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Wikipedia

Nicholas Christakis

Nicholas A. Christakis (born May 7, 1962) is a Greek-American[1] sociologist and physician known for his research on social networks and on the socioeconomic, biosocial, and evolutionary determinants of human welfare (including the behavior, health, and capability of individuals and groups). He is the Sterling Professor of Social and Natural Science at Yale University, where he directs the Human Nature Lab. He is also the co-director of the Yale Institute for Network Science.[2][3]

Nicholas Christakis
Born (1962-05-07) May 7, 1962 (age 61)
EducationYale University (BS)
Harvard University (MD, MPH)
University of Pennsylvania (PhD)
SpouseErika Christakis
Scientific career
Fields
InstitutionsUniversity of Pennsylvania
University of Chicago
Harvard University
Yale University
Doctoral advisorRenée Fox
Websitenicholaschristakis.net

Christakis was elected a Fellow of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences in 2006; of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2010; and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2017.[4] In 2021, he received an honorary degree from the University of Athens, Greece.[5]

In 2009, Christakis was named to the Time 100, Time magazine's list of the 100 most influential people in the world.[6] In 2009 and again in 2010, he was named by Foreign Policy magazine to its list of top global thinkers.[7]

Early life edit

Christakis' parents are Greek. They had three biological children and then adopted two others, an African-American girl and a Taiwanese boy.[8] His father was a nuclear physicist turned business consultant and his mother a physical chemist turned psychologist.[9] He was born in New Haven, Connecticut in 1962 when both his parents were Yale University graduate students. His family returned to Greece when he was three, and Greek became his first language. He returned to the United States with his family at age six and grew up in Washington, D.C.[10] He graduated from St. Albans School (Washington, D.C.).[8]

Education edit

Christakis obtained a B.S. degree in biology from Yale University in 1984, where he won the Russell Henry Chittenden Prize. He received an M.D. degree from Harvard Medical School and an M.P.H. degree from the Harvard School of Public Health in 1989, winning the Bowdoin Prize on graduation.

In 1991, Christakis completed a residency in Internal Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Health System. He was certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine in 1993. He obtained a Ph.D. degree in sociology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1995. While at the University of Pennsylvania as a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar, he studied with Renee C. Fox, a distinguished American medical sociologist; other members of his dissertation committee were methodologist Paul Allison and physician Sankey Williams. His dissertation was published as Death Foretold, his first book.[11]

Career edit

In 1995, Christakis started as an assistant professor with joint appointments in the Departments of Sociology and of Medicine at the University of Chicago. In 2001, he was awarded tenure in both Sociology and Medicine. He left the University of Chicago to take up a position at Harvard in 2001. Until July 2013, he was a professor of medical sociology in the Department of Health Care Policy and a professor of medicine in the Department of Medicine at Harvard Medical School; a professor of sociology in the Department of Sociology in the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences; and an attending physician at the Harvard-affiliated Mt. Auburn Hospital.[12]

In 2013, Christakis moved to Yale University, where he is a professor of social and natural science in the Department of Sociology, with additional appointments in the Departments of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology; Statistics and Data Science; Biomedical Engineering; Medicine; and in the School of Management. He served as the Sol Goldman Family Professor of Social and Natural Science until 2018, when he was appointed as a Sterling Professor, the highest honor bestowed on Yale faculty.

From 2009 to 2013, Christakis and his wife, Erika Christakis, were Co-Masters of Pforzheimer House, one of Harvard's twelve residential houses.[13] From 2015 to 2016, he served in a similar capacity at Silliman College at Yale University.[14]

Research edit

Christakis uses quantitative methods (e.g., experiments, mathematical models, and statistical analyses). His work focuses on network science and biosocial science, and it has also involved sociology, economics, demography, evolutionary biology, evolutionary psychology, behavior genetics, and epidemiology. He is an author or editor of six books, more than 200 peer-reviewed academic articles, numerous editorials in national and international publications, and at least three patents.[15][16][17] His laboratory is also active in the development and release of software to conduct large-scale social science experiments, pioneering its use beginning in 2009 (e.g., Breadboard, Trellis).[18][19]

Christakis' early work was on physician decision-making and end-of-life care. He first began to study interpersonal social network effects in this setting in the late 1990s, with a series of studies of the widowhood effect, whereby the death of one person might increase the risk of death of their spouse.[20][21] He developed a number of innovative ways to estimate the causal nature of these effects (e.g., by studying how the death of a man's ex-wife might affect his risk of death),[22] and he expanded the scope of such work to analyze, for instance, how the precise diagnosis or duration of illness of the decedent might modify the risk of death of their survivor or how better quality of health care given to a dying person might reduce the risk of death of their survivor.[23][24] He also explored, in a 2006 paper in The New England Journal of Medicine that analyzed 518,240 elderly couples, how hospitalization of a spouse, and not just their death, might affect a survivor's mortality risk.[20] These were all early studies in network effects, but they involved just simple dyads of people (pairs of spouses).

Beginning in 2004, Christakis began to study "hyper-dyadic" network effects, whereby processes of social contagion moved beyond pairs of people.[25] Initially using observational studies with his colleague James H. Fowler, he documented that a variety of phenomena like obesity,[26] smoking,[27] and happiness,[28] rather than being solely individualistic, also arise via social contagion mechanisms over some distance within social networks (see: "three degrees of influence").[29] Other work by Christakis and Fowler, and by Christakis and other collaborators, used experimental methods and diverse data sets and settings to study social networks, thereby enhancing the robustness of causal inference (e.g., in a 2010 paper that showed that altruistic behavior in college students, or in a 2015 paper that showed that vitamin use in developing-world villages could both be made to be contagious).[30][31][32][33][34] Indeed, the 2010 experiment demonstrated that cooperative behavior could spread to three degrees of separation.[30] A 2022 paper used another experiment to show how a novel "pair targeting" algorithm could enhance population-level social contagion of the adoption of iron-fortified salt to reduce anemia in mothers and children.[35] In a 2010 TED talk, Christakis summarized the broader implications of the role of networks in human activity.[36]

In addition to studying how diverse processes, ranging from cooperation to emotions, obesity, resource sharing,[37] and vaccination,[38][39] might spread across social networks, Christakis and his colleagues have published a series of papers exploring how experimental manipulation of social network structure itself might enhance human welfare. Early work, starting in 2011, focused on how experimental manipulation of network structure could enhance human cooperation and economic productivity.[31] Other work explored how network topology could affect human communication during a time of crisis.[40] A 2019 paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS) showed that experimentally re-wiring social networks could enhance human welfare without either redistributing or increasing resources.[41] Additionally, an observational study of a novel monetary system (Sardex, a complementary currency introduced during the 2010 financial crisis) showed that k-cycle centrality was associated with economic success at the level of individual firms or the system as a whole.[42]

In 2009, Christakis' group began to study the evolutionary biology and genetics of social networks, publishing in PNAS a finding that social network position may be partially heritable, and specifically that an increase in twins' shared genetic material corresponds to differences in their social networks.[43] In 2011, a follow-up paper on "Correlated Genotypes in Friendship Networks" in PNAS advanced the argument that humans may be metagenomic with respect to the people around them.[44] Further work on this topic included "Friendship and Natural Selection" in PNAS in 2014, showing that people have a small but discernible preference for choosing as their friends other people who resemble them roughly as much as third or fourth cousins.[45] In 2012, in a paper in Nature, Christakis' group analyzed the social networks of the Hadza hunter-gatherers, showing that human social network structure appears to have ancient origins.[46] Anthropologist Joseph Henrich noted that "the crucial insight from this work is that understanding distinct aspects of cooperation among these hunter-gatherers must incorporate an analysis of the dynamic processes at the population level."[47] Christakis and his colleagues did similar work mapping the networks of the Nyangatom people of Sudan in 2016.[48] His group has also demonstrated that social networks are deeply related to human cooperation.[30][31] These ideas are explored in Christakis' 2019 book, Blueprint: The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society.

Beginning in 2010, Christakis' lab initiated a program of research to deploy social networks to improve welfare, health, and diverse other social phenomena—for example, facilitating the adoption of public health innovations in the developing world (published in 2015),[49] understanding the origins of economic inequality (published in Nature in 2015),[33] or demonstrating the utility of autonomous agents (AI "bots") in optimizing coordination in groups online (published in Nature in 2017).[34] Economist Simon Gächter noted that "the most striking insight from these findings [in 2015] is the effect of wealth visibility on the dynamics of inequality: conspicuous inequality breeds more inequality. Although visibility of wealth does not change economic incentives in this experimental scenario, it invites social comparisons that... undermine cooperation and diminish social ties."[50] Gachter also commented on the 2017 paper and its contributions to evolutionary game theory.[51]

The 2017 paper on bots[34] initiated a program of work on "hybrid systems" composed of humans and machines (endowed with AI) that reshape how humans interact not with the machines, but with each other. A paper published in 2020 in PNAS extended this idea by showing that physical robots could modify conversations among people interacting in groups.[52] Another paper that year showed that simply programmed bots could re-engineer social connections among humans in networked groups in order to make them become more cooperative.[53] Christakis has argued that "the effects of AI on human-to-human interaction stand to be intense and far-reaching, and the advances rapid and broad. We must investigate systematically what second-order effects might emerge and discuss how to regulate them on behalf of the common good".[54]

Finally, in 2010, a paper analyzed the spread of H1N1 influenza at Harvard University (as part of the 2009 swine flu pandemic) and showed that an understanding of social networks could be used to develop 'sensors' for forecasting epidemics (of germs and other phenomena).[55] In another 2010 TED talk, Christakis describes this effort (and computational social science more generally).[56] A follow-up paper in 2014 documented the utility of this approach to forecast online trends, again based on the "friendship paradox", using Twitter data.[57]

Christakis' lab has been supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, by the Pioneer Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and by other funders. In 2019, his lab received support to extend their work to studies of the human microbiota from the Nomis Foundation.[58]

Physician edit

Christakis has practiced as a home hospice physician and in consultative palliative medicine. He took care of indigent, home-bound, dying patients in the South Side of Chicago while at the University of Chicago, from 1995 to 2001.[59] During this time, he was also active in translating research results into national policy changes with respect to end-of-life care in the USA; for instance, he testified before the US Senate Special Committee on Aging in 2000 (regarding barriers to hospice use, prognostication, and the cost-effectiveness of hospice).[60]

In Boston, from 2002 to 2006, Christakis worked as an attending physician on the Palliative Medicine Consult Service at Massachusetts General Hospital. In 2006, he moved to Mount Auburn Hospital. In 2013, he moved to the Department of Medicine at Yale University.

