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    "147882-21902139":
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        "event_title":"Melissa Jones Exhibition",
        "occurrence_title":"",
        "combined_title":"Melissa Jones Exhibition: Internal Architecture",
        "event_subtitle":"Internal Architecture",
        "event_type":"Exhibition",
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        "description":"Melissa Jones works across multiple mediums, consistently centering the human figure, texture, and elements of the natural world\u2014such as weathered surfaces, bones, and rust. These recurring interests create a unifying thread throughout her work, regardless of medium.\nShe creates in both two and three dimensions, including sculpture, painting, and assemblage. Oil painting is her preferred medium, allowing her to work slowly in layered processes and achieve a wide range of nuanced effects.\n\nJones\u2019 work is primarily figurative, often narrative and autobiographical\u2014though not strictly self-portraiture. Her figures are intended to evoke emotional responses that are less commonly found in landscape or other painting genres. She draws inspiration from the visual poetry of the human form, finding beauty in subtle details: the turn of a wrist, the curve of a spine, or the shadow along a collarbone. She is captivated by how light illuminates the skin and how shadow defines form, embracing the challenge of capturing this complexity in paint. Beyond physical representation, her work also explores psychological dimensions, aiming to convey mood and emotional depth.\n\nHer technique, in both painting and sculpture, is highly detailed, realistic, and developed gradually over time through layered processes. At times, her work enters the realm of magical realism. While deeply personal, her narratives remain intentionally ambiguous, inviting viewers to interpret the imagery through their own perspectives and experiences.\n\nBorn and raised in Detroit, Jones studied at Wayne State University, earning a Bachelor\u2019s degree in Art Education and a Master\u2019s degree in Art Therapy. She previously worked as an art educator in the West Bloomfield School District and has exhibited professionally throughout the Detroit area since 2006, receiving numerous awards. In addition, she served as a board member and exhibition committee member for the Detroit Artists Market.",
        "occurrence_notes":"Mon-Friday, 9 am to 5 pm or by appointment serrag@med.umich.edu",
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        "building_id":"0",
        "building_name":"North Campus Research Complex Building 18",
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        "room":"Rotunda Gallery",
        "location_name":"North Campus Research Complex Building 18",
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        "cost":"",
        "tags":["ArtsEngine","ArtsRx","Detroit","Exhibition","Family","Free","Humanities","Visual Arts"],
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        "sponsors":[
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                "group_name":"North Campus Research Complex NCRC Art Program",
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                "website":"https:\/\/ncrc.umich.edu\/life-ncrc\/occupant-amenities\/art-program"                }                    ],
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        "datetime_modified":"20260518T091620",
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        "date_start":"2026-06-03",
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        "time_zone":"America\/Detroit",
        "event_title":"Resistance is Fertile: Celebrating 30 Years of Cultivating Change",
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        "combined_title":"Resistance is Fertile: Celebrating 30 Years of Cultivating Change",
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        "event_type":"Exhibition",
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        "description":"Resistance Is Fertile honors the founding moment of the Institute for Research on Women & Gender, while speaking to the present. The institute was established because faculty members believed that research on women, gender, and sexuality required an institutional commitment to thrive. That belief was itself a form of resistance\u2014to disciplinary silos, to marginalization, to the idea that such scholarship was peripheral.\n\nThis theme reminds us that resistance is not merely reactive; it is constructive. When rooted in collaboration and sustained through infrastructure, it produces knowledge that reshapes disciplines, institutions, and public life.\n\nThis exhibit celebrates 30 years of IRWG\u2014its history, its programs, and the people whose vision and labor built it into what it is today. Through archival materials, milestones, and stories, we trace the evolution of an institute that has continually expanded the boundaries of research in women, gender, and sexuality.\n\nThis exhibit centers growth, collaboration, and intellectual creativity\u2014honoring the sustained efforts, bold ideas, and collective care that have shaped IRWG\u2019s legacy and continue to guide its future.\n\nHosted and sponsored by the Institute for Research on Women and Gender and the Department of Women\u2019s and Gender Studies, U-M. \n\nLocated on the first floor of Lane Hall (204 S. State Street), the Exhibit Space is free and open to the public, M-F, 9am-4pm.",
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        "tags":["Activism","gender","Gender Based Violence","women","Women History","Women's And Gender Studies","women's studies"],
