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OverviewFrom genome sequencing to large sky surveys, digital technologies produce massive datasets that promise unprecedented scientific insights. But data, for being good to use and reuse, need people – scientists, technicians, and administrators – as embodied, evaluative, social humans. In this book, anthropologist Götz Hoeppe draws on an ethnography of astronomical research to examine the media and practices that scientists and technicians use to instruct graduate students, make diagrams for data calibration and discovery, organize collaborative work, negotiate the ethics of open access, encode their knowledge in datasets – and undertake social inquiries along the way. This book offers a reflection on the sociality of data-rich research that will benefit attempts to integrate human and machine learning. It will be of interest for students and scholars in data science and science and technology studies, as well as in anthropology, sociology, history, and the philosophy of science. This book is also available Open Access on Cambridge Core. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Götz Hoeppe (University of Waterloo)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Weight: 0.500kg ISBN: 9781009686723ISBN 10: 1009686720 Pages: 300 Publication Date: 18 June 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available, will be POD This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon it's release. This is a print on demand item which is still yet to be released. Table of ContentsReviews‘How Data Need People convincingly exemplifies why patient ethnographic studies are so needed today. I recommend the book as a model to everyone interested in practices of science.’ Morana Alač, University of California, San Diego ‘Hoeppe joins scientific teams and studies them from the inside. He convincingly argues that junior scientists also effectively become ethnographers when being trained in their work, in the implicit knowledge in their subfields, and in the expectations of their profession.’ David W. Hogg, New York University ‘This is the first long-term ethnographic study of how one of the oldest sciences we have, astronomy, lives a data-centric life today. A must-read not just for science and technology studies and the social sciences, but all data-focused fields and operations inside and outside the sciences.’ Karin Knorr Cetina, University of Chicago ‘Götz Hoeppe has become a leading sociologist of science because he grounds his inquiries in real-world field research where he identifies the local details of scientific work. In this ethnographically rich study Hoeppe explains to us what it is scientists do with digital data in order to make it science.’ Kenneth Liberman, University of Oregon 'How Data Need People convincingly exemplifies why patient ethnographic studies are so needed today. I recommend the book as a model to everyone interested in practices of science.' Morana Alač, University of California, San Diego 'Hoeppe joins scientific teams and studies them from the inside. He convincingly argues that junior scientists also effectively become ethnographers when being trained in their work, in the implicit knowledge in their subfields, and in the expectations of their profession.' David W. Hogg, New York University 'This is the first long-term ethnographic study of how one of the oldest sciences we have, astronomy, lives a data-centric life today. A must-read not just for science and technology studies and the social sciences, but all data-focused fields and operations inside and outside the sciences.' Karin Knorr Cetina, University of Chicago 'Götz Hoeppe has become a leading sociologist of science because he grounds his inquiries in real-world field research where he identifies the local details of scientific work. In this ethnographically rich study Hoeppe explains to us what it is scientists do with digital data in order to make it science.' Kenneth Liberman, University of Oregon Author InformationGötz Hoeppe is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Waterloo, Canada. He is the author of Conversations on the Beach: Fishermen's Knowledge, Metaphor and Environmental Change in South India (2007) and Why the Sky is Blue: Discovering the Color of Life (2007), which received the American Meteorological Society's Louis J. Battan Author's Award. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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