Books edit

Christakis' first book, Death Foretold: Prophecy and Prognosis in Medical Care, was published by the University of Chicago Press in 1999 (ISBN 978-0226104706), and has been translated into Japanese.[11] The book, based on his dissertation, explored the role of prognosis in medical thought and practice, documenting and explaining how physicians are socialized to avoid making prognoses. It argues that the prognoses patients receive, even from the best-trained American doctors, are driven not only by professional norms but also by religious, moral, and even quasi-magical beliefs (such as the "self-fulfilling prophecy").

His second book, Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives, was co-authored with James Fowler and was published by Little, Brown Spark in 2009 (ISBN 978-0316036146).[61][62] It was awarded the "Books for a Better Life" Award in 2009 and has been translated into 20 languages.[63] Connected draws on previously published and unpublished studies and makes several new conclusions about the influence of social networks on human health and behavior. In Connected, Christakis and Fowler put forward their "three degrees of influence" rule, which theorizes that each person's social influence can stretch to roughly three degrees of separation (to the friend of a friend of a friend) before it fades out.[64][65]

Christakis' third book, Blueprint: The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society, was published by Little, Brown Spark in 2019 (ISBN 978-0316230032).[66] It made The New York Times Best Seller list in its debut week.[67] It was widely and favorably reviewed.[68][69][70][71][72][73] For instance, Bill Gates described the book as "optimistic and terrific."[73] Blueprint explores the idea that evolution has given humans a suite of beneficial capacities, including love, friendship, social networks, cooperation, and learning; humans have innate proclivities to make a good society, one that is similar worldwide. "For too long," Christakis writes, "the scientific community has been overly focused on the dark side of our biological heritage: our capacity for tribalism, violence, selfishness, and cruelty. The bright side has been denied the attention it deserves."[74] Overall, Blueprint advances an argument about sociodicy, that is, the "vindication of society despite its failures".

Christakis' fourth book, Apollo's Arrow: The Profound and Enduring Impact of Coronavirus on the Way We Live, was published by Little, Brown Spark in October 2020 (ISBN 978-0316628228).[75] It was widely and favorably reviewed[76][77][78][79][80] and was called "magisterial",[81] "gripping",[82] and "provocative".[83] It was long-listed for the PEN America EO Wilson Literary Science Writing Award.[84] Apollo's Arrow provides an account of the origins and course of the COVID-19 pandemic and its end, biologically and socially (in what Christakis has compared to the Roaring Twenties of the 20th century). In essence, the book argues that "plagues are not new to our species — they are just new to us".[85]

Christakis also co-edited two clinical textbooks on end-of-life care, published by Oxford University Press.[86][87]

Public intellectual edit

In addition to his scientific research and books, Christakis has contributed to popular media as a public intellectual, in a range of publications and on a range of topics. He has said he is invested in "advancing the public understanding of science",[88] and he typically writes about matters at the intersection of the social, biological, and/or computational sciences.

For instance, in addition to his book about the COVID-19 pandemic, Apollo's Arrow, released in 2020, Christakis published numerous essays helping to advance understanding of the social, economic, psychological, and epidemiological aspects of the pandemic, including in The Wall Street Journal, where he forecast the long course of the pandemic[89] and outlined optimal responses;[90] in The Washington Post regarding the role of compassion during epidemics;[91] in The Atlantic regarding school closures,[92] risk perception,[93] and public health responses;[94] and in FiveThirtyEight regarding how voting in the primary elections did not worsen the course of the pandemic.[95] Early in the pandemic (in August 2020), he wrote an invited essay for The Economist about how intrinsic properties of SARS-CoV-2 would make the COVID-19 pandemic more challenging to fight.[96] The magazine relied on him for subsequent assessments of the long-term impact of the pandemic.[97] In an interview for The Atlantic, Christakis also discussed the importance of free expression in combating the COVID-19 pandemic.[98]

For The New York Times, Christakis has written on prognostication,[99] university education,[100] free expression,[101] and the evolution of social sciences.[102] His essay on social science was said to have "created quite a stir", and it prompted debate and commentary.[103][104] For The Washington Post, he has written not only about COVID[91] but also on mass shootings[105] and fatherhood.[106] He has also written about how to "construct novel, unnatural social systems based on the predictable ways that humans act" for The Boston Globe;[107] the role of social artificial intelligence for The Atlantic;[108] and about social network dynamics for the Financial Times.[109]

In 2012, he wrote a series of online columns for Time with his wife, Erika Christakis, on a range of topics from academic dishonesty to women in the armed services.[110] For the same publication, in 2011, he wrote about biosocial science,[111] and, in 2019, about the link between cooperation and individuality, arguing that such a perspective was useful "in a moment when too much tribalism is causing devastating problems".[112]

Christakis has also appeared periodically on TV and radio, commenting on social networks and social interactions, the COVID-19 pandemic, and other matters, including on NPR,[113][114] Amanpour & Company,[115] and other venues. Krista Tippett of NPR has said his perspective on human goodness "deepens and refreshes".[116] He has been featured in a number of documentaries about science, including Through the Wormhole,[117] Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick?,[118] and This Emotional Life (on PBS).[119][120] Interviews with Christakis have appeared in The New York Times,[121][122] The Atlantic,[98] and elsewhere.[123] He has been a repeat guest on many leading podcasts, including Joe Rogan,[124][125] Sam Harris,[126][127][128] Michael Shermer,[129][130] and Reason.[131]

Christakis has given two mainstage TED talks,[132][133] appeared at the Aspen Ideas Festival,[134] and been a frequent contributor to the online salon of leading scientists and intellectuals Edge, including answering ten of its annual questions, from 2009 to 2019[135] and giving talks on how "social networks are like the eye" in 2008,[136] on "a new kind of social science for the 21st century" in 2012,[137] and on the science of social connections in 2013.[138]

Advocacy for free expression edit

Christakis has been involved in the defense of free expression for some time. At Harvard in 2012, he and his wife came to the defense of minority students who were using satire to criticize the elite final clubs at that institution. They suggested that the critics might be "more concerned with ugly words than the underlying problems" and that policing free expression on campus "denies students the opportunity to learn to think for themselves."[139] Their argument expressed confidence in the capacity and maturity of Harvard students to discuss contentious issues.

In April 2020, Christakis expressed concern that, in the setting of the COVID-19 pandemic, hospitals and medical schools were seeking to silence faculty and staff who were highlighting problems with the response; he stated that "clamping down on people who are speaking is a kind of idiocy of the highest order."[140]

In July 2020, Christakis was one of the 153 signers of "A Letter on Justice and Open Debate" (also known as the "Harper's Letter") that expressed concern that "the free exchange of information and ideas, the lifeblood of a liberal society, is daily becoming more constricted".[141]

In 2021, Christakis was asked to join the advisory council of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE).[142] In 2022, he joined the advisory council of Heterodox Academy.[143]

In 2023, Christakis was the recipient of the Silverglate Award for Championing Free Expression at the inaugural gala held by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression in New York City.[144]

Yale Halloween controversy edit

In 2015, Christakis and his wife, Erika, were involved in a controversy related to Halloween costumes at Yale University. In October of that year, the Intercultural Affairs Council at Yale (a group of fourteen administrators) sent an email to undergraduates that recommended students be careful when choosing Halloween outfits, suggesting they avoid various sorts of costumes incorporating potentially offensive elements and including a link to a Pinterest page with recommended and non-recommended costumes.[145][146][147] In response, Erika (a lecturer on early childhood education at the Yale Child Study Center) wrote an email on October 29 on the role of free expression in universities. She argued, from a developmental perspective, that students might wish to consider whether administrators should provide guidance on Halloween attire or whether students would prefer to "dress themselves". She noted that her husband's advice was that "if you don't like a costume someone is wearing, look away, or tell them you are offended. Talk to each other. Free speech and the ability to tolerate offense are the hallmarks of a free and open society".[148]

This e-mail played a role in protests on campus that received national attention in the United States.[149] Christakis and his wife were criticized by some students for placing "the burden of confrontation, education, and maturity on the offended".[150] Other students, however, pointed out that Erika Christakis was defending the rights to free expression of all Yale students and expressing confidence in them and in their capacity to discuss and confront such issues among themselves.[151][152]

During the controversy, some students "[asked President] Salovey to remove Nicholas and Erika Christakis from their positions at the helm of Silliman College", and, in a separate development, over 400 faculty members signed a letter on the broader issue of supporting "greater diversity".[153] Ninety-one Yale faculty members signed a different letter supporting the Christakises, and this letter noted that the couple themselves distinguished support for freedom of expression from supporting the content of such expression (the Christakises had noted that they would find many of the same costumes offensive as some students would).[154] Christakis stepped down from his role at Silliman College eight months later, at the end of the academic year, a step The Atlantic later decried (noting "when Yale's history is written, they should be regarded as collateral damage harmed by people who abstracted away their humanity").[155]

In a subsequent op-ed in The New York Times (his only published comment on the events), Christakis argued: "Open, extended conversations among students themselves are essential not only to the pursuit of truth but also to deep moral learning and to righteous social progress."[156] A year later, commentators condemned how students, administrators, and faculty had behaved at Yale (and linked to substantial video footage of the events).[157] In her only published remarks regarding what happened, published a year later, in October 2016, Erika Christakis described the circumstances (including threats) that she had faced in an Op-Ed published in The Washington Post.[158] Alum James Kirchick and former dean of the Yale Law School Anthony T. Kronman have since criticized the university administration for abandoning or not supporting Christakis and his wife.[159][160]

The incident led to some students being called members of "Generation Snowflake".[161] In January 2016, Bill Maher expressed consternation at how the Yale students had behaved.[162] In April 2017, an episode of The Simpsons titled "Caper Chase" satirized the events. Also in 2017, a short documentary was released about the episode, arguing that they reflected a collision between "old values" centered on reason and debate, on the one hand, and "administrative bloat" and a shift to a "consumer mentality" on the other (this documentary also noted that Christakis comes from a multi-racial family and has African-American and Chinese siblings).[147] The New York Times published a coda regarding the episode in August 2018, upon Christakis' appointment as a Sterling Professor, Yale's highest faculty rank.[159]