        "website":"https:\/\/irwg.umich.edu\/lanehall",
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                "website":"http:\/\/irwg.umich.edu\/"                },             {
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    {
        "datetime_modified":"20260508T155502",
        "datetime_start":"20260603T090000",
        "datetime_end":"20260603T200000",
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        "date_start":"2026-06-03",
        "date_end":"2026-06-03",
        "time_start":"09:00:00",
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        "time_zone":"America\/Detroit",
        "event_title":"The People\u2019s Bicentennial",
        "occurrence_title":"",
        "combined_title":"The People\u2019s Bicentennial",
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        "event_type":"Exhibition",
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        "description":"This selection of original artifacts documents the work of the Peoples Bicentennial Commission (PBC), which challenged the official, corporate-sponsored commemoration of the 1976 bicentennial. This year we celebrate the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.\n\nItems on display are from the Joseph A. Labadie Collection, which documents social protest movements and radical history.\n\nHOURS\nSunday 2-8pm\nMonday-Thursday 9am-8pm\nFriday 9am-4pm\nSaturday 11am-5pm",
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        "building_name":"Hatcher Graduate Library",
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        "room":"Hatcher Gallery Exhibit Room (1st floor)",
        "location_name":"Hatcher Graduate Library",
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        "tags":["Free","History","Library"],
        "website":"https:\/\/www.lib.umich.edu\/events",
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    }    ,    "148420-21904230":
    {
        "datetime_modified":"20260526T134332",
        "datetime_start":"20260603T100000",
        "datetime_end":"20260603T120000",
        "has_end_time":1,
        "date_start":"2026-06-03",
        "date_end":"2026-06-03",
        "time_start":"10:00:00",
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        "time_zone":"America\/Detroit",
        "event_title":"Dissertation Defense: The Pursuit of Value: Essays on the Cognitive Science of Motivation",
        "occurrence_title":"",
        "combined_title":"Dissertation Defense: The Pursuit of Value: Essays on the Cognitive Science of Motivation: Paul de Font-Reaulx",
        "event_subtitle":"Paul de Font-Reaulx",
        "event_type":"Other",
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        "description":"ABSTRACT:\n\nHumans have motivations to do things. The same is true for animals, and perhaps for artificial agents as well. How does this work? This dissertation is an attempt to answer that question, and explore the normative and descriptive consequences of the answer. To do so, I draw on formal and computational models from philosophy, economics, and artificial intelligence research, and empirical evidence from cognitive neuroscience and psychology.\n\n\nAt the heart of the dissertation is a new view of motivation that I call externalism about expected value maximization, or externalism for short. Externalism agrees with all standard accounts of rationality that a rational agent performs actions that maximize the achievement of some metric of value. However, it relaxes an additional assumption that is typically made implicitly, namely that what has value is a function of the agent themselves, for example their preferences or desires. According to externalism, rational agents do not determine the value of an option any more than they determine its weight. Instead, they represent value as they would other quantities: as existing independent of themselves and able to be estimated in light of evidence. Unlike estimations of other quantities, however, the estimations of value govern their behavior: motivation is the direct pursuit of expected value.\n\nI present the idea of externalism in a new introductory essay written for the dissertation, titled \u2018Rationality Externalized\u2019. The next three papers elaborate on the externalist picture, although implicitly so. (1) In Chapter 2, titled \u2018What Stands to Desire as Perception Stands to Belief?\u2019, I consider how our motivational attitudes can be updated from experience, and whether any mental capacity allows for this in the way that perception does for belief. I propose a novel functional capacity that I call conaception, and argue that it provides signals that update representations of value and thereby change our desires. I also suggest that evolution has plausibly tuned our minds to interpret these signals so as to steer us towards what is good for us in a normatively substantive sense.\n\nIn Chapter 3, \u2018Reward is Evidence of Value\u2019, I develop this idea in more formal and empirical detail, suggesting that reward signals should be seen as one crucial source of evidence of value. This resolves an ongoing debate about how to interpret computational models in Reinforcement Learning as applying to humans and other animals. In Appendix A, I demonstrate the formal details of this account, and show how standard RL algorithms converge on Bayesian solutions even assuming an evidential interpretation of reward. In Chapter 4, \u2018A Conflation of Valences\u2019, I consider the relation between reward learning and hedonic valence. A common view is to identify hedonic experience as the biological instantiation of reward signals. I argue that this is empirically implausible, and articulate the implications of this separation for the distribution of sentience and other philosophical questions.