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It was a bit cloudy today, but I still enjoyed my run while accompanied by talks for my #AcademicRunPlaylist! (1/12)
A large pond, with ripples extending to the far shore, on a cloudy day. Bare, gnarled branches loom over the near bank on the left, and a white house is visible on the far bank amidst a forest of mostly evergreens dotted with a few brown-leafed trees
First was a great slate of talks on remote work at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research with Emma Williams-Baron (gendered implications for the rise of remote work, highly recommend), Hira Farooqi (women's labor market outcomes and fertility choices), Hoyoung Yoo (consequences of remote workers on local residents), and Alma Andino-Frydman (what constitutes a "digital nomad") https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IwZhk5Sq1c8 (2/12) #work #economics #RemoteWork
Next was a short talk by Athul Paul Jacob on building strategic language agents at Rutgers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwi_InNjKjI (3/12) #AI
#ai
Next was a fascinating (and troubling) talk by Jason Porter on economic strategies and slavery in classical Athens at the School of Advanced Study, University of London https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aD-ASfLDUwE (4/12) #history #Greece #anthropology #economics
Next was an interesting last day of the National Bureau of Economic Research's WFH shock to labor markets event https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fkmw59jF0W (5/12) #work #RemoteWork #economics
Next was a fantastic panel on generative AI and creative industries at UNSW with Joel Pearson, Kartini Ludwig, and Jules Munro. These are informed, excellent perspectives on the legal, technical, and psychological implications of generative AI for creative work. Highly recommend https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1Iba7JSGBw (6/12) #GenerativeAI #art #copyright #law

Matthew Rimmer hat dies geteilt