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Zeno Franco, PhD (Clinical Psychology)
Graduate Assignment: National Center on the Psychology of Terrorism
     Pacific Graduate School of Psychology, Stanford University, VA Medical Center
Currently: Post Doc Fellow, Dept. Family & Community Medicine, Medical College of
     Wisconsin
 Explore the opportunities and challenges of
  doing graduate work in a transdiciplinary
  problem space
 Provide a reflective overview of my own
  graduate research process as a way to discuss
  the specifics of these opportunities and
  challenges (10,000 foot level)
 How to use proximal steps (papers) to focus your
  research, while building your CV
 Thoughts on how to transition your research
  agenda as you move toward post doc and/or
  early faculty appointments
   Different than                          How is interdisciplinarity
    interdisciplinary or                     usually depicted?
    multidisciplinary research
     Not better or worse:
        Different
       Working at the margins of
        several disciplines
       Attempts to solve difficult
        societal problems
       Create new theories &
        methods – incipient stages of
        a new discipline
       Translating findings from the
        lab to the real world and back
   Different than                          How is interdisciplinarity
    interdisciplinary or                     usually depicted?
    multidisciplinary research
     Not better or worse:
        Different
       Working at the margins of
        several disciplines
       Attempts to solve difficult
        societal problems
       Create new theories &
        methods – incipient stages of
        a new discipline
       Translating findings from the
        lab to the real world and back
    “The United States faces a serious but
     silent intellectual crisis: U.S. national
     security elites have separated into two
     tribes of specialists, technical and
     nontechnical, who are incapable of
     communicating with each other. The
     implications of the divide between experts
     in science and technology on one hand and
     experts in politics on the other are
     dangerous and far-reaching. If the United
     States policymaking community cannot
     bridge the gap between these
     communities, we risk making mistakes
     with repercussions running all the way from
     wasting scarce resources to war.

    This insularity begins in graduate
     school or during professional
     preparation, where young
     specialists are taught to revere the                 “The Problem of
     norms and knowledge of their own                     Knowledge (Communication
     field or institution above all others”
                                                          Between Disciplines!)” Pieter
    Johnson-Freese, Joan and Thomas M. Nichols.
         "Academic Stovepipes Undermine U.S. Security."
                                                          Bruegel: The Tower of Babel 1563)
         World Politics Review, April 14, 2011.           – Murray Turoff’s homepage
We are often unaware of how differently people from other disciplines conceptualize
problems, we make fundamentally different assumptions, we model the world
in very different ways, we value different forms of evidence.




                         Interdisciplinary
Multidisciplinary
Initially, saw myself as a psychology researcher trying to inform information science
 researchers on what they were getting wrong about human behavior in the
 context of crisis
                                              ISCRAM 2007 on VIRTUALPOLITIK Blog
                                              Danger is their Business – Liz Losh
                                              “I thought that one of the big stories of the
Information                                   conference was the lively debate between
Sciences                                      John Carroll and Zeno Franco… Franco
                                              certainly scored some points as well about
                                              the need for providing real data that shows
                                              the usability of technologies for crisis
                                              management and the role of human --
                   Psychology                 specifically political – factors in effective
                                              disaster …

                                              [I was troubled by] Franco's disciplinary
                                              power play at work in a highly
                                              interdisciplinary forum for exchanging ideas
                                              about critical and global issues. In short,
                                              Franco made it clear that he wanted to see
                                              social science formatted papers with methods
                                              sections. Then, he even went so far as to
                                              dismiss computer science as a ‘science.’”
                                              http://bit.ly/lDBmH3
Transdiscipline / Nascent new discipline

                                  -Drawn from other fields, but:
                                  --New assumptions
                                  -- New theories
                                  --New methods
                                  -- New forms of evidence
                                  -- Begin to belong to a new
                                  community of practice
Transdiscipline / Nascent new discipline




                                           If possible, your goal is to answer
                                           fundamental questions in your
                                           primary discipline, while also
                                           informing the developing
                                           transdiciplinary space
Transdiscipline / Nascent new discipline

        Social psychology




                                                                   Human behavior
                                                                   In the context of crisis




Disaster Mental Health                           Use this process to define your
                                                 area of expertise



                 Human factors psychology
   the goal of constructing a                           Ten Barriers
                                                             What is a disaster?
    general theory of emergency                              What is emergency management?
    management should be a top                               What hazards should we focus on?
    priority within the disaster                             Should we continue to give preference to the
    research community. We are                                concept of hazards?
                                                             What variables should be explored in
    not there yet although many                               academic research?
    promising leads can be                                   What actors should be incorporated into
    identified.                                               academic studies?
                                                             What phases should be given priority?
                                                             What disciplines should contribute to
                                                              emergency management?
      Drabek (2004). Theories relevant to emergency          What paradigms should guide our field?
         management versus a theory of emergency
         management. FEMA Higher Education                   What is the proper balance for knowledge
         Conference.                                          generation?