\n\nChapter 5 and 6 deal with two quite different but related issues. In Chapter 5, \u2018Do Expected Utility Maximizers Have Commitment Issues?\u2019, I consider a long-standing criticism of standard expected utility theory, namely that it implausibly recommends us to tie ourselves to the proverbial mast whenever we expect our future preferences to change in a way that is contrary to our current goals, even at great cost. Drawing on Bayesian reputation games, I propose a novel solution by arguing that expected value maximizers typically have an incentive to follow-through on prior commitments after all, because by doing so we foster a reputation with ourselves that permits rationally pursuing better outcomes in the future. In Appendix B, I prove the main result of this chapter.\n\nFinally, in Chapter 6, \u2018The AI Epistemic Deference Index: A Continuous Measure of Sycophancy\u2019 (co-authored with Alejandro Botas and Luke Hewitt), I approach a contemporary practical problem related to human motivation: it is well-known that current artificial agents trained on human feedback provide excessively sycophantic interactions. This provides inaccurate evidence for users, shaping both our beliefs and values in detrimental ways. We present new techniques for providing a scalar metric to assess the sycophantic behavior of current models, and demonstrate substantial differences between them.\n\n\n(1) These papers were written prior to the introduction and do not reference externalism as such, but can naturally be interpreted as contributing to that overarching program.\n\nThose interested in reading the full dissertation beforehand can contact the candidate to request a draft.\n\nCOMMITTEE:\nSripada, Chandra  (chair)\nRailton, Peter\nJoyce, Jim\nLewis, Rick (cognate, Cognitive Science)\nChalmers, Dave (special member, NYU)",
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                "group_name":"Department of Philosophy",
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    {
        "datetime_modified":"20260513T130858",
        "datetime_start":"20260603T100000",
        "datetime_end":"20260603T130000",
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        "date_start":"2026-06-03",
        "date_end":"2026-06-03",
        "time_start":"10:00:00",
        "time_end":"13:00:00",
        "time_zone":"America\/Detroit",
        "event_title":"June 1-10, 2026  MWF Course - Data Collection Using Wearables, Sensors, and Apps in the Social, Behavioral, and Health Sciences",
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        "combined_title":"June 1-10, 2026  MWF Course - Data Collection Using Wearables, Sensors, and Apps in the Social, Behavioral, and Health Sciences: Heidi Guyer - RTI International",
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        "description":"June 1-10, 2026  MWF\n10:00am - 1:00pm\nA live course via Zoom. Registration and payment are required a minimum of two weeks prior to the start of the course. \n\nFounded in 1948, the Summer Institute in Survey Research Techniques is designed specifically to meet the needs of professionals and graduate students seeking to deepen their expertise in survey methodology and data collection. Offered through the Michigan Program in Survey and Data Science within the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan, the program provides a rigorous and flexible curriculum that blends theoretical foundations with practical application \u2014 entirely online.\n\nData Collection Using Wearables, Sensors, and Apps in the Social, Behavioral, and Health Sciences\n\nThe recent proliferation of mobile technology allows researchers to collect objective health and behavioral data at increased intervals, in real time, and may also reduce participant burden. In this course, we will provide examples of the utility of and integration of wearables, sensors, and apps in research settings. Examples will include the use of wearable health devices to measure activity, apps for ecological momentary assessment, and smartphone sensors to measure sound and movement, among others. Additionally, this course will consider the integration of these new technologies into existing surveys and the quality of the data collected from the total survey error perspective. We will discuss considerations for assessing coverage, participation, and measurement error when integrating wearables, sensors, and apps in a research setting as well as the costs and privacy considerations when collecting these types of data. Participants will work in groups to discuss a research study design using new technology and have the opportunity for hands-on practice with sensor data.\n\nHeidi Guyer is Senior Public Health Research Scientist at RTI International. Before joining RTI, she was a Senior Survey Director and oversaw data collection on large national and international health research projects at the University of Michigan. She received a PhD in Epidemiology from the University of Michigan and a Master of Public Health from the University of Texas. She has extensive experience in population-based data collection, cross-sectional and longitudinal health surveys, and adapting clinical measures and new technology in health research. Her substantive areas of research have focused on the association between health behaviors, such as sleep and diet quality, and the development of chronic health conditions.",
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