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Posts by Shengchun Huang

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The machines are fine. I'm worried about us. | Shengchun Huang Yesterday in class, a student asked me: if AI can already do so much, why do we still need PhD programs? Then, I came across an insightful blog by Minas Karamanis https://lnkd.in/gzpqshrz, particularly this line: “What’s great about science is its *people*. The slow, stubborn, sometimes painful process by which a confused student becomes an independent thinker. If we use these tools to bypass that process in favor of faster output, we don’t just risk taking away what’s great about science. We take away the only part of it that wasn’t replaceable in the first place.” I deeply agree with this, as it speaks to what I ultimately gained from my own PhD training. Looking back, the most valuable outcome of those six years was not the methods I learned--those can often be learned through online resources. It was not only the theories or knowledge I absorbed--those, too, can be studied independently through books and papers. It was not even the professional knowledge or network I built, which is maybe only meaningful within academia and my specific field. And not to say the degree itself--it mattered for getting the position I have now, but it would not necessarily have been essential for every possible career path that I could pursue. Before graduating, I asked myself: was this journey still seen as valuable as I had hoped it would be back in 2018, given all the tradeoffs: the years away from family and friends, the hobbies I gave up, the postponement of stability in my personal life, and the financial sacrifices. My answer was still yes. It was worthwhile because, in the end, I learned how to think and how to learn. More than any particular skill or credential, I value that training process itself. It gave me a way of approaching uncertainty, complexity, and future challenges that I will carry far even beyond academia. That is why I find the role of AI in science both promising and worrying. As a researcher who has spent years studying the social impacts of algorithmic systems, I do not see this simply as a question of individual agency or literacy. It is also a structural question: *What happens when people are placed in systems where reliance becomes hard to resist?* AI can certainly make parts of the process more efficient. But when it becomes deeply woven into training, it also becomes harder for students to resist relying on it rather than growing through the struggle themselves. And that is where the real danger lies: it often happens quietly, almost invisibly. The gains in efficiency are easy to notice; the gradual loss of agency is much harder to see. So perhaps the question is not whether AI should be part of PhD training--it already is, and it will be. The real question is about how to practice: what to preserve, and what thinking we do not want to outsource. If a PhD is still meant to cultivate independent thinkers, then this may be one of the most important questions for all of us to reflect on.

This is really cool! I wrote my reflections on Linkedin here and shared this blog to my colleagues and students! www.linkedin.com/posts/shengc...

1 week ago 1 0 0 0

Truly bittersweet news to me but always ready to cheer for your future WOWs!!! ❤️🎉🥳 Congrats again, Jo!

8 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Congratulations to Annenberg's newest Ph.D. @sarahuang.bsky.social, who successfully defended her dissertation yesterday!

She will be joining the faculty at UT Austin’s Moody College of Communication as an Assistant Professor.

Join us in congratulating Dr. Huang!

8 months ago 7 2 0 0

The project title: "Passive versus Active News Exposure in All-Web". DM me if you want to access it via zoom! A preprint version will be shared in the fall-keep an eye out for it!

9 months ago 0 0 0 0

I’ll be remotely presenting our work at the 7/23 8:30 AM ET hybrid session at IC2S2! By measuring both passive exposure and active engagement with news content, we provide a more nuanced view of how algorithmic curation and user agency shape digital news consumption.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

Hi #PolComm, I will present my dissertation which develops a trust-based theory of misinformation belief and sharing in social contexts using a dyadic interactive experiment on oTree at #ica25. The presentation will take place on Saturday at 1:30pm in Centennial F, Hyatt Regency. Come check it out!

10 months ago 8 3 0 0

🚀 Everyone’s using LLMs to generate message stimuli—but how well do they *actually* perform? Can they manipulate better than humans? Control confounds? We put them to the test—and the results are more surprising than you'd expect.

Check out our framework + evaluation here 👇

Happening In an hour!!

10 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Due time extended! March 21! Plz spread the word to your students and friends🌸

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

I wish I were there 🥹

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

We have a forester since 2023 - not that expensive, highly recommended, but they do have an old-school software system if you are okay with that XD

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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Center on Digital Culture and Society Call for Applications - Postdoctoral Fellowship, 2025-2026

Applications for our @cdcspenn.bsky.social postdoctoral fellowship are due on Valentine’s Day, so no one will miss it for the love of it! www.asc.upenn.edu/news-events/...

1 year ago 11 4 0 0

SICSS-Penn ⏭️2025! See y’all in Philly 🌸🌻

1 year ago 1 0 0 1

tbh I don’t have that many accounts for that level of safe 🙃 but they don’t let me opt-out…

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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Hiring Visit the post for more.

Job alert! Interested in working with PRL as a postdoc next year? Apply by January 15! We offer the opportunity to collaborate on and lead projects related to democratic attitudes, elite behavior, and more! polarizationresearchlab.org/hiring/

1 year ago 14 12 0 0

Please add me in the group. Thanks!

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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TikTok Faces U.S. Ban After Losing Bid to Overturn New Law The law will ban the video app in the United States by Jan. 19 if its owner, ByteDance, does not sell it to a non-Chinese company.

Looks like TikTok may be "banned" in the US if it doesn't sell by Jan 19. www.nytimes.com/2024/12/06/b... I have two questions about this that the article doesn't answer:

1 year ago 13 3 1 0
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I dont even have many new followers 😂 seems the auto-detection didn’t notice Im onboard now

1 year ago 1 0 0 0