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Event Detail (Archived)

Designing Futures: Fiction to Scientific Reality and Back

Futurist Monika Bielskyte and neurogeneticist Dr. Erich Jarvis will give a joint lecture about the feedback loop between SciFi cultural fictions and scientific research. The lecture will explore what it would take to establish a more productive relationship between the bleeding edge of science and the popular media that shapes the dominant future narratives for the general public. It will also address a growing anti-science and disinformation movement, and the urgent need to examine resilience strategies for effective science communication and information literacy.

  • This event already took place in August 2024
  • Carson Family Auditorium (CRC)

Event Details

Type
Other Tri-Institutional Events
Speaker(s)
Monika Bielskyte, Futurist
Erich Jarvis, Ph.D., Professor and Head, Laboratory of Neurogenetics of Language, The Rockefeller University
Event URL
https://rocku.zoom.us/j/95837732902?pwd=WSsBiQ6zzDYmKeGAsfJZsfcPp0jtKj.1
Event password
627003
Speaker bio(s)

Monika Bielskyte is a futurist, speculative designer, founder of @protopiafutures & partner at @africanlifecentricdesign.

Her work is firmly anchored in contextual, complex realities on the ground, rather than one-size-fits-all techno-solutionism, prone to short-term hype cycles and rapid obsolescence. With expertise in information technologies and immersive media (generative AI, spatial computation, VR/XR, UI, UX), Monika examines both the promises and perils of innovation as the blurring boundaries between the digital and physical worlds become increasingly weaponized through strategies of hybrid warfare. 

Monika is passionate about the value of inclusive embodiment considerations to innovation processes & “invisible” disability & neurodivergence inclusion in all future considerations: from tech, to policy, to built environment, in order to design a more compassionate world for most of humanity.  As a speculative designer, Monika prototypes culturally expansive, socially and environmentally engaged future world designs that take lessons from visually and narratively captivating Science Fiction entertainment and apply them to make real-world future literacy more compelling.

Her career in Hollywood includes futurist consultancy for Disney / Marvel’s Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. Monika has done speaking and advisory work for BBC, Disney, DreamWorks, Google, Huawei, L’Oreal, McKi sey, Mexico City, Microsoft, MTN Group, Nike, SKY, TATA ,Technicolor, UAE, Unesco, Universal, Warner Media, World Economic Forum, among others.

Erich D. Jarvis, Ph.D., an alumnus of The Rockefeller University, returned to campus in 2016 as a tenured professor heading the new Laboratory of Neurogenetics of Language. Dr. Jarvis investigates vocal learning in songbirds and other animals as a model for understanding spoken language in humans. He integrates computational, behavioral, physiological, and molecular techniques to explore the neural genetics of vocal learning and the evolution of this complex behavior. His research has led him to theorize that the brain pathways for vocal learning in both birds and humans likely evolved from a motor circuit common to all vertebrates. One of the Jarvis lab’s current interests is understanding mechanisms that guide the formation of neural circuits during learning.

In recent years, Dr. Jarvis’s interest in songbird learning has expanded into the parallel pursuit of genomics. As co-leader of an avian genomics consortium consisting of more than 200 scientists in 20 countries, he oversaw the sequencing of genomes from representative species of every avian order—48 genomes in all. The consortium’s findings led to an overhaul of the bird family tree and produced evidence that confirmed vocal learning evolved three time among birds: in songbirds, parrots, and hummingbirds. Subsequent analysis also identified hundreds of genes that have similarly evolved in the vocal learning circuits of vocal learning birds and humans. The changes in these genes, which are not found in the brains of close bird and primate relatives, may be responsible, when mutated, for speech disorders in humans. Dr. Jarvis has also helped to organize an international Vertebrate Genomes Project, formed with the goal of assembling high-quality genomes for all 70,000 vertebrate species on Earth.

Born and raised in New York City, Dr. Jarvis received a bachelor’s degree in biology and mathematics from Hunter College. He earned his Rockefeller doctorate in 1995 for research conducted in the laboratory of Fernando Nottebohm, where he studied genes linked to vocalization in canaries. In 1998, he joined Duke University, where he ascended to a full professorship before coming back to Rockefeller.

An Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute since 2008, Dr. Jarvis is the recipient of numerous awards, including the National Science Foundation’s Alan T. Waterman Award, an NIH Director’s Pioneer Award, the 2015 Ernest Everett Just Award from the American Society for Cell Biology, and a 2019 NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award. He is also a member of the Hunter College Alumni Hall of Fame.

Open to
Public
Contact
Emily houton
Phone
(917) 841-0649
Sponsor
Emily houton
(917) 841-0649
ehouton@rockefeller.edu
Notes
Please register at this link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfoAAQlPGmEo7TpKfhcjeIMhrXosVe-Ym2hogNaIK3T9ts1uw/viewform


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