Biomimicry: Social Media Week at USC

The time is upon us. As I wrote about earlier this week, it is Social Media Week in Los Angeles, and I’m participating, liveblogging (on this post!

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The time is upon us. As I wrote about earlier this week, it is Social Media Week in Los Angeles, and I'm participating, liveblogging (on this post! refresh for updates below the fold), and livetweeting, and streaming a session at USC called Biomimcry: Science and Social Media.

An incomplete list of additional participants (who may or may not be livetweeting and/or blogging):


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Marc Cooper: @marc_cooper

Laura Nelson: @laura_nelson

Jessika Walsten:@JessikaWalsten

Lisa Rau: @LisaRau, Square Syndrome

Krishna Nayak:@krishusc

Raphael Rosen:@raphaelrosen22, Science Happenings

Casey Rentz:@caseyrentz, Noticing Science

Other links:

#SMWUSC hashtag archive

Neon Tommy

Social Media Week in LA

Several video clips from the event

Jump behind the fold (and refresh the page every once in a while) for liveblogging updates!

4:32pm: Thus concludes "Biomimicry."

4:30pm: Video conference over. And we didn't use anything more complicated than Skype!

4:03pm: Now we're on video conference via Skype with Alan Alda and his peeps at Stony Brook.

3:40pm: A tractor designed by nature? Combination of a bull and a warm. Takes in earth with claws, processes dirt and combines with seeds (the seeds grow internally). As the tail swings back and forth, it spreads the seeds around the land.

A coffee maker designed by nature? Modeled on birds. A large bag filled with lots of rocks, grinds up the coffee beans.

A goat is nature's perfect lawnmower.

3:30pm: The Rules of Biomimicry:

(1) Create within structure.

(2) Recycle everything.

(3) Reward cooperation.

(4) Demand local expertise.

(5) Curb excesses from within.

3:23pm: Three levels of communication: cosmetic, emotional, meta. The emotional level is what connects with audiences - useful to lead and close with meta, use cosmetic to create a platform.

3:13pm: The First Lesson of Improvisation: Agree on a game (but don't talk about it). Give people nothing to do and see what happens.

3:00pm: Bonifer: communication has changed, but behavior has remained remarkably the same. Hierarchies, status-seeking. Why are they the same when we're operating in a fundamentally different environment? We should use this as an opportunity, because journalists don't know what journalism will become - journalists enter the field by making an "agreement with the unknown." "It ain't gonna be writing science for TIME Magazine."

2:58pm: "improvisation" from Latin for "to see ahead" - in provisus - a process for producing consistently positive outcomes from unforeseen circumstances

2:48pm: How did we get here? Intersecting networks. (Jason's note: The Psychology of Chance Encounters, Albert Bandura (PDF)

2:33pm: That was a whole lotta "yes."

2:25pm: Teams 2-by-3 and The A Team are playing "Zip Zap Zop"

2:16pm: Counting down from eight. Room full of USC professors, students, writers, and friends jumping around. And counting down from eight.

2:12: Coming up with team names, and the game - how do you arrive at your team name?

Team names: 2-by-3; The A Team (they all have "A"s in their names); Humanimals (all like, have, or *are* animals)

2:09pm: Getting into teams. For.... something. I'm sure there's a very good reason for this.

2:05pm: Mike Bonifer, founder of Gamechangers introducing himself and the activity to the group.

Jason G. Goldman is a science journalist based in Los Angeles. He has written about animal behavior, wildlife biology, conservation, and ecology for Scientific American, Los Angeles magazine, the Washington Post, the Guardian, the BBC, Conservation magazine, and elsewhere. He contributes to Scientific American's "60-Second Science" podcast, and is co-editor of Science Blogging: The Essential Guide (Yale University Press). He enjoys sharing his wildlife knowledge on television and on the radio, and often speaks to the public about wildlife and science communication.

More by Jason G. Goldman

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