Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

21
September 2021 1 JEREMY FREESE Department of Sociology Stanford University 450 Jane Stanford Way Stanford, CA 94305 [email protected] EMPLOYMENT 2016-present Professor, Department of Sociology, Stanford University (Department Chair, 2021-present) 2013-2015 Ethel and John Lindgren Professor of Sociology, Northwestern University 2007-2015 Professor, Department of Sociology, Northwestern University (Department Chair, 2010-2013) 2007-2015 Faculty Fellow, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University 2013-2014 Visiting Professor, Institute for Quantitative Social Science, University of Queensland 2007 Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin–Madison 2005-2007 Fellow, Robert Wood Johnson Scholars in Health Policy Program, Harvard University 2005-2007 Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin– Madison 2001-2005 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin– Madison EDUCATION Ph.D. 2000, Indiana University, Sociology Special Concentration: Survey and Experimental Methodology Minor: Social Semiotics of Language Dissertation Title: “What Should Sociology Do About Darwin?: Evaluating the Potential Contributions of Sociobiology and Evolutionary Psychology

Transcript of Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Page 1: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

September 2021

1

JEREMY FREESE

Department of Sociology

Stanford University 450 Jane Stanford Way

Stanford, CA 94305 [email protected]

EMPLOYMENT 2016-present Professor, Department of Sociology, Stanford University (Department Chair, 2021-present) 2013-2015 Ethel and John Lindgren Professor of Sociology, Northwestern University 2007-2015 Professor, Department of Sociology, Northwestern University

(Department Chair, 2010-2013) 2007-2015 Faculty Fellow, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University 2013-2014 Visiting Professor, Institute for Quantitative Social Science, University of

Queensland 2007 Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin–Madison 2005-2007 Fellow, Robert Wood Johnson Scholars in Health Policy Program, Harvard

University 2005-2007 Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin–

Madison 2001-2005 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin–

Madison EDUCATION Ph.D. 2000, Indiana University, Sociology

Special Concentration: Survey and Experimental Methodology Minor: Social Semiotics of Language Dissertation Title: “What Should Sociology Do About Darwin?: Evaluating the Potential Contributions of Sociobiology and Evolutionary Psychology

Page 2: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 2

2

to Sociology” (Winner, American Sociological Association Dissertation Major Award, 2001) Committee: Brian Powell (chair), Arthur S. Alderson, Thomas F. Gieryn, J. Scott Long, Sheldon Stryker

M.A. 1995, Indiana University, Sociology

Thesis Title: “Prosody in Conversational News Deliveries.” Master’s Committee: Douglas W. Maynard, William A. Corsaro

B.A. 1993, with Honors and with Highest Distinction, University of Iowa,

Sociology Minor: English

PUBLICATIONS * indicates work with collaborators who were graduate students when the project was conducted. I denote this to indicate my interest and enthusiasm in working with graduate students, and it should not be interpreted in any way as diminishing or devaluing their contributions.

Forthcoming Austin van Loon* and Jeremy Freese. “Word Embeddings Reveal How

Fundamental Sentiments Structure Natural Language.” American Behavioral Scientist.

Forthcoming Joel Becker, Casper A. P. Burik, Grant Goldman, Nancy Wang ... Jeremy

Freese ... David Cesarini, Daniel J. Benjamin, Patrick Turley, and Aysu Okbay. “Resource Profile and User Guide of the Polygenic Index Repository.” Nature Human Behavior.

Forthcoming Jan G. Voelkel* and Jeremy Freese. “Open Computational Social

Science.” In Uwe Engel, Anabel Quan-Haase, Sunny Xun Liu, and Lars Lyberg (eds.) Handbook of Computational Social Science: Data Science, Statistical Modelling, and Machine Learning Methods.

2021 Sasha Johfre* and Jeremy Freese. “Reconstructing the Reference

Category” Sociological Methodology 51(2): 253-269. 2021 Nicole Janz and Jeremy Freese. “Good and Bad Replications.” PS:

Political Science & Politics. 54(2): 305-308. 2020 Jeremy Freese and David Peterson.* “Replication in Quantitative

Research” Pp. 267-282 in Colin Elman, John Gerring, and James Mahoney (eds.) The Production of Knowledge: Enhancing Progress in Social Science. Cambridge University Press.

Page 3: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 3

3

2020 Tom Vogl and Jeremy Freese. “Differential Fertility Makes Society More

Conservative on ‘Family Values.’” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117(14): 7696-7701.