The 2015 occurrences at Yale have been discussed in at least twenty nonfiction books.[163][164] Philosopher Russell Blackford provides a very precise and comprehensive timeline.[165] Some of these books noted the "sexism" and "irony" that, in a key episode that was part of the events (when Christakis was surrounded by 150 students in a quad for two hours), the students wished to hold Christakis responsible for his wife's email.[166][167] Commentator Douglas Murray summarizes statements by students based on his review of extensive video footage released by the students themselves of the events in the quad, and he notes Christakis' emphasis on "our common humanity".[164] Many of the books have expressed concern at the "illiberal" actions of the students (and of many administrators and faculty) at Yale. The behavior of the students also sparked a minor controversy at Harvard Law School when a student there wrote a piece decrying the Christakis' treatment as "fascism" in the Harvard Law Record; criticized for publishing the piece, the Record's liberal editor-in-chief wrote that his role was "editor-in-chief, not thought-policeman-in-chief."[168][169]

Christakis has spoken publicly about the events only rarely. In an October 2017 interview with Sam Harris, he discussed parts of the situation he faced, framing the events at Yale in the broader context of what was happening on many campuses during that time period; Harris noted that Christakis had "the imperturbability of a saint."[170] In March 2019, Christakis told Frank Bruni that, partly in response to the events, he worked to complete a long-standing book project on the origins of goodness in society (Blueprint).[171]

Personal life edit

Christakis resides in Norwich, Vermont.[172] He is married to early childhood educator and author Erika Christakis and they have four children, one of whom they adopted later in life, while serving as foster parents.[173][174][175] His hobbies have included Shotokan karate (as noted by his instructor, Kazumi Tabata)[176] and making maple syrup.[177]

Published works edit

Books edit

  • Death Foretold: Prophecy and Prognosis in Medical Care (1999) ISBN 978-0226104706
  • Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives (2009) - with James Fowler ISBN 978-0316036146
  • Blueprint: The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society (2019) ISBN 978-0316230032
  • Apollo's Arrow: The Profound and Enduring Impact of Coronavirus on the Way We Live (2020) ISBN 978-0316628228

Selected scientific papers edit

  • Christakis, NA; Allison, PD (2006). (PDF). New England Journal of Medicine. 354 (7): 719–730. doi:10.1056/NEJMsa050196. PMID 16481639. S2CID 8229736. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 10, 2017. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  • Christakis, NA; Fowler, JH (2007). (PDF). New England Journal of Medicine. 357 (4): 370–379. doi:10.1056/NEJMsa066082. PMID 17652652. S2CID 264194973. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 18, 2015. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  • Elwert, F; Christakis, NA (2008). (PDF). American Journal of Public Health. 98 (11): 2092–2098. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2007.114348. PMC 2636447. PMID 18511733. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  • Christakis, NA; Fowler, JH (2008). (PDF). New England Journal of Medicine. 358 (21): 2249–2258. doi:10.1056/NEJMsa0706154. PMC 2822344. PMID 18499567. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 10, 2017. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  • Fowler, JH; Christakis, NA (2009). (PDF). British Medical Journal. 337 (768): a2338. doi:10.1136/bmj.a2338. PMC 2600606. PMID 19056788. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 18, 2015. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  • Fowler, JH; Dawes, CT; Christakis, NA (2009). "Model of genetic variation in human social networks". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 106 (6): 1720–1724. Bibcode:2009PNAS..106.1720F. doi:10.1073/pnas.0806746106. PMC 2644104. PMID 19171900.
  • Fowler, JH; Christakis, NA (2010). "Cooperative Behavior Cascades in Human Social Networks". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107 (12): 5334–8. arXiv:0908.3497. Bibcode:2010PNAS..107.5334F. doi:10.1073/pnas.0913149107. PMC 2851803. PMID 20212120.
  • Christakis, NA; Fowler, JH (2010). "Social Network Sensors for Early Detection of Contagious Outbreaks". PLOS ONE. 5 (9): e12948. arXiv:1004.4792. Bibcode:2010PLoSO...512948C. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0012948. PMC 2939797. PMID 20856792.
  • Christakis, NA; Fowler, JH; Imbens, GW; Kalyanaraman, K (2010). "An Empirical Model for Strategic Network Formation". NBER Working Papers. Working Paper Series (16039). doi:10.3386/w16039. Retrieved November 24, 2022.
  • Fowler, JH; Settle, JE; Christakis, NA (2011). "Correlated Genotypes in Friendship Networks". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (5): 1993–7. Bibcode:2011PNAS..108.1993F. doi:10.1073/pnas.1011687108. PMC 3033315. PMID 21245293.
  • Rand, DG; Arbesman, S; Christakis, NA (2011). "Dynamic Social Networks Promote Cooperation in Experiments with Humans". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (48): 19193–8. Bibcode:2011PNAS..10819193R. doi:10.1073/pnas.1108243108. PMC 3228461. PMID 22084103.
  • Apicella, CL; Marlowe, FW; Fowler, JH; Christakis, NA (2012). (PDF). Nature. 481 (7382): 497–501. Bibcode:2012Natur.481..497A. doi:10.1038/nature10736. PMC 3340565. PMID 22281599. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 15, 2017. Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  • Christakis, NA; Fowler, JH (2014). "Friendship and Natural Selection". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 111 (3): 10796–10801. arXiv:1308.5257. Bibcode:2014PNAS..111S0796C. doi:10.1073/pnas.1400825111. PMC 4113922. PMID 25024208.
  • Nishi, CL; Shirado, FW; Rand, DG; Christakis, NA (2015). "Inequality and Visibility of Wealth in Experimental Social Networks". Nature. 526 (7382): 426–429. Bibcode:2015Natur.526..426N. doi:10.1038/nature15392. PMID 26352469. S2CID 4446774.
  • Kim, DA; Hwong, AR; Stafford, D; Hughes, DA; O'Malley, AJ; Fowler, JH; Christakis, NA (2015). "Social Network Targeting to Maximize Population Behavior Change: A Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial". The Lancet. 386 (9989): 145–153. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(15)60095-2. PMC 4638320. PMID 25952354.
  • Shirado, H; Christakis, NA (2017). "Locally Noisy Autonomous Agents Improve Global Human Coordination in Network Experiments". Nature. 545 (7654): 370–374. Bibcode:2017Natur.545..370S. doi:10.1038/nature22332. PMC 5912653. PMID 28516927.
  • Traeger, ML; Sebo, SS; Jung, M; Scassellati, B; Christakis, NA (2020). "Vulnerable Robots Shape Human Conversational Dynamics in a Human-Robot Team". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 117 (12): 6370–6375. Bibcode:2020PNAS..117.6370T. doi:10.1073/pnas.1910402117. PMC 7104178. PMID 32152118.
  • Jia, JS; Lu, X; Yuan, Y; Xu, G; Jia, J; Christakis, NA (2020). "Population Flow Drives Spatio-Temporal Distribution of COVID-19 in China". Nature. 582 (7812): 389–394. Bibcode:2020Natur.582..389J. doi:10.1038/s41586-020-2284-y. PMID 32349120.
  • Shirado, H; Christakis, NA (2020). "Network Engineering Using Autonomous Agents Increases Cooperation in Human Groups". iScience. 23 (9): 101438. Bibcode:2020iSci...23j1438S. doi:10.1016/j.isci.2020.101438. PMC 7452167. PMID 32823053.
  • Alexander, M; Forastiere, L; Gupta, S; Christakis, NA. (2022-07-26). "Algorithms for seeding social networks can enhance the adoption of a public health intervention in urban India". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 119 (30): e2120742119. doi:10.1073/pnas.2120742119. PMC 9335263. PMID 35862454.

References edit

  1. ^ "Preface", in Nicholas A. Christakis, Blueprint: The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society, Little, Brown Spark, 2019
  2. ^ Tom Conroy, "New Institute Will Advance the Interdisciplinary Study of Networks", Yale News, April 11, 2013.
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External links edit