                                                              McEntire (2004). The Status of Emergency
                                                                 Management Theory: Issues, Barriers, and
                                                                 Recommendations for Improved Scholarship.
                                                                 FEMA Higher Education Conference.
   In the beginning                     The problem
     Interested in PTSD and               My program was focused on
      expected to become an                 clinical psychology
      expert in disaster mental            Wanted to do human-in-the-
      health                                loop simulations to address
     Turning point – Hurricane             the problem
      Katrina (& article in AP)            Little local support for this
     Began to see that poor                work
      disaster management was a          Solutions
      major preventable risk factor        Looking for connections –
      for psychological injury              embracing chance
     From this perspective,               Collaboration
      prevention i.e. improving
      actual disaster management           Funding
      performance (not                     More collaboration
      preparedness) is key to
      avoiding psychological harm
   Dissertation funded by
     US Navy – Office of Naval Research
     National Science Foundation Small Business
      Technology Transfer grant (STTR) in collaboration
      with Quimba Software (Award IIP-0637999)
      ▪ US$ 147,000 over 1 year
     Total cost ~$167,000
      ▪ Salary support
      ▪ Licenses for Aptima’s DDD simulator
      ▪ Consulting from BEST Lab at Wright State to learn DDD
   Psychology                            Information Science
     Experimental problem                  Distributed team-in-the-loop
        characterization                       simulator
       Interrupted Time Series               Maps & Geographical
        Design                                 Information
       Manipulation Check (FEMA              XML based scenario generation
        ICS-100 Training)                     Detailed simulation logging
       Characterizing Improvisation          Symbol sets – visual
       Ideographic predictors of              representation of situation
        improvisation
        ▪ Integrative complexity          Other methods used
        ▪ Time perspective                  Delphi method for score
        ▪ Ambiguity Tolerance                  normalization
     Team focused measures
        (heterogeneity of teams)
Iscram 2011 presentation_4_web
Iscram 2011 presentation_4_web
Iscram 2011 presentation_4_web
Dissertation Committee
Academics closest to actual work
Funding Agencies
True Academic Home
= People I never met   = “Angel” – Stovepipe breaker
Keys to Creating a Trandsciplinary Community of Practice that Supports Your Work

  1. Embrace conflict within your team
  – friction between assumptions is the
  key factor in “hot science”




                                                  2. Move toward a common language
                                                  with collaborators and shared
                                                  theoretical space

                                                  3. Develop new methods only when
                                                  necessary – borrow and modify from
                                                  other disciplines where ever you can

                                                  4. Design projects that inform and
                                                  test the theoretical models of the
                                                  developing discipline while
                                                  answering questions in your primary
                                                  discipline of interest

                                                  5. All team members should be
                                                  working at the edge of their expertise
ISCRAM PHD
COLLOQUIM PAPER
MAJOR PSYCHOLOGY
JOURNAL, RELATING
OBSERVATIONS &
THEORY TO PRIMARY
DISCIPLINE
MOVING
METHODS &
MEASUREMENT
APPROACHES
FROM BEHAVIORAL
SCIENCES INTO
TRANSDICIPLINARY
SPACE
SUMMARY OF DISSERTATION
ISCRAM BEST PAPER, 2009
?

Each Step
Focused
Dissertation
Planning
   Transitioned from a
    Department of Psychology
    to Family & Community
    Medicine at an academic
    medical center
   As we transition to post
    doc and early faculty
    appointments, there are
    many changes
       Priorities of Department
       Resources
       Relocation = lost connections
       Life changes
   Given transition, important to find relevance
    for Family & Community Medicine
   Connections to related departments
     Emergency Medicine
   Begin building connections with local SMEs
     Sat on a local panel, approached by Regional FBI
     WMD coordinator
   Look to the edges of your network for ways
    to reposition your work
= People I never met         = “Angel” – Stovepipe breaker


