“Isn’t that endogenous?”
Posts by Dashun Wang
AI agents are "airplanes for the mind" - check out my latest piece in Nature.
The question is not whether machines replace scientists, but what kind of scientist emerges when we learn to fly.
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
I've got a piece out today @theatlantic.com with @dashunwang.bsky.social on how the Republican Party in Congress continues to fund science, pushing back against the Trump Administration's most anti science funding proposals. (gift link)
www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/0...
📢Out now! @dashunwang.bsky.social and colleagues introduce SciSciGPT, a prototype AI collaborator for the domain of science of science that streamlines a wide range of empirical and analytical research tasks. www.nature.com/articles/s43... #cssky
Candidates from all disciplines are welcome. This year we’re esp excited about candidates interested in one or more of the following areas:
-LLMs & AI agents
-Political science (science, policy & governance)
-Technological progress + societal impacts of science
-Nonequilibrium statistical physics
We’re a purposefully multidisciplinary group working at the intersection of science-of-science, innovation, AI, networks, and complexity. We’re looking for postdocs who want to ask bold new questions, with rigorous data, theory, and computation.
Please share with great candidates! Join us!!!
Postdoc openings at Kellogg/Northwestern!
Review begins Feb 15 (rolling until filled).
Apply / details: www.kellogg.northwestern.edu/academics-re...
This was a very insightful read! There is a price to pay for making hard pivots in science and technology. By @dashunwang.bsky.social's group.
Read here: doi.org/10.1038/s415...
What happens when scientists leave their original research theme to explore a new field? A new @nature.com paper by @dashunwang.bsky.social et al quantifies this "pivot" and shows that it comes at a cost: work in new fields receives relatively fewer citations 🧪 www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Line graphic showing how left-leaning and right-leaning think tanks cite science papers over time.
Do US politicians listen to science? Democrat-led congressional committees and leftwing think tanks cite research papers more than their rightwing counterparts, finds vast analysis by @dashunwang.bsky.social @alexanderfurnas.com www.nature.com/articles/d41... With comments from @ejfagan.com