  • Nicholas Christakis | Yale University
  • Nicholas Christakis at TED  

nicholas, christakis, nicholas, christakis, born, 1962, greek, american, sociologist, physician, known, research, social, networks, socioeconomic, biosocial, evolutionary, determinants, human, welfare, including, behavior, health, capability, individuals, grou. Nicholas A Christakis born May 7 1962 is a Greek American 1 sociologist and physician known for his research on social networks and on the socioeconomic biosocial and evolutionary determinants of human welfare including the behavior health and capability of individuals and groups He is the Sterling Professor of Social and Natural Science at Yale University where he directs the Human Nature Lab He is also the co director of the Yale Institute for Network Science 2 3 Nicholas ChristakisBorn 1962 05 07 May 7 1962 age 61 New Haven Connecticut U S EducationYale University BS Harvard University MD MPH University of Pennsylvania PhD SpouseErika ChristakisScientific careerFieldsSociologyBiosocial ScienceMedicineInstitutionsUniversity of PennsylvaniaUniversity of ChicagoHarvard UniversityYale UniversityDoctoral advisorRenee FoxWebsitenicholaschristakis wbr netChristakis was elected a Fellow of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences in 2006 of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2010 and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2017 4 In 2021 he received an honorary degree from the University of Athens Greece 5 In 2009 Christakis was named to the Time 100 Time magazine s list of the 100 most influential people in the world 6 In 2009 and again in 2010 he was named by Foreign Policy magazine to its list of top global thinkers 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Career 3 1 Research 3 2 Physician 4 Books 5 Public intellectual 6 Advocacy for free expression 6 1 Yale Halloween controversy 7 Personal life 8 Published works 8 1 Books 8 2 Selected scientific papers 9 References 10 External linksEarly life editChristakis parents are Greek They had three biological children and then adopted two others an African American girl and a Taiwanese boy 8 His father was a nuclear physicist turned business consultant and his mother a physical chemist turned psychologist 9 He was born in New Haven Connecticut in 1962 when both his parents were Yale University graduate students His family returned to Greece when he was three and Greek became his first language He returned to the United States with his family at age six and grew up in Washington D C 10 He graduated from St Albans School Washington D C 8 Education editChristakis obtained a B S degree in biology from Yale University in 1984 where he won the Russell Henry Chittenden Prize He received an M D degree from Harvard Medical School and an M P H degree from the Harvard School of Public Health in 1989 winning the Bowdoin Prize on graduation In 1991 Christakis completed a residency in Internal Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Health System He was certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine in 1993 He obtained a Ph D degree in sociology from the University of Pennsylvania in 1995 While at the University of Pennsylvania as a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar he studied with Renee C Fox a distinguished American medical sociologist other members of his dissertation committee were methodologist Paul Allison and physician Sankey Williams His dissertation was published as Death Foretold his first book 11 Career editIn 1995 Christakis started as an assistant professor with joint appointments in the Departments of Sociology and of Medicine at the University of Chicago In 2001 he was awarded tenure in both Sociology and Medicine He left the University of Chicago to take up a position at Harvard in 2001 Until July 2013 he was a professor of medical sociology in the Department of Health Care Policy and a professor of medicine in the Department of Medicine at Harvard Medical School a professor of sociology in the Department of Sociology in the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences and an attending physician at the Harvard affiliated Mt Auburn Hospital 12 In 2013 Christakis moved to Yale University where he is a professor of social and natural science in the Department of Sociology with additional appointments in the Departments of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Statistics and Data Science Biomedical Engineering Medicine and in the School of Management He served as the Sol Goldman Family Professor of Social and Natural Science until 2018 when he was appointed as a Sterling Professor the highest honor bestowed on Yale faculty From 2009 to 2013 Christakis and his wife Erika Christakis were Co Masters of Pforzheimer House one of Harvard s twelve residential houses 13 From 2015 to 2016 he served in a similar capacity at Silliman College at Yale University 14 Research edit Christakis uses quantitative methods e g experiments mathematical models and statistical analyses His work focuses on network science and biosocial science and it has also involved sociology economics demography evolutionary biology evolutionary psychology behavior genetics and epidemiology He is an author or editor of six books more than 200 peer reviewed academic articles numerous editorials in national and international publications and at least three patents 15 16 17 His laboratory is also active in the development and release of software to conduct large scale social science experiments pioneering its use beginning in 2009 e g Breadboard Trellis 18 19 Christakis early work was on physician decision making and end of life care He first began to study interpersonal social network effects in this setting in the late 1990s with a series of studies of the widowhood effect whereby the death of one person might increase the risk of death of their spouse 20 21 He developed a number of innovative ways to estimate the causal nature of these effects e g by studying how the death of a man s ex wife might affect his risk of death 22 and he expanded the scope of such work to analyze for instance how the precise diagnosis or duration of illness of the decedent might modify the risk of death of their survivor or how better quality of health care given to a dying person might reduce the risk of death of their survivor 23 24 He also explored in a 2006 paper in The New England Journal of Medicine that analyzed 518 240 elderly couples how hospitalization of a spouse and not just their death might affect a survivor s mortality risk 20 These were all early studies in network effects but they involved just simple dyads of people pairs of spouses Beginning in 2004 Christakis began to study hyper dyadic network effects whereby processes of social contagion moved beyond pairs of people 25 Initially using observational studies with his colleague James H Fowler he documented that a variety of phenomena like obesity 26 smoking 27 and happiness 28 rather than being solely individualistic also arise via social contagion mechanisms over some distance within social networks see three degrees of influence 29 Other work by Christakis and Fowler and by Christakis and other collaborators used experimental methods and diverse data sets and settings to study social networks thereby enhancing the robustness of causal inference e g in a 2010 paper that showed that altruistic behavior in college students or in a 2015 paper that showed that vitamin use in developing world villages could both be made to be contagious 30 31 32 33 34 Indeed the 2010 experiment demonstrated that cooperative behavior could spread to three degrees of separation 30 A 2022 paper used another experiment to show how a novel pair targeting algorithm could enhance population level social contagion of the adoption of iron fortified salt to reduce anemia in mothers and children 35 In a 2010 TED talk Christakis summarized the broader implications of the role of networks in human activity 36 In addition to studying how diverse processes ranging from cooperation to emotions obesity resource sharing 37 and vaccination 38 39 might spread across social networks Christakis and his colleagues have published a series of papers exploring how experimental manipulation of social network structure itself might enhance human welfare Early work starting in 2011 focused on how experimental manipulation of network structure could enhance human cooperation and economic productivity 31 Other work explored how network topology could affect human communication during a time of crisis 40 A 2019 paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America PNAS showed that experimentally re wiring social networks could enhance human welfare without either redistributing or increasing resources 41 Additionally an observational study of a novel monetary system Sardex a complementary currency introduced during the 2010 financial crisis showed that k cycle centrality was associated with economic success at the level of individual firms or the system as a whole 42 In 2009 Christakis group began to study the evolutionary biology and genetics of social networks publishing in PNAS a finding that social network position may be partially heritable and specifically that an increase in twins shared genetic material corresponds to differences in their social networks 43 In 2011 a follow up paper on Correlated Genotypes in Friendship Networks in PNAS advanced the argument that humans may be metagenomic with respect to the people around them 44 Further work on this topic included Friendship and Natural Selection in PNAS in 2014 showing that people have a small but discernible preference for choosing as their friends other people who resemble them roughly as much as third or fourth cousins 45 In 2012 in a paper in Nature Christakis group analyzed the social networks of the Hadza hunter gatherers showing that human social network structure appears to have ancient origins 46 Anthropologist Joseph Henrich noted that the crucial insight from this work is that understanding distinct aspects of cooperation among these hunter gatherers must incorporate an analysis of the dynamic processes at the population level 47 Christakis and his colleagues did similar work mapping the networks of the Nyangatom people of Sudan in 2016 48 His group has also demonstrated that social networks are deeply related to human cooperation 30 31 These ideas are explored in Christakis 2019 book Blueprint The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society Beginning in 2010 Christakis lab initiated a program of research to deploy social networks to improve welfare health and diverse other social phenomena for example facilitating the adoption of public health innovations in the developing world published in 2015 49 understanding the origins of economic inequality published in Nature in 2015 33 or demonstrating the utility of autonomous agents AI bots in optimizing coordination in groups online published in Nature in 2017 34 Economist Simon Gachter noted that the most striking insight from these findings in 2015 is the effect of wealth visibility on the dynamics of inequality conspicuous inequality breeds more inequality Although visibility of wealth does not change economic incentives in this experimental scenario it invites social comparisons that undermine cooperation and diminish social ties 50 Gachter also commented on the 2017 paper and its contributions to evolutionary game theory 51 The 2017 paper on bots 34 initiated a program of work on hybrid systems composed of humans and machines endowed with AI that reshape how humans interact not with the machines but with each other A paper published in 2020 in PNAS extended this idea by showing that physical robots could modify conversations among people interacting in groups 52 Another paper that year showed that simply programmed bots could re engineer social connections among humans in networked groups in order to make them become more cooperative 53 Christakis has argued that the effects of AI on human to human interaction stand to be intense and far reaching and the advances rapid and broad We must investigate systematically what second order effects might emerge and discuss how to regulate them on behalf of the common good 54 Finally in 2010 a paper analyzed the spread of H1N1 influenza at Harvard University as part of the 2009 swine flu pandemic and showed