Simon French, PhD




      Those at the edge of the network have become central to restructuring
      to address Incident Command in the hospital context
   Researcher (in this case YOU) must come
    to embody the disciplines represented at
    the intersection of the activity
   Tensions collaborators and
    representatives from primary disciplines
    (including your PhD committee) are
    possible and necessary
   The project may fall apart at times, you
    may panic, etc. Get advice, and keep
    making decisions that move you forward –
    even if the decisions are not perfect
   There will be moments when you question
    your sanity – why didn’t I just stick with a
    simple dissertation that is just CS or
    Psychology, or whatever???
   Have faith – the process will end
   Realize that your success is tied up with
    the relationships you have – be a good
    collaborator and others will invest in
    ensuring your project is successful.
   Embrace chance (unplanned meetings, etc.)
   Go with solutions that are not dependent on
    grant funding
   Don’t run away from friction with your team –
    where there is friction there is “hot science”
   Involve & mentor junior students
   Keep your objectives (outcome variables) limited
    and focused
   Spend as much time thinking about what your
    results actually mean as you can

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Iscram 2011 presentation_4_web

  • 1. Zeno Franco, PhD (Clinical Psychology) Graduate Assignment: National Center on the Psychology of Terrorism Pacific Graduate School of Psychology, Stanford University, VA Medical Center Currently: Post Doc Fellow, Dept. Family & Community Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin
  • 2.  Explore the opportunities and challenges of doing graduate work in a transdiciplinary problem space  Provide a reflective overview of my own graduate research process as a way to discuss the specifics of these opportunities and challenges (10,000 foot level)  How to use proximal steps (papers) to focus your research, while building your CV  Thoughts on how to transition your research agenda as you move toward post doc and/or early faculty appointments
  • 3. Different than  How is interdisciplinarity interdisciplinary or usually depicted? multidisciplinary research  Not better or worse: Different  Working at the margins of several disciplines  Attempts to solve difficult societal problems  Create new theories & methods – incipient stages of a new discipline  Translating findings from the lab to the real world and back
  • 4. Different than  How is interdisciplinarity interdisciplinary or usually depicted? multidisciplinary research  Not better or worse: Different  Working at the margins of several disciplines  Attempts to solve difficult societal problems  Create new theories & methods – incipient stages of a new discipline  Translating findings from the lab to the real world and back
  • 5. “The United States faces a serious but silent intellectual crisis: U.S. national security elites have separated into two tribes of specialists, technical and nontechnical, who are incapable of communicating with each other. The implications of the divide between experts in science and technology on one hand and experts in politics on the other are dangerous and far-reaching. If the United States policymaking community cannot bridge the gap between these communities, we risk making mistakes with repercussions running all the way from wasting scarce resources to war.  This insularity begins in graduate school or during professional preparation, where young specialists are taught to revere the “The Problem of norms and knowledge of their own Knowledge (Communication field or institution above all others” Between Disciplines!)” Pieter Johnson-Freese, Joan and Thomas M. Nichols. "Academic Stovepipes Undermine U.S. Security." Bruegel: The Tower of Babel 1563) World Politics Review, April 14, 2011. – Murray Turoff’s homepage
  • 6. We are often unaware of how differently people from other disciplines conceptualize problems, we make fundamentally different assumptions, we model the world in very different ways, we value different forms of evidence. Interdisciplinary
  • 8. Initially, saw myself as a psychology researcher trying to inform information science researchers on what they were getting wrong about human behavior in the context of crisis ISCRAM 2007 on VIRTUALPOLITIK Blog Danger is their Business – Liz Losh “I thought that one of the big stories of the Information conference was the lively debate between Sciences John Carroll and Zeno Franco… Franco certainly scored some points as well about the need for providing real data that shows the usability of technologies for crisis management and the role of human -- Psychology specifically political – factors in effective disaster … [I was troubled by] Franco's disciplinary power play at work in a highly interdisciplinary forum for exchanging ideas about critical and global issues. In short, Franco made it clear that he wanted to see social science formatted papers with methods sections. Then, he even went so far as to dismiss computer science as a ‘science.’” http://bit.ly/lDBmH3
  • 9. Transdiscipline / Nascent new discipline -Drawn from other fields, but: --New assumptions -- New theories --New methods -- New forms of evidence -- Begin to belong to a new community of practice
  • 10. Transdiscipline / Nascent new discipline If possible, your goal is to answer fundamental questions in your primary discipline, while also informing the developing transdiciplinary space