2020 Matthew J. Salganik, Ian Lundberg, Alexander T. Kindel … Jeremy Freese

… Sara McLanahan. “Measuring the Predictability of Life Outcomes with a Scientific Mass Collaboration.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117(15): 8398-8403.

2020 Daniel Weiss, Erik R. Sund, Jeremy Freese, Steinar Krokstad. “The

Diffusion of Innovative Diabetes Technologies as a Fundamental Cause of Social Inequalities in Health. The Nord-Trondelag Health Study, Norway.” Sociology of Health and Illness 42: 1548-1565. doi: 10.1111/1467-9566.13147

2019 Amelia R. Branigan, Jeremy Freese, Steven Sidney, and Catarina I. Kiefe.

The Shifting Salience of Skin Color for Educational Attainment. Socius. https://doi.org/10.1177/2378023119889829

2019 Pamela Herd, Jeremy Freese, Kamil Sicinski, Benjamin W. Domingue,

Kathleen Mullan Harris, Caipeng Wei*, and Robert M. Hauser. “Genes, Gender Inequality, and Educational Attainment.” American Sociological Review 84(6): 1069-1098.

2019 Garret Christensen, Jeremy Freese, and Edward Miguel. Transparent and

Reproducible Social Science Research. University of California Press. 2018 Jeremy Freese and Livia Baer-Bositis*. “Networks of Problems: Social,

psychological, and genetic influences on health.” Current Opinion in Psychology 27: 88-92.

2018 Jeremy Freese and David Peterson.* “The Emergence of Statistical

Objectivity: Changing Ideas of Epistemic Vice and Virtue in Science” Sociological Theory 36: 289-313.

2018 Jeremy Freese. “The Arrival of Social Science Genomics.” Contemporary

Sociology 47: 524-536. 2018 Sam Trejo*, Daniel W. Belsky, Jason D. Boardman, Jeremy Freese,

Kathleen Mullan Harris, Pam Herd, Kamil Sicinski, Benjamin W. Domingue. “Schools as Moderators of Genetic Associations with Lifecourse Attainments: Evidence from the WLS and Add Health.” Sociological Science 5: 513-540 doi: 10.15195/v5.a22.

Page 4: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 4

4

2018 James J. Lee, Robbee Wedow, Aysu Okbay ... Jeremy Freese ... Daniel J.

Benjamin, and David Cesarini. “Gene discovery and polygenic prediction from a genome-wide association study of educational attainment in 1.1 million individuals.” Nature Genetics 50: 1112-1121.

2018 Daniel W. Belsky, Benjamin W. Domingue, Robbee Wedow* … Jeremy

Freese … Kathleen Mullan Harris. “Genetic Analysis of Social Class Mobility in Five Longitudinal Studies.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 115(31): E7275-E7284.

2018 Jeremy Freese and Molly M. King.* "Institutionalizing Transparency."

Socius 4:1-7. doi: 10.1177/2378023117739216. 2017 Jeremy Freese. "What about the behavioral constellation of advantage?"

Behavior and Brain Sciences 40: 26-27. 2017 David Figlio, Jeremy Freese, Krzysztof Karbnowik, and Jeffrey Roth.

"Socioeconomic Status and Genetic Influences on Cognitive Development." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). (Corresponding author.)

2017 Amelia R. Branigan, Christopher Wildeman, Jeremy Freese, Catarina I.

Keefe. Complicating Colorism: Race, Skin Color, and the Likelihood of Arrest. Socius 3:1-17. DOI: 10.1177/2378023117725611

2017 Sean A. P. Clouston, Marcie S. Rubin, David Chae, Jeremy Freese, Barbara

Nemesure, Bruce Link. "Fundamental causes of accelerated decline in colorectal cancer mortality: Modeling multiple ways that disadvantage influences mortality risk." Social Science & Medicine 187: 1-10.

2017 Deborah Carr, Elizabeth Heger Boyle, Benjamin Cornwell, Shelley Correll,

Robert Crosnoe, Jeremy Freese, and Mary C. Waters. The Art and Science of Social Research. New York: Norton.

2017 Jeremy Freese and Yu-Han Jao*. “Shared Environment Estimates for

Educational Attainment: A Puzzle and Possible Solutions.” Journal of Personality 85: 79-89.

2017 Jeremy Freese and David Peterson*. "Replication in Social Science."

Annual Review of Sociology 43: 147-165 2016 Jeremy Freese. “What We Talk About When We Talk About Causes: The

Case of Personality Traits.” European Journal of Personality 30: 313-315.

