D. J. Hicks
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About D.
Hick's is a philosopher of science, computational social scientist, and science policy researcher. My primary academic research focuses on public scientific controversies, and related issues such as the role of ethical and political values in science, and trust in science. I also have interests in the use of statistics in scientific practice, computational methods in HPSTS (primarily empirical methods such as text mining, rather than purely simulation-based methods), and philosophy of data science.
Contributions
Publications
Uses GMOs, vaccines, and climate change as case studies. Shows how "scientific controversies" are often better understood as political controversies.
Uses data from California's Department of Pesticide Registration to examine the demographics of potential exposure to the neurotoxic pesticide chlorpyrifos in the Central Valley. Finds that, for each 10 point increase in the percentage of Hispanic residents, there is a seven to eight percent increase in potential chlorpyrifos exposure.
Examines the scientific controversy over the yields of genetically modified crops as a case study in epistemologically deep disagreements. Shows that appeals to "the evidence" are inadequate to resolve such disagreements, because the interlocutors assume rival epistemological frameworks and so have incompatible views about what kinds of research methods and claims count as evidence.