  • 11. Transdiscipline / Nascent new discipline Social psychology Human behavior In the context of crisis Disaster Mental Health Use this process to define your area of expertise Human factors psychology
  • 12. the goal of constructing a  Ten Barriers  What is a disaster? general theory of emergency  What is emergency management? management should be a top  What hazards should we focus on? priority within the disaster  Should we continue to give preference to the research community. We are concept of hazards?  What variables should be explored in not there yet although many academic research? promising leads can be  What actors should be incorporated into identified. academic studies?  What phases should be given priority?  What disciplines should contribute to emergency management? Drabek (2004). Theories relevant to emergency  What paradigms should guide our field? management versus a theory of emergency management. FEMA Higher Education  What is the proper balance for knowledge Conference. generation? McEntire (2004). The Status of Emergency Management Theory: Issues, Barriers, and Recommendations for Improved Scholarship. FEMA Higher Education Conference.
  • 13. In the beginning  The problem  Interested in PTSD and  My program was focused on expected to become an clinical psychology expert in disaster mental  Wanted to do human-in-the- health loop simulations to address  Turning point – Hurricane the problem Katrina (& article in AP)  Little local support for this  Began to see that poor work disaster management was a  Solutions major preventable risk factor  Looking for connections – for psychological injury embracing chance  From this perspective,  Collaboration prevention i.e. improving actual disaster management  Funding performance (not  More collaboration preparedness) is key to avoiding psychological harm
  • 14. Dissertation funded by  US Navy – Office of Naval Research  National Science Foundation Small Business Technology Transfer grant (STTR) in collaboration with Quimba Software (Award IIP-0637999) ▪ US$ 147,000 over 1 year  Total cost ~$167,000 ▪ Salary support ▪ Licenses for Aptima’s DDD simulator ▪ Consulting from BEST Lab at Wright State to learn DDD
  • 15. Psychology  Information Science  Experimental problem  Distributed team-in-the-loop characterization simulator  Interrupted Time Series  Maps & Geographical Design Information  Manipulation Check (FEMA  XML based scenario generation ICS-100 Training)  Detailed simulation logging  Characterizing Improvisation  Symbol sets – visual  Ideographic predictors of representation of situation improvisation ▪ Integrative complexity  Other methods used ▪ Time perspective  Delphi method for score ▪ Ambiguity Tolerance normalization  Team focused measures (heterogeneity of teams)
  • 20. Academics closest to actual work
  • 23. = People I never met = “Angel” – Stovepipe breaker
  • 24. Keys to Creating a Trandsciplinary Community of Practice that Supports Your Work 1. Embrace conflict within your team – friction between assumptions is the key factor in “hot science” 2. Move toward a common language with collaborators and shared theoretical space 3. Develop new methods only when necessary – borrow and modify from other disciplines where ever you can 4. Design projects that inform and test the theoretical models of the developing discipline while answering questions in your primary discipline of interest 5. All team members should be working at the edge of their expertise
  • 26. MAJOR PSYCHOLOGY JOURNAL, RELATING OBSERVATIONS & THEORY TO PRIMARY DISCIPLINE
  • 28. SUMMARY OF DISSERTATION ISCRAM BEST PAPER, 2009
  • 30. Transitioned from a Department of Psychology to Family & Community Medicine at an academic medical center  As we transition to post doc and early faculty appointments, there are many changes  Priorities of Department  Resources  Relocation = lost connections  Life changes
  • 31. Given transition, important to find relevance for Family & Community Medicine  Connections to related departments  Emergency Medicine  Begin building connections with local SMEs  Sat on a local panel, approached by Regional FBI WMD coordinator  Look to the edges of your network for ways to reposition your work
  • 32. = People I never met = “Angel” – Stovepipe breaker Simon French, PhD Those at the edge of the network have become central to restructuring to address Incident Command in the hospital context
  • 33. Researcher (in this case YOU) must come to embody the disciplines represented at the intersection of the activity  Tensions collaborators and representatives from primary disciplines (including your PhD committee) are possible and necessary  The project may fall apart at times, you may panic, etc. Get advice, and keep making decisions that move you forward – even if the decisions are not perfect  There will be moments when you question your sanity – why didn’t I just stick with a simple dissertation that is just CS or Psychology, or whatever???  Have faith – the process will end  Realize that your success is tied up with the relationships you have – be a good collaborator and others will invest in ensuring your project is successful.
  • 34. Embrace chance (unplanned meetings, etc.)  Go with solutions that are not dependent on grant funding  Don’t run away from friction with your team – where there is friction there is “hot science”  Involve & mentor junior students  Keep your objectives (outcome variables) limited and focused  Spend as much time thinking about what your results actually mean as you can