that an understanding of social networks could be used to develop sensors for forecasting epidemics of germs and other phenomena 55 In another 2010 TED talk Christakis describes this effort and computational social science more generally 56 A follow up paper in 2014 documented the utility of this approach to forecast online trends again based on the friendship paradox using Twitter data 57 Christakis lab has been supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health by the Pioneer Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation by the Bill amp Melinda Gates Foundation and by other funders In 2019 his lab received support to extend their work to studies of the human microbiota from the Nomis Foundation 58 Physician edit Christakis has practiced as a home hospice physician and in consultative palliative medicine He took care of indigent home bound dying patients in the South Side of Chicago while at the University of Chicago from 1995 to 2001 59 During this time he was also active in translating research results into national policy changes with respect to end of life care in the USA for instance he testified before the US Senate Special Committee on Aging in 2000 regarding barriers to hospice use prognostication and the cost effectiveness of hospice 60 In Boston from 2002 to 2006 Christakis worked as an attending physician on the Palliative Medicine Consult Service at Massachusetts General Hospital In 2006 he moved to Mount Auburn Hospital In 2013 he moved to the Department of Medicine at Yale University Books editChristakis first book Death Foretold Prophecy and Prognosis in Medical Care was published by the University of Chicago Press in 1999 ISBN 978 0226104706 and has been translated into Japanese 11 The book based on his dissertation explored the role of prognosis in medical thought and practice documenting and explaining how physicians are socialized to avoid making prognoses It argues that the prognoses patients receive even from the best trained American doctors are driven not only by professional norms but also by religious moral and even quasi magical beliefs such as the self fulfilling prophecy His second book Connected The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives was co authored with James Fowler and was published by Little Brown Spark in 2009 ISBN 978 0316036146 61 62 It was awarded the Books for a Better Life Award in 2009 and has been translated into 20 languages 63 Connected draws on previously published and unpublished studies and makes several new conclusions about the influence of social networks on human health and behavior In Connected Christakis and Fowler put forward their three degrees of influence rule which theorizes that each person s social influence can stretch to roughly three degrees of separation to the friend of a friend of a friend before it fades out 64 65 Christakis third book Blueprint The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society was published by Little Brown Spark in 2019 ISBN 978 0316230032 66 It made The New York Times Best Seller list in its debut week 67 It was widely and favorably reviewed 68 69 70 71 72 73 For instance Bill Gates described the book as optimistic and terrific 73 Blueprint explores the idea that evolution has given humans a suite of beneficial capacities including love friendship social networks cooperation and learning humans have innate proclivities to make a good society one that is similar worldwide For too long Christakis writes the scientific community has been overly focused on the dark side of our biological heritage our capacity for tribalism violence selfishness and cruelty The bright side has been denied the attention it deserves 74 Overall Blueprint advances an argument about sociodicy that is the vindication of society despite its failures Christakis fourth book Apollo s Arrow The Profound and Enduring Impact of Coronavirus on the Way We Live was published by Little Brown Spark in October 2020 ISBN 978 0316628228 75 It was widely and favorably reviewed 76 77 78 79 80 and was called magisterial 81 gripping 82 and provocative 83 It was long listed for the PEN America EO Wilson Literary Science Writing Award 84 Apollo s Arrow provides an account of the origins and course of the COVID 19 pandemic and its end biologically and socially in what Christakis has compared to the Roaring Twenties of the 20th century In essence the book argues that plagues are not new to our species they are just new to us 85 Christakis also co edited two clinical textbooks on end of life care published by Oxford University Press 86 87 Public intellectual editIn addition to his scientific research and books Christakis has contributed to popular media as a public intellectual in a range of publications and on a range of topics He has said he is invested in advancing the public understanding of science 88 and he typically writes about matters at the intersection of the social biological and or computational sciences For instance in addition to his book about the COVID 19 pandemic Apollo s Arrow released in 2020 Christakis published numerous essays helping to advance understanding of the social economic psychological and epidemiological aspects of the pandemic including in The Wall Street Journal where he forecast the long course of the pandemic 89 and outlined optimal responses 90 in The Washington Post regarding the role of compassion during epidemics 91 in The Atlantic regarding school closures 92 risk perception 93 and public health responses 94 and in FiveThirtyEight regarding how voting in the primary elections did not worsen the course of the pandemic 95 Early in the pandemic in August 2020 he wrote an invited essay for The Economist about how intrinsic properties of SARS CoV 2 would make the COVID 19 pandemic more challenging to fight 96 The magazine relied on him for subsequent assessments of the long term impact of the pandemic 97 In an interview for The Atlantic Christakis also discussed the importance of free expression in combating the COVID 19 pandemic 98 For The New York Times Christakis has written on prognostication 99 university education 100 free expression 101 and the evolution of social sciences 102 His essay on social science was said to have created quite a stir and it prompted debate and commentary 103 104 For The Washington Post he has written not only about COVID 91 but also on mass shootings 105 and fatherhood 106 He has also written about how to construct novel unnatural social systems based on the predictable ways that humans act for The Boston Globe 107 the role of social artificial intelligence for The Atlantic 108 and about social network dynamics for the Financial Times 109 In 2012 he wrote a series of online columns for Time with his wife Erika Christakis on a range of topics from academic dishonesty to women in the armed services 110 For the same publication in 2011 he wrote about biosocial science 111 and in 2019 about the link between cooperation and individuality arguing that such a perspective was useful in a moment when too much tribalism is causing devastating problems 112 Christakis has also appeared periodically on TV and radio commenting on social networks and social interactions the COVID 19 pandemic and other matters including on NPR 113 114 Amanpour amp Company 115 and other venues Krista Tippett of NPR has said his perspective on human goodness deepens and refreshes 116 He has been featured in a number of documentaries about science including Through the Wormhole 117 Unnatural Causes Is Inequality Making Us Sick 118 and This Emotional Life on PBS 119 120 Interviews with Christakis have appeared in The New York Times 121 122 The Atlantic 98 and elsewhere 123 He has been a repeat guest on many leading podcasts including Joe Rogan 124 125 Sam Harris 126 127 128 Michael Shermer 129 130 and Reason 131 Christakis has given two mainstage TED talks 132 133 appeared at the Aspen Ideas Festival 134 and been a frequent contributor to the online salon of leading scientists and intellectuals Edge including answering ten of its annual questions from 2009 to 2019 135 and giving talks on how social networks are like the eye in 2008 136 on a new kind of social science for the 21st century in 2012 137 and on the science of social connections in 2013 138 Advocacy for free expression editChristakis has been involved in the defense of free expression for some time At Harvard in 2012 he and his wife came to the defense of minority students who were using satire to criticize the elite final clubs at that institution They suggested that the critics might be more concerned with ugly words than the underlying problems and that policing free expression on campus denies students the opportunity to learn to think for themselves 139 Their argument expressed confidence in the capacity and maturity of Harvard students to discuss contentious issues In April 2020 Christakis expressed concern that in the setting of the COVID 19 pandemic hospitals and medical schools were seeking to silence faculty and staff who were highlighting problems with the response he stated that clamping down on people who are speaking is a kind of idiocy of the highest order 140 In July 2020 Christakis was one of the 153 signers of A Letter on Justice and Open Debate also known as the Harper s Letter that expressed concern that the free exchange of information and ideas the lifeblood of a liberal society is daily becoming more constricted 141 In 2021 Christakis was asked to join the advisory council of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression FIRE 142 In 2022 he joined the advisory council of Heterodox Academy 143 In 2023 Christakis was the recipient of the Silverglate Award for Championing Free Expression at the inaugural gala held by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression in New York City 144 Yale Halloween controversy edit In 2015 Christakis and his wife Erika were involved in a controversy related to Halloween costumes at Yale University In October of that year the Intercultural Affairs Council at Yale a group of fourteen administrators sent an email to undergraduates that recommended students be careful when choosing Halloween outfits suggesting they avoid various sorts of costumes incorporating potentially offensive elements and including a link to a Pinterest page with recommended and non recommended costumes 145 146 147 In response Erika a lecturer on early childhood education at the Yale Child Study Center wrote an email on October 29 on the role of free expression in universities She argued from a developmental perspective that students might wish to consider whether administrators should provide guidance on Halloween attire or whether students would prefer to dress themselves She noted that her husband s advice was that if you don t like a costume someone is wearing look away or tell them you are offended Talk to each other Free speech and the ability to tolerate offense are the hallmarks of a free and open society 148 This e mail played a role in protests on campus that received national attention in the United States 149 Christakis and his wife were criticized by some students for placing the burden of confrontation education and maturity on the offended 150 Other students however pointed out that Erika Christakis was defending the rights to free expression of all Yale students and expressing confidence in them and in their capacity to discuss and confront such issues among themselves 151 152 During the controversy some students asked President Salovey to remove Nicholas and Erika Christakis from their positions at the helm of Silliman College and in a separate development over 400 faculty members signed a letter on the broader issue of supporting greater diversity 153 Ninety one Yale faculty members signed a different letter supporting the Christakises and this letter noted that the couple themselves distinguished support for freedom of expression from supporting the content of such expression the Christakises had noted that they would find many of the same costumes offensive as some students would 154 Christakis stepped down from his role at Silliman College eight months later at the end of the academic year a step The Atlantic later decried noting when Yale s history is written they should be regarded as collateral damage harmed by people who abstracted away their humanity 155 In a subsequent op ed in The New York Times