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Home > About SI > John Seely Brown Symposium

John Seely Brown Symposium on Technology and Society


2006 JSB Symposium: Gaming and Learning


  • Featured Speaker: Steven Johnson
    (author most recently of Everything Bad Is Good For You and The Ghost Map: The Story of London’s Most Terrifying Epidemic and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World)
  • Time: 2:00 p.m., Friday, October 13, 2006
  • Place: Biomedical Science Research Building
    (at Huron and Glen on U-M's Central Campus)

The John Seely Brown Symposium is sponsored by the University of Michigan School of Information. The centerpiece of the Symposium is the John Seely Brown Lecture, which is supported by a five-year gift from John Seely Brown (a.k.a. "JSB"). Brown is an alumnus of U-M, having earned an MS in mathematics in 1964 and a Ph.D. in computer and communication sciences in 1972 from the University. He has been a strong supporter of SI for a number of years now.

The first John Seely Brown Symposium on Technology and Society was held at the University of Michigan on September 8 & 9, 2000.

The inaugural symposium featured a lecture by Stanford Professor of Law Lawrence Lessig, titled "Architecting Innovation," and a panel discussion, "The Implications of Open Source Software," featuring Brown, Lessig, and the William D. Hamilton Collegiate Professor of Complex Systems at SI, Michael D. Cohen.

The 2002 symposium featured the second of at least five lectures by internationally known scholars on the implications of technological advancement for societies. Elizabeth M. Daley, Dean, University of Southern California School of Cinema-Television and Executive Director, Annenberg Center for Communication, USC, gave the JSB Lecture at that event. Her talk, on what is often termed "multimedia literacy," was titled "Screen as Vernacular: An Expanding Concept of Literacy."

If you would like information on the next John Seely Brown Symposium, still being planned, please e-mail jsbsymposium@umich.edu and we will send you details as they become available.


Last updated: Aug 16, 2006 Home > About SI > John Seely Brown Symposium
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Steven Johnson

Steven Johnson, author most recently of Everything Bad Is Good For You and The Ghost Map: The Story of London’s Most Terrifying Epidemic and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World, is featured speaker at the 2006 John Seely Brown Symposium on Technology and Society.

The theme of the 2006 Symposium is "Gaming and Learning."

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