My research spans political economy, economic sociology and science and technology studies. I’m interested in the ways in which networks rather than individual actors produce macroeconomic knowledge, specifically modes of distributed knowledge production. I explore the interplay between ideational and technical mechanisms that produce complex networks of information, both hand-made and synthetic data made by generative AI. Methodologically, I utilize my experience as a computational linguist and data scientist to support large-scale quantitative analysis with qualitative methods.
Primary research areas
Macroeconomic ideas
Artificial Intelligence and knowledge infrastructures