his only published comment on the events Christakis argued Open extended conversations among students themselves are essential not only to the pursuit of truth but also to deep moral learning and to righteous social progress 156 A year later commentators condemned how students administrators and faculty had behaved at Yale and linked to substantial video footage of the events 157 In her only published remarks regarding what happened published a year later in October 2016 Erika Christakis described the circumstances including threats that she had faced in an Op Ed published in The Washington Post 158 Alum James Kirchick and former dean of the Yale Law School Anthony T Kronman have since criticized the university administration for abandoning or not supporting Christakis and his wife 159 160 The incident led to some students being called members of Generation Snowflake 161 In January 2016 Bill Maher expressed consternation at how the Yale students had behaved 162 In April 2017 an episode of The Simpsons titled Caper Chase satirized the events Also in 2017 a short documentary was released about the episode arguing that they reflected a collision between old values centered on reason and debate on the one hand and administrative bloat and a shift to a consumer mentality on the other this documentary also noted that Christakis comes from a multi racial family and has African American and Chinese siblings 147 The New York Times published a coda regarding the episode in August 2018 upon Christakis appointment as a Sterling Professor Yale s highest faculty rank 159 The 2015 occurrences at Yale have been discussed in at least twenty nonfiction books 163 164 Philosopher Russell Blackford provides a very precise and comprehensive timeline 165 Some of these books noted the sexism and irony that in a key episode that was part of the events when Christakis was surrounded by 150 students in a quad for two hours the students wished to hold Christakis responsible for his wife s email 166 167 Commentator Douglas Murray summarizes statements by students based on his review of extensive video footage released by the students themselves of the events in the quad and he notes Christakis emphasis on our common humanity 164 Many of the books have expressed concern at the illiberal actions of the students and of many administrators and faculty at Yale The behavior of the students also sparked a minor controversy at Harvard Law School when a student there wrote a piece decrying the Christakis treatment as fascism in the Harvard Law Record criticized for publishing the piece the Record s liberal editor in chief wrote that his role was editor in chief not thought policeman in chief 168 169 Christakis has spoken publicly about the events only rarely In an October 2017 interview with Sam Harris he discussed parts of the situation he faced framing the events at Yale in the broader context of what was happening on many campuses during that time period Harris noted that Christakis had the imperturbability of a saint 170 In March 2019 Christakis told Frank Bruni that partly in response to the events he worked to complete a long standing book project on the origins of goodness in society Blueprint 171 Personal life editChristakis resides in Norwich Vermont 172 He is married to early childhood educator and author Erika Christakis and they have four children one of whom they adopted later in life while serving as foster parents 173 174 175 His hobbies have included Shotokan karate as noted by his instructor Kazumi Tabata 176 and making maple syrup 177 Published works editBooks edit Death Foretold Prophecy and Prognosis in Medical Care 1999 ISBN 978 0226104706 Connected The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives 2009 with James Fowler ISBN 978 0316036146 Blueprint The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society 2019 ISBN 978 0316230032 Apollo s Arrow The Profound and Enduring Impact of Coronavirus on the Way We Live 2020 ISBN 978 0316628228Selected scientific papers edit Christakis NA Allison PD 2006 Mortality after the Hospitalization of a Spouse PDF New England Journal of Medicine 354 7 719 730 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa050196 PMID 16481639 S2CID 8229736 Archived from the original PDF on August 10 2017 Retrieved November 9 2015 Christakis NA Fowler JH 2007 The Spread of Obesity in a Large Social Network Over 32 Years PDF New England Journal of Medicine 357 4 370 379 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa066082 PMID 17652652 S2CID 264194973 Archived from the original PDF on November 18 2015 Retrieved November 9 2015 Elwert F Christakis NA 2008 The Effect of Widowhood on Mortality by the Causes of Death of Both Spouses PDF American Journal of Public Health 98 11 2092 2098 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2007 114348 PMC 2636447 PMID 18511733 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved November 9 2015 Christakis NA Fowler JH 2008 Quitting in Droves Collective Dynamics of Smoking Behavior in a Large Social Network PDF New England Journal of Medicine 358 21 2249 2258 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa0706154 PMC 2822344 PMID 18499567 Archived from the original PDF on August 10 2017 Retrieved November 9 2015 Fowler JH Christakis NA 2009 The Dynamic Spread of Happiness in a Large Social Network PDF British Medical Journal 337 768 a2338 doi 10 1136 bmj a2338 PMC 2600606 PMID 19056788 Archived from the original PDF on November 18 2015 Retrieved November 9 2015 Fowler JH Dawes CT Christakis NA 2009 Model of genetic variation in human social networks Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 6 1720 1724 Bibcode 2009PNAS 106 1720F doi 10 1073 pnas 0806746106 PMC 2644104 PMID 19171900 Fowler JH Christakis NA 2010 Cooperative Behavior Cascades in Human Social Networks Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107 12 5334 8 arXiv 0908 3497 Bibcode 2010PNAS 107 5334F doi 10 1073 pnas 0913149107 PMC 2851803 PMID 20212120 Christakis NA Fowler JH 2010 Social Network Sensors for Early Detection of Contagious Outbreaks PLOS ONE 5 9 e12948 arXiv 1004 4792 Bibcode 2010PLoSO 512948C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0012948 PMC 2939797 PMID 20856792 Christakis NA Fowler JH Imbens GW Kalyanaraman K 2010 An Empirical Model for Strategic Network Formation NBER Working Papers Working Paper Series 16039 doi 10 3386 w16039 Retrieved November 24 2022 Fowler JH Settle JE Christakis NA 2011 Correlated Genotypes in Friendship Networks Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108 5 1993 7 Bibcode 2011PNAS 108 1993F doi 10 1073 pnas 1011687108 PMC 3033315 PMID 21245293 Rand DG Arbesman S Christakis NA 2011 Dynamic Social Networks Promote Cooperation in Experiments with Humans Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108 48 19193 8 Bibcode 2011PNAS 10819193R doi 10 1073 pnas 1108243108 PMC 3228461 PMID 22084103 Apicella CL Marlowe FW Fowler JH Christakis NA 2012 Social Networks and Cooperation in Hunter Gatherers PDF Nature 481 7382 497 501 Bibcode 2012Natur 481 497A doi 10 1038 nature10736 PMC 3340565 PMID 22281599 Archived from the original PDF on December 15 2017 Retrieved November 9 2015 Christakis NA Fowler JH 2014 Friendship and Natural Selection Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111 3 10796 10801 arXiv 1308 5257 Bibcode 2014PNAS 111S0796C doi 10 1073 pnas 1400825111 PMC 4113922 PMID 25024208 Nishi CL Shirado FW Rand DG Christakis NA 2015 Inequality and Visibility of Wealth in Experimental Social Networks Nature 526 7382 426 429 Bibcode 2015Natur 526 426N doi 10 1038 nature15392 PMID 26352469 S2CID 4446774 Kim DA Hwong AR Stafford D Hughes DA O Malley AJ Fowler JH Christakis NA 2015 Social Network Targeting to Maximize Population Behavior Change A Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial The Lancet 386 9989 145 153 doi 10 1016 s0140 6736 15 60095 2 PMC 4638320 PMID 25952354 Shirado H Christakis NA 2017 Locally Noisy Autonomous Agents Improve Global Human Coordination in Network Experiments Nature 545 7654 370 374 Bibcode 2017Natur 545 370S doi 10 1038 nature22332 PMC 5912653 PMID 28516927 Traeger ML Sebo SS Jung M Scassellati B Christakis NA 2020 Vulnerable Robots Shape Human Conversational Dynamics in a Human Robot Team Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117 12 6370 6375 Bibcode 2020PNAS 117 6370T doi 10 1073 pnas 1910402117 PMC 7104178 PMID 32152118 Jia JS Lu X Yuan Y Xu G Jia J Christakis NA 2020 Population Flow Drives Spatio Temporal Distribution of COVID 19 in China Nature 582 7812 389 394 Bibcode 2020Natur 582 389J doi 10 1038 s41586 020 2284 y PMID 32349120 Shirado H Christakis NA 2020 Network Engineering Using Autonomous Agents Increases Cooperation in Human Groups iScience 23 9 101438 Bibcode 2020iSci 23j1438S doi 10 1016 j isci 2020 101438 PMC 7452167 PMID 32823053 Alexander M Forastiere L Gupta S Christakis NA 2022 07 26 Algorithms for seeding social networks can enhance the adoption of a public health intervention in urban India Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 119 30 e2120742119 doi 10 1073 pnas 2120742119 PMC 9335263 PMID 35862454 References edit Preface in Nicholas A Christakis Blueprint The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society Little Brown Spark 2019 Tom Conroy New Institute Will Advance the Interdisciplinary Study of Networks Yale News April 11 2013 Dr Nicholas A Christakis named Sterling Professor YaleNews July 23 2018 Retrieved July 25 2018 Five professors elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences Yale News April 11 2017 Retrieved April 18 2017 Anagoreysh toy Ka8hghth toy Yale Nicholas Christakis se epitimo didaktora toy Tmhmatos Oikonomikwn Episthmwn toy EKPA iatronet gr in Greek October 6 2021 Retrieved October 9 2021 Ariely Dan April 30 2009 Nicholas Christakis The 2009 Time 100 Time Archived from the original on May 3 2009 Retrieved November 10 2015 1 Archived December 18 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b Good By Design April 19 2019 Retrieved May 13 2019 Billen Andrew April 3 2019 Nicholas Christakis the Yale professor who stood up to the mob The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved May 13 2019 Nature nurture or network yalealumnimagazine com Retrieved May 13 2019 a b Gina Kolata A Conversation with Nicholas Christakis A Doctor with a Cause What s My Prognosis The New York Times November 28 2000 Nicholas A Christakis Edge Retrieved November 10 2015 Bita M Asad and Ahmed Mabruk Christakises To Be Pfoho House Masters The Harvard Crimson February 17 2009 Emma Platoff and Victor Wang Christakis named Silliman master Yale News February 27 2015 Radiological image interpretation apparatus and method Establishing a social network Disease diagnoses based disease prediction Shirado Hirokazu Fu Feng Fowler James H Christakis Nicholas A November 14 2013 Quality versus quantity of social ties in experimental cooperative networks Nature Communications 4 1 2814 Bibcode 2013NatCo 4 2814S doi 10 1038 ncomms3814 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 3868237 PMID 24226079 S2CID 6381186 Lungeanu Alina McKnight Mark Negron Rennie Munar Wolfgang Christakis Nicholas A Contractor Noshir S July 1 2021 Using Trellis software to enhance high quality large scale network data collection in the field Social Networks 66 171 184 doi 10 1016 j socnet 2021 02 007 ISSN 0378 8733 PMC 8117970 PMID 34219904 a b Christakis Nicholas A Allison Paul D February 16 2006 Mortality after the Hospitalization of a Spouse New England Journal of Medicine 354 7 719 730 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa050196 ISSN 0028 4793 PMID 16481639 S2CID 8229736 Elwert Felix Christakis Nicholas A February 2006 Widowhood and Race American Sociological Review 71 1 16 41 doi 10 1177 000312240607100102 ISSN 0003 1224 S2CID 15340529 Elwert Felix Christakis Nicholas A November 1 2008 Wives and ex wives A new test for homogamy bias in the widowhood effect Demography 45 4 851 873 doi 10 1353 dem 0 0029 ISSN 1533 7790 PMC 2789302 PMID 19110901 Elwert Felix Christakis Nicholas A November 1 2008 The Effect of Widowhood on Mortality by the Causes of Death of Both Spouses American Journal of Public Health 98 11 2092 2098 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2007 114348 ISSN 0090 0036 PMC 2636447 PMID 18511733 Christakis Nicholas A Iwashyna Theodore J August 1 2003 The health