Page 5: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 5

5

2016 Kevin Levay*, Jeremy Freese, and James N. Druckman. “The

Demographic and Political Composition of Mechanical Turk Samples.” SAGE Open. DOI: 10.1177/2158244016636433

2016 Mullinix, Kevin J.*, Thomas J. Leeper, James N. Druckman, and Jeremy

Freese. “The Generalizability of Survey Experiments.” Journal of Experimental Political Science DOI: 10.1017/XPS.2015.19

2015 Headworth, Spencer* and Jeremy Freese. “Credential Privilege or

Cumulative Advantage? Prestige, Productivity, and Placement in the Sociology Job Market.” Social Forces. doi: 10.1093/sf/sov102

2015 Nosek, Brian A., G. Alter, G. C. Banks, D. Boorsboom, S.D. Bowman, S. J.

Breckler, S. Buck, C. D. Chambers, G. Chin, G. Christensen, M. Contestabile, A. Defoe, E. Eich, J. Freese, R. Glennerster, D. Goroff, D. P. Green, B. Hesse, M. Humphreys, J. Ishiyama, D. Karlan, A. Lupia, P. Mabry, T.A. Madon, N. Malhotra, E. Mayo-Wilson, M. McNutt, E. Miguel, E. Levy Paluck, U. Simonsohn, C. Soderberg, B. A. Spellman, J. Turitto, G. VandenBos, S. Vazire, E. J. Wagenmakers, R. Wilson, T. Yarkoni. “Promoting an Open Research Culture.” Science. 348: 1422-1425.

2014 Jeremy Freese. “Defending the Decimals: Why Foolishly False Precision

Might Strengthen Social Science.” Sociological Science 1:532-541. 2014 J. Scott Long and Jeremy Freese. Regression Analysis for Categorical

Dependent Variables Using Stata, Third Edition. College Station, TX: Stata Press. [Extensively revised; software completely rewritten.]

2014 Jill D. Weinberg*, Jeremy Freese, and David McElhattan*. “Comparing

Data Characteristics and Results of an Online Factorial Survey Between a Population-Based and a Crowdsource-Recruited Sample.” Sociological Science 1:292-310.

2014 Ethan Fosse*, Jeremy Freese, and Neil Gross. “Political Liberalism and

Graduate School Attendance: A Longitudinal Analysis.” In Neil Gross and Solon Simmons, Professors and their Politics.

2013 Amelia R. Branigan*, Kenneth J. McCallum*, and Jeremy Freese.

“Variation in the Heritability of Educational Attainment: An International Meta-Analysis.” Social Forces 92(1): 109-140.

Page 6: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 6

6

2013 Jason D. Boardman, Jonathan Daw, and Jeremy Freese. “Defining the Environment in Gene-Environment Research: Lessons from Social Epidemiology.” American Journal of Public Health 103.S1: S64-S72.

2013 Amelia R. Branigan*, Jeremy Freese, Assaf Patir*, Thomas W. McDade,

Kiang Liu, and Catarina I. Keefe. “Skin Color, Sex, and Educational Attainment in the Post-Civil Rights Era.” Social Science Research 42(6): 1659-1674.

2013 Jeremy Freese. “No Revolution? Don’t Blame Evolution.” (Featured

review essay) Contemporary Sociology 42(2): 190-193. 2013 Nora Cate Schaeffer, Dana Garbarski, Jeremy Freese, and Douglas W.

Maynard. “An Interactional Model of the Call for Survey Participation: Actions and Reactions in the Survey Recruitment Call.” Public Opinion Quarterly 77(1): 323-351.

2013 Jeremy Freese and J. Alex Kevern*. “Types of Causes.” Pp 27-44 in

Stephen L. Morgan (ed.) Handbook for Causal Analysis for Social Research.

2012 Chabris, Christopher, Benjamin M. Hebert, Daniel J. Benjamin, Jonathan

Beauchamp, David Cesarini, Magnus Johanneson, Patrik K. E. Magnusson, Paul Lichtenstein, Craig S. Atwood, Jeremy Freese, Taissa S. Hauser, Robert M. Hauser, Nicholas Christakis, David I. Laibson. “Most Published Genetic Associations with General Cognitive Ability are False Positives.” Psychological Science 23(11): 1314-1323.

2012 Maynard, Douglas W. and Jeremy Freese. “Good News, Bad News, and

Affect: Practical and Temporal ‘Emotion Work’ in Everyday Life.” Anssi Peräkylä and Marja-Leena Sorjonen (eds). Pp. 92-112 in Emotion in Interaction Cambridge University Press.

2012 Daniel J. Benjamin, David Cesarini, Christopher F. Chabris, