founders Aarty, Doug, and Madi, who discuss their running journeys and their virtual charity run that you can set as your new walk or run goal or simply donate to support the Pediatric Oncology Group of Ontario!

    • 42 min

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