impact of health care on families a matched cohort study of hospice use by decedents and mortality outcomes in surviving widowed spouses Social Science amp Medicine 57 3 465 475 doi 10 1016 S0277 9536 02 00370 2 ISSN 0277 9536 PMID 12791489 Christakis Nicholas A July 22 2004 Social networks and collateral health effects BMJ 329 7459 184 185 doi 10 1136 bmj 329 7459 184 ISSN 0959 8138 PMC 487721 PMID 15271805 Christakis Nicholas A Fowler James H 2007 The Spread of Obesity in a Large Social Network over 32 Years The New England Journal of Medicine 357 4 370 379 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa066082 PMID 17652652 S2CID 264194973 Christakis Nicholas A Fowler James H 2008 The Collective Dynamics of Smoking in a Large Social Network The New England Journal of Medicine 358 21 2249 2258 doi 10 1056 NEJMsa0706154 PMC 2822344 PMID 18499567 Christakis Nicholas A Fowler James H 2008 Dynamic spread of happiness in a large social network longitudinal analysis over 20 years in the Framingham Heart Study British Medical Journal 337 337 a2338 doi 10 1136 bmj a2338 PMC 2600606 PMID 19056788 Christakis Nicholas A Fowler James H 2009 Connected The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives Little Brown and Co ISBN 978 0316036146 a b c Fowler J H Christakis N A 2010 Cooperative behavior cascades in human social networks Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107 12 5334 5338 arXiv 0908 3497 Bibcode 2010PNAS 107 5334F doi 10 1073 pnas 0913149107 PMC 2851803 PMID 20212120 a b c Rand DG Arbesman S Christakis NA November 2011 Dynamic social networks promote cooperation in experiments with humans Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 108 48 19193 19198 Bibcode 2011PNAS 10819193R doi 10 1073 pnas 1108243108 PMC 3228461 PMID 22084103 Kim David 2015 A Randomised Controlled Trial of Social Network Targeting to Maximise Population Behaviour Change The Lancet 386 9989 145 153 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 15 60095 2 PMC 4638320 PMID 25952354 a b Nishi Akihiro Shirado Hirokazu Rand David G Christakis Nicholas A October 2015 Inequality and Visibility of Wealth in Experimental Social Networks Nature 526 7573 426 429 Bibcode 2015Natur 526 426N doi 10 1038 nature15392 PMID 26352469 S2CID 4446774 a b c Shirado Hirokazu Christakis Nicholas A May 18 2017 Locally noisy autonomous agents improve global human coordination in network experiments Nature 545 7654 370 374 Bibcode 2017Natur 545 370S doi 10 1038 nature22332 ISSN 0028 0836 PMC 5912653 PMID 28516927 Alexander Marcus Forastiere Laura Gupta Swati Christakis Nicholas A July 26 2022 Algorithms for seeding social networks can enhance the adoption of a public health intervention in urban India Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 119 30 e2120742119 Bibcode 2022PNAS 11920742A doi 10 1073 pnas 2120742119 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 9335263 PMID 35862454 Nicholas Christakis The hidden influence of social networks TED Talk Retrieved November 10 2015 Shirado Hirokazu Iosifidis George Tassiulas Leandros Christakis Nicholas A March 6 2019 Resource sharing in technologically defined social networks Nature Communications 10 1 1079 Bibcode 2019NatCo 10 1079S doi 10 1038 s41467 019 08935 2 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 6403336 PMID 30842424 S2CID 71144947 Onnela Jukka Pekka Landon Bruce E Kahn Anna Lea Ahmed Danish Verma Harish O Malley A James Bahl Sunil Sutter Roland W Christakis Nicholas A March 1 2016 Polio vaccine hesitancy in the networks and neighborhoods of Malegaon India Social Science amp Medicine 153 99 106 doi 10 1016 j socscimed 2016 01 024 ISSN 0277 9536 PMID 26889952 Fu Feng Christakis Nicholas A Fowler James H March 2 2017 Dueling biological and social contagions Scientific Reports 7 1 43634 Bibcode 2017NatSR 743634F doi 10 1038 srep43634 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5333634 PMID 28252663 S2CID 470759 Shirado Hirokazu Crawford Forrest W Christakis Nicholas A May 27 2020 Collective communication and behaviour in response to uncertain Danger in network experiments Proceedings of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences 476 2237 20190685 Bibcode 2020RSPSA 47690685S doi 10 1098 rspa 2019 0685 PMC 7277132 PMID 32518501 Shirado Hirokazu Iosifidis George Christakis Nicholas A November 5 2019 Assortative mixing and resource inequality enhance collective welfare in sharing networks Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116 45 22442 22444 Bibcode 2019PNAS 11622442S doi 10 1073 pnas 1911606116 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 6842617 PMID 31636181 Iosifidis George Charette Yanick Airoldi Edoardo M Littera Giuseppe Tassiulas Leandros Christakis Nicholas A November 2018 Cyclic motifs in the Sardex monetary network Nature Human Behaviour 2 11 822 829 doi 10 1038 s41562 018 0450 0 ISSN 2397 3374 PMID 31558815 S2CID 53087039 Fowler J H Dawes C T Christakis N A February 2009 Model of Genetic Variation in Human Social Networks Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 6 1720 1724 arXiv 0807 3089 Bibcode 2009PNAS 106 1720F doi 10 1073 pnas 0806746106 PMC 2644104 PMID 19171900 Fowler James H Settle Jaime E Christakis Nicholas A 2011 Correlated genotypes in friendship networks Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108 5 1993 1997 Bibcode 2011PNAS 108 1993F doi 10 1073 pnas 1011687108 PMC 3033315 PMID 21245293 Christakis Nicholas A 2014 Friendship and natural selection Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111 Suppl 3 10796 10801 arXiv 1308 5257 Bibcode 2014PNAS 111S0796C doi 10 1073 pnas 1400825111 PMC 4113922 PMID 25024208 Apicella Coren L Marlowe Frank W Fowler James H Christakis Nicholas A 2012 Social networks and cooperation in hunter gatherers Nature 481 7382 497 501 Bibcode 2012Natur 481 497A doi 10 1038 nature10736 PMC 3340565 PMID 22281599 Henrich Joseph January 2012 Hunter gatherer cooperation Nature 481 7382 449 450 doi 10 1038 481449a ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 22281588 S2CID 205069663 Glowacki Luke Isakov Alexander Wrangham Richard W McDermott Rose Fowler James H Christakis Nicholas A October 25 2016 Formation of raiding parties for intergroup violence is mediated by social network structure Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113 43 12114 12119 Bibcode 2016PNAS 11312114G doi 10 1073 pnas 1610961113 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 5086992 PMID 27790996 Kim David A Hwong Alison R Stafford Derek Hughes D Alex O Malley A James Fowler James H Christakis Nicholas A July 11 2015 Social network targeting to maximise population behaviour change a cluster randomised controlled trial The Lancet 386 9989 145 153 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 15 60095 2 ISSN 0140 6736 PMC 4638320 PMID 25952354 Gachter Simon October 2015 Visible inequality breeds more inequality Nature 526 7573 333 334 doi 10 1038 526333a ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 26469042 S2CID 205086455 Gachter Simon May 2017 Occasional errors can benefit coordination Nature 545 7654 297 298 doi 10 1038 545297a ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 28516921 S2CID 205094047 Traeger Margaret L Strohkorb Sebo Sarah Jung Malte Scassellati Brian Christakis Nicholas A March 9 2020 Vulnerable robots positively shape human conversational dynamics in a human robot team Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117 12 6370 6375 Bibcode 2020PNAS 117 6370T doi 10 1073 pnas 1910402117 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 7104178 PMID 32152118 Shirado Hirokazu Christakis Nicholas A September 25 2020 Network Engineering Using Autonomous Agents Increases Cooperation in Human Groups iScience 23 9 101438 Bibcode 2020iSci 23j1438S doi 10 1016 j isci 2020 101438 ISSN 2589 0042 PMC 7452167 PMID 32823053 Christakis Nicholas A March 4 2019 How AI Will Rewire Us The Atlantic Retrieved May 21 2019 Christakis N A Fowler J H 2010 Social Network Sensors for Early Detection of Contagious Outbreaks PLOS ONE 5 9 e12948 arXiv 1004 4792 Bibcode 2010PLoSO 512948C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0012948 PMC 2939797 PMID 20856792 Nicholas Christakis How social networks predict epidemics TED Talk TED com Retrieved November 10 2015 Garcia Herranz Manuel Moro Esteban Cebrian Manuel Christakis Nicholas A Fowler James H 2014 Using Friends as Sensors to Detect Global Scale Contagious Outbreaks PLOS ONE 9 4 e92413 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 992413G doi 10 1371 journal pone 0092413 PMC 3981694 PMID 24718030 Stoeter Sarah January 11 2019 Yale News New Yale led project looks at the microbiome social network connection The NOMIS Foundation Retrieved May 12 2019 Sharlet Jeff February 24 2000 Prognosis Death The Chicago Reader www chicagoreader com Retrieved November 19 2015 HEARING BEFORE THE SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON AGING Serial No 106 37 PDF September 18 2000 Connected The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks Connectedthebook com Retrieved November 10 2015 Connected Hachette Book Group September 28 2009 Archived from the original on October 2 2012 Retrieved November 10 2015 Books for a Better Life Awards 2009 Bookreporter com www bookreporter com Retrieved June 9 2018 Clive Tomson Is Happiness Catching The New York Times September 14 2009 Christakis Nicholas A 2012 Social contagion theory examining dynamic social networks and human behavior Statistics in Medicine 32 4 556 577 arXiv 1109 5235 doi 10 1002 sim 5408 PMC 3830455 PMID 22711416 Nicholas A Christakis Hachette Book Group June 27 2017 Retrieved June 9 2018 Hardcover Nonfiction Books Best Sellers April 14 2019 The New York Times The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 27 2019 Barash David P April 24 2019 Blueprint Review Bending Toward Goodness The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved May 12 2019 Two books explore the evolutionary origins of morality The Economist May 2 2019 ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved May 12 2019 Prasad Aarathi May 10 2019 The Benevolent Power of Other People The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 12 2019 Fuentes Agustin March 19 2019 Evolving society why humanity coheres Nature 567 7748 308 309 Bibcode 2019Natur 567 308F doi 10 1038 d41586 019 00873 9 Billen Andrew April 3 2019 Nicholas Christakis the Yale professor who stood up to the mob The Times ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved July 28 2019 a b Elkins Kathleen July 27 2019 Bill Gates has a new favorite book that is optimistic and terrific CNBC Retrieved July 28 2019 The Sick Professor and our Better Angels The Attic Retrieved November 5 2019 Christakis Nicholas A May 26 2020 Apollo s Arrow Little Brown ISBN 9780316628228 Quammen David November 3 2020 The Pandemic s Future and Ours The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 26 2020 APOLLO S ARROW Kirkus Reviews Review The virus isn t transforming us It s speeding up the changes already underway Washington Post Retrieved December 29 2020 Nonfiction Book Review Apollo s Arrow The Profound and Enduring Impact of Coronavirus on the Way We Live by Nicholas A Christakis Little Brown Spark 29 288p ISBN 978 0 316 62821 1 PublishersWeekly com Retrieved December 29 2020 How will covid 19 change the world The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved July 24 2022 Apollo s Arrow by Nicholas A Christakis book review The TLS TLS Retrieved December 26 2020 Review Apollo s Arrow by Nicholas A Christakis Star Tribune Retrieved December 26 2020 Scarpino Samuel V November 17 2020 The pandemic is as much about society leaders and values as it is about a pathogen Books Et Al Retrieved December 26 2020 Announcing the 2021 PEN America Literary Awards Longlists PEN America December 22 2020 Retrieved December 26 2020 Epidemiologist looks to the past to predict second post pandemic roaring 20s the Guardian December 21 2020 Retrieved December 26 2020 P Glare and N A Christakis eds Prognosis in Advanced Cancer Oxford University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 19 853022 0 G Hanks N Cherny S Kassa R Portenoy N A Christakis and M Fallon eds Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine 4th ed Oxford University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 19 969314 6 Living Through the Pandemic A Review One Year Later Governing March 12 2021 Retrieved June 30 2022 Christakis Nicholas October 16 2020 The Long Shadow of the Pandemic 2024 and Beyond The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas November 13 2020 How the Swiss Cheese Model Can Help Us Beat Covid 19 The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved June 19 2022 a b Opinion Compassion in the time of coronavirus Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Erika Christakis Nicholas A March 16 2020 Closing the Schools Is Not the Only Option The Atlantic Retrieved June 19 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Christakis Soham Sankaran Jacob Derechin Nicholas A April 11 2021 Beach Photos Give People the Wrong Idea The Atlantic Retrieved June 19 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Christakis Nicholas A October 20 2021 Sometimes Altruism Needs to Be Enforced The Atlantic Retrieved June 19 2022 Feltham Eric October 15 2020 Voting in the 2020 Primaries Didn t Worsen the COVID 19 Pandemic FiveThirtyEight Retrieved June 19 2022 Nicholas Christakis on fighting covid 19 by truly understanding the virus The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved July 24 2022 The long goodbye to covid 19 The Economist ISSN 0013 0613 Retrieved July 24 2022 a b Friedersdorf Conor April 10 2020 Hospitals Must Let Doctors and Nurses Speak Out The Atlantic Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas A August 24 2007 Opinion The Bad News First The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas A July 30 2015 Making Friends in New Places The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas A June 22 2016 Teaching Inclusion in a Divided World The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas A July 19 2013 Opinion Let s Shake Up the Social Sciences The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 19 2022 Do the social sciences need a shake up Times Higher Education October 9 2014 Retrieved June 19 2022 Do We Need to Shake Up the Social Sciences Forum for Philosophy October 21 2014 Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Erika L Christakis Nicholas A September 19 2013 Navy Yard shootings What role does social isolation play in mass killings Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas June 18 2022 In some cultures multiple fathers or no fathers at all are the norm The Washington Post Retrieved June 18 2022 Arbesman Samuel Introducing the human computer The Boston Globe BostonGlobe com Retrieved September 21 2022 Christakis Nicholas A How AI Will Rewire Us The Atlantic Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas 2012 Americans Need to Leave the Deadbeats Behind Financial Times Retrieved June 18 2022 Erika Christakis and Nicholas A Christakis time com Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas December 19 2011 Putting the Social into Science Time Retrieved June 18 2022 Can Cultivating Individuality Draw Us Closer Together Time Retrieved June 19 2022 Nicholas Christakis How Do Our Social Networks Affect Our Health NPR org Retrieved June 19 2022 The Enduring Impact Of COVID 19 Fresh Air NPR org Retrieved June 19 2022 Nicholas Christakis Guest Amanpour amp Company PBS Amanpour amp Company Retrieved June 19 2022 Nicholas Christakis How We re Wired for Goodness The On Being Project Retrieved June 30 2022 Are we all bigots Through the wormhole Discovery Science Documentary with Morgan Freema The Bes retrieved March 9 2023 Vital Pictures Unnatural Causes PDF This Emotional Life Georgia Public Broadcasting Retrieved March 9 2023 Crossroads Retrieved March 9 2023 Kolata Gina November 28 2000 A Conversation with Nicholas Christakis A Doctor with a Cause What s My Prognosis The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 19 2022 Bruni Frank March 19 2019 Opinion A Disgusting Yale Professor Moves On The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 19 2022 Living Through the Pandemic A Review One Year Later Governing March 12 2021 Retrieved June 19 2022 1274 Nicholas Christakis March 28 2019 retrieved June 19 2022 1566 Nicholas Christakis November 18 2020 retrieved June 19 2022 100 Facing the Crowd Sam Harris Retrieved June 19 2022 How Should We Respond to Coronavirus A Conversation with Nicholas Christakis Episode 190 retrieved June 19 2022 A Pandemic of Incompetence A Conversation with Nicholas Christakis Episode 222 retrieved June 19 2022 Michael Shermer with Nicholas A Christakis Blueprint The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society retrieved June 19 2022 Michael Shermer with Nicholas Christakis Profound amp Enduring Impact of Coronavirus on How We Live retrieved June 19 2022 Are Humans Predisposed by Evolution to Get Along Podcast Reason com April 7 2019 Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas May 10 2010 The hidden influence of social networks retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Nicholas September 16 2010 How social networks predict epidemics retrieved June 19 2022 Aspen Times Weekly June 28 edition by Aspen Times Weekly issuu com June 27 2012 Retrieved June 19 2022 Nicholas A Christakis Edge org www edge org Retrieved June 19 2022 Social Networks Are Like the Eye Edge org www edge org Retrieved September 29 2022 A New Kind of Social Science for the 21st Century Edge org www edge org Retrieved September 29 2022 Nicholas Christakis The Science of Social Connections HeadCon 13 Part V Edge org www edge org Retrieved June 19 2022 Christakis Erika Christakis Nicholas A December 4 2012 Whither Goes Free Speech at Harvard Time Retrieved July 13 2016 Friedersdorf Conor April 10 2020 Hospitals Must Let Doctors and Nurses Speak Out The Atlantic Retrieved April 13 2020 A Letter on Justice and Open Debate Harper s Magazine Harper s Magazine July 7 2020 Retrieved August 23 2022 FIRE s Advisory Council FIRE Retrieved March 3 2022 Our Advisory Council Heterodox Academy Retrieved July 5 2022 SPEAKERS Free Speech Makes Free People Celebrating a New Era of FIRE web cvent com Retrieved April 22 2023 Email from the Intercultural Affairs Committee FIRE October 27 2015 Retrieved October 26 2022 Friedersdorf Conor November 9 2015 The New Intolerance of Student Activism The Atlantic Retrieved November 17 2015 a b Silence U Part 2 What Has Yale Become We the Internet Documentary March 22 2017 retrieved March 23 2017 Dressing Yourselves October 30 2015 Retrieved January 6 2016 Stack Liam November 8 2015 Yale s Halloween Advice Stokes a Racially Charged Debate The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 17 2015 White Gillian November 10 2015 The Problem with Vilifying the Yale Student Activists The Atlantic Retrieved November 17 2015 Yale Students Demand Resignations from Faculty Members Over Halloween Email fire org November 6 2015 Retrieved November 19 2015 Friedersdorf Conor November 9 2015 The New Intolerance of Student Activism The Atlantic Retrieved January 4 2016 Stanley Becker Isaac November 13 2015 Minority students at Yale give list of demands to university president Washington Post Retrieved October 25 2022 Letter of Support for Erika and Nicholas Christakis Retrieved January 4 2016 Friedersdorf Conor May 26 2016 The Perils of Writing a Provocative Email at Yale The Atlantic Retrieved June 1 2016 Christakis Nicholas June 22 2016 Teaching Inclusion in a Divided World The New York Times Retrieved October 7 2016 Kirchick James September 22 2016 New Videos Show How Yale Betrayed Itself by Favoring Cry Bullies Tablet Retrieved September 23 2016 Christakis Erika October 28 2016 My Halloween email led to a campus firestorm The Washington Post Retrieved October 29 2016 a b Wang Vivian August 14 2018 Once at Center of Yale Protests Professor Wins the School s Highest Honor The New York Times Retrieved August 16 2018 Turner Samuel September 5 2019 Former YLS dean reignites Calhoun conversation Yale Daily News Fox Claire 2016 I find that offensive Biteback Martyrs Without a Cause YouTube Archived from the original on December 15 2021 Cabranes J 2017 Campus Speech in Crisis What the Yale Experience Can Teach America New York Encounter Books Dattel G 2017 Reckoning with Race America s Failure New York Encounter Books Fox C 2017 I Find that Offensive London Biteback Furedi F 2017 What s Happened to the University A Sociological Exploration of Its Infantalisation London Routledge Schwartz HS 2016 Political Correctness and the Destruction of Social Order London Palgrave Macmillan Ben Porath Sigal 2017 Free Speech on Campus Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press Chemerinsky Erwin Gillman Howard 2017 Free speech on campus New Haven ISBN 9780300226560 OCLC 978291333 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Nichols Thomas M 2017 The death of expertise the campaign against established knowledge and why it matters New York NY ISBN 9780190469412 OCLC 965120125 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link HAIDT JONATHAN 2018 CODDLING OF THE AMERICAN MIND how good intentions and bad ideas are setting up a generation for failure S l PENGUIN BOOKS ISBN 9780735224896 OCLC 1007552624 CAMPBELL BRADLEY 2018 RISE OF VICTIMHOOD CULTURE microaggressions safe spaces and the new culture wars S l PALGRAVE MACMILLAN ISBN 9783319703282 OCLC 1006306577 Whittington Keith E April 10 2018 Speak freely why universities must defend free speech Princeton New Jersey ISBN 9780691181608 OCLC 1028552259 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Goldberg Jonah Suicide of the west how the rebirth of tribalism populism nationalism and identity politics is destroying American democracy 1st ed New York ISBN 9781101904930 OCLC 973135836 Sasse Benjamin E October 16 2018 Them why we hate each other and how to heal 1st ed New York ISBN 9781250193681 OCLC 1055766385 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Chris Clearfield Tilcsik Andras 2018 Meltdown why our systems fail and what we can do about it New York ISBN 9780735222632 OCLC 993419323 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Maltz Bovy Phoebe March 14 2017 The perils of privilege why injustice can t be solved by accusing others of advantage 1st ed New York ISBN 9781250091208 OCLC 973480779 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Doyle Eamon July 15 2018 Freedom of speech on campus Doyle Eamon 1988 1st ed New York NY ISBN 9781534503076 OCLC 1019833275 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Everett Piper August 7 2017 Not a daycare the devastating consequences of abandoning truth Washington D C ISBN 9781621576051 OCLC 999673768 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Heather Mac Donald The diversity delusion how race and gender pandering corrupt the university and undermine our culture 1st ed New York ISBN 9781250200914 OCLC 1024091839 a b Murray Douglas September 17 2019 The madness of crowds gender race and identity London ISBN 9781635579987 OCLC 1119529087 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Blackford Russell 2019 The tyranny of opinion conformity and the future of liberalism Bloomsbury pp 142 149 ISBN 9781350056022 OCLC 1048595507 Fox C 2017 I Find that Offensive London Biteback Ben Porath Sigal 2017 Free Speech on Campus Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press Fascism at Yale The Harvard Law Record Retrieved February 8 2018 A Note from the Editor in Chief Why I Don t Censor Conservative Articles The Harvard Law Record Retrieved February 8 2018 Harris Sam Facing the Crowd Retrieved October 11 2017 Bruni Frank March 19 2019 Opinion A Disgusting Yale Professor Moves On The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 24 2019 Earle Sarah May 30 2019 Norwich author examines the traits common to good societies Valley News Retrieved May 31 2019 Kolin Danielle House Master Families Reflect The Harvard Crimson Retrieved August 15 2016 Gallagher Brian August 22 2019 Humans Are Wired for Goodness Nautilus Retrieved September 17 2019 Christakis Erika December 9 2019 Should We Worry that American Children Are Becoming Less Creative The Washington Post Retrieved January 20 2020 Tabata Kazumi Warrior Wisdom Tuttle publishing 2013 ISBN 978 4805312711 The Thing That Says It All theatlantic com External links editNicholas Christakis Yale University Nicholas Christakis at TED nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nicholas Christakis amp oldid 1182165036, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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