Events
Past Event
WED@NICO SEMINAR: Lightning Talks w/ Northwestern Scholars!
Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems (NICO)
12:00 PM
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Lower Level, Chambers Hall
Details
Speakers:
Yessica Herrera, Visiting Scholar, Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems
Talk Title: The Body Speaks: Visual Cues of Psychological Stress in Bodily Expressions
Abstract: Emotions shape body movement, yet the visual cues that signal psychological stress—distinct from other emotional states—remain poorly understood. Acute stress alters motor patterns and may produce subtle expressive markers. In this study, dancers performed creative improvisations under stress (induced via the Trier Social Stress Test) and in a control condition. Movements were video-recorded and rated by 25 non-expert observers (ages 18–23, all female) using qualitative parameters from Laban Movement Analysis—Weight, Flow, and Rhythm— alongside perceived stress levels. Our study shows that observers reliably identified stressed performances, associating stress with tense, less fluid, and rhythmically altered movement. These findings reveal nuanced visual cues of psychosocial stress in expressive motion and have implications for fields like dance, clinical assessment, and emotionally intelligent systems. In particular, this work supports the growing efforts to make robotic movement more meaningful to humans by applying insights from movement perception studies to improve the design of expressive and more likable robotic technologies.
Aakriti Kumar, Postdoctoral Fellow, Kellogg School of Management and the Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems
Talk Title: Large language models can provide expert-aligned judgments of empathic communication
Abstract: Large language models (LLMs) appear to excel at empathic communication in text-based conversations. But, how reliably can machines judge the nuances of empathic communication? We compare annotations by experts, crowd workers, and LLMs based on four empathic communication frameworks applied to four different datasets. Specifically, we investigate the inter-rater reliability of these three groups across 1,050 annotations of 200 conversations where one partner is sharing a problem, and the other is offering empathetic support. We find high but imperfect reliability between experts across most sub-components of empathic communication; inter-rater reliability between experts varies based on the clarity, complexity, and subjectivity of these sub-components. Furthermore, we find that LLMs approach expert level inter-rater reliability and surpass the inter-rater reliability between crowd workers and experts. Finally, we demonstrate that evaluating subjective annotation can be misleading with traditional classification metrics but clear and robust when evaluating with inter-rater reliability contextualized by an empirical ceiling.
Tingyu "Mark" Zhao, PhD Student, Department of Industrial Engineering and Management Sciences
Talk Title: Noise Filtering in Complex Networks
Abstract: Networks are powerful representations of complex systems, yet real-world network data are often corrupted by edge-level measurement inaccuracies, sampling biases, and incomplete observations, compromising analytical validity. Here, we introduce the Network Wiener Filter (NetWF), a principled method to filter edge noise that jointly leverages both network topology and explicit noise characterization, thereby enhancing downstream analyses and inferences. We demonstrate the efficacy of NetWF in two distinct settings: the Enron Corpus email network and the genetic interaction network of the yeast \textit{Saccharomyces cerevisiae}, noting promising results in both studies. Equipped with technologies such as NetWF, we advocate for error-aware network analysis, with the hope to usher in a new chapter of network science, one that embraces data imperfection as an inherent feature and learns to navigate it effectively.
Sign Up:
Sign up to present at a future Lightning Talk session. NICO Lightning Talks are open to graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and visiting scholars.
Location:
In person: Chambers Hall, 600 Foster Street, Lower Level
Remote option: https://northwestern.zoom.us/j/95387714084
Passcode: NICO25
About the Speaker Series:
Wednesdays@NICO is a vibrant weekly seminar series focusing broadly on the topics of complex systems, data science and network science. It brings together attendees ranging from graduate students to senior faculty who span all of the schools across Northwestern, from applied math to sociology to biology and every discipline in-between. Please visit: https://bit.ly/WedatNICO for information on future speakers.
Time
Wednesday, May 14, 2025 at 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Location
Lower Level, Chambers Hall Map
Contact
Calendar
Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems (NICO)
WED@NICO SEMINAR: Steven Franconeri, Northwestern University "Point Taken: A gamified Intervention that Creates Enlightened Disagreements"
Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems (NICO)
12:00 PM
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Lower Level, Chambers Hall
Details
Speaker:
Steven Franconeri, Professor of Psychology, Weinberg College of Arts & Sciences; Professor of Management and Organizations, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University
Title:
Point Taken: A gamified Intervention that Creates Enlightened Disagreements
Abstract:
Should we drop standardized testing for college or Ph.D. admissions? Allow athletes to join teams based on gender identity? When organizational and public policies bind behavior, human coexistence requires a way to determine that collective policy. Because individuals and like-minded groups have incomplete information, constrained strategies, and biased perspectives, thoughtful debate on those policies is critical. Unfortunately, those debates too often degrade into chaotic fights.
Point Taken provides a scalable solution by translating best practices in conflict resolution and critical thinking into a structured dialogue that can be learned and played in 30 minutes. In this interactive session, you'll play a short game to feel its effects.
Players replace persuasion with a common goal of discovering why they disagree. Dialogue then unfolds thoughtfully and calmly, through chains of short written reasons and responses. We've tested the game extensively in schools and organizations, and conducted a formal pilot study. All show powerful improvements in the tone and quality of debate, across longstanding and strongly-held disagreements. I’ll give background on best practices for enlightened disagreement, show how they translate to the game, ask you to play a game, and then ask for your advice on next steps.
Speaker Bio:
Steven Franconeri is leading scientist, teacher, and speaker on visual thinking, visual communication, and the psychology of data visualization. He is a Professor of Psychology in the Weinberg College of Arts & Sciences at Northwestern, Director of the Northwestern Cognitive Science Program, as well as a Kellogg Professor of Management and Organizations by Courtesy. He is the director of the Visual Thinking Laboratory, where a team of researchers explore how leveraging the visual system - the largest single system in your brain - can help people think, remember, and communicate more efficiently.
His undergraduate training was in computer science and cognitive science at Rutgers University, followed by a Ph.D. in Experimental Psychology from Harvard University, and postdoctoral research at the University of British Columbia. His work on both Cognitive Science and Data Visualization has been funded by the National Science Foundation, as well as the Department of Education, and the Department of Defense. He has received a prestigious National Science Foundation CAREER award, given to researchers who combine excellent research with outstanding teaching, and he has received a Psychonomic Society Early Career award for his research on visual thinking.
Location:
In person: Chambers Hall, 600 Foster Street, Lower Level
Remote option: https://northwestern.zoom.us/j/97198523514
PW: NICO26
About the Speaker Series:
Wednesdays@NICO is a vibrant weekly seminar series focusing broadly on the topics of complex systems, data science and network science. It brings together attendees ranging from graduate students to senior faculty who span all of the schools across Northwestern, from applied math to sociology to biology and every discipline in-between. Please visit: https://bit.ly/WedatNICO for information on future speakers.
Time
Wednesday, March 11, 2026 at 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
Location
Lower Level, Chambers Hall Map
Contact
Calendar
Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems (NICO)