Skip to main content

Stampede Theory

Human Nature, Technology, and Runaway Social Realities

  • 1st Edition - April 26, 2023
  • Latest edition
  • Author: Philip Feldman
  • Language: English

Stampede Theory: Human Nature, Technology, and Runaway Social Realities explores the biological, evolutionary and technological systems that drive troubling patterns of behavior… Read more

World Book Day celebration

Where learning shapes lives

Up to 25% off trusted resources that support research, study, and discovery.

Description

Stampede Theory: Human Nature, Technology, and Runaway Social Realities explores the biological, evolutionary and technological systems that drive troubling patterns of behavior among groups while also proposing actions to combat harm. The book discusses different ways that living beings coordinate and how the emergence of communication technologies has changed behaviors. As the problem of echo chambers and misinformation grows, it is crucial to understand underlying causes and provide solutions—this book does just that by pulling from multiple fields to produce a coherent story about how social realities are created and how they can create resilient communities or reinforce damaging beliefs.

This interdisciplinary approach rests on three primary pillars: 1) How information systems affect the distribution of ideas, information, influence and belief; 2. Technology-mediated communication between individuals and groups, from stories pressed into clay tablets to “likes” on social media; 3) The sociology of behavioral bias in groups ranging from teams to nations. Because of its interdisciplinary foundations, the book includes chapters that address behavioral economics, cults, artificial intelligence, and the individual psychology of belief. This will be a valuable resource for a range of readers, from political and social scientists to decision-makers in government and business, scientists in the fields of machine learning and AI, and more.

Key features

  • Presents a usable framework to approach and understand current sociotechnical trends, as well as methods for repair in order to create resilient, sustainable online environments
  • Establishes an understanding of the deep biases in human nature and how they interact with technology
  • Details specific mechanisms to approach the repair of our sociotechnical systems, including diversity injection and belief cartography

Readership

Political and social scientists studying large scale patterns of behavior, information systems, human group behavior, technology-mediated communication, and ecology; graduate university or college courses on interdisciplinary studies; decision makers in government and business. Scientists in the fields of machine learning and AI; media professionals working to make sense of the world in a time of vast amounts of misinformation and polarization

Table of contents

I Theory

1. From the Serengeti to the Ecclesia

2. Deep Bias

3. Humans and Information

4. Human Belief Spaces

5. Influence + Dominance = Attention

6. Hierarchies, Networks, and Technology

II Practice

7. Interview with a Biased Machine

8. The Spacecraft of Babel

9. Influence Networks and the Power of Money

10. Cults, Hierarchies, and the Doomed Voyage of the Pequod

11. Escaping Cults, Deprogramming, and Diversity

12. Population-Computer Interfaces

13. Belief Geography and Cartography

14. Belief Stampedes

15. Future Cartographers

16. Epilogue

17. Definitions

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: May 3, 2023
  • Language: English

About the author

PF

Philip Feldman

Dr. Philip Feldman has spent most of his career building technology for people to use: graphical interfaces, robots, even exercise machines that play video games. He has degrees in art and ecology, as well as a PhD in Human Centered Computing. He has 12 patents, and his academic research focuses on how technology affects why people believe things and how populations make decisions. He has developed several techniques for polling populations using large transformer language models, which allow the latent beliefs of a group to be explored. Dr. Feldman has been a developer and entrepreneur, helping to start small companies that range from medical to virtual reality. He is currently a research professor in Information Systems at the University of Maryland Baltimore County where he studies how to build diverse and resilient systems and that can improve the way we communicate with each other through our ever-present devices.
Affiliations and expertise
Research Professor, Information Systems, University of Maryland Baltimore County, USA

View book on ScienceDirect

Read Stampede Theory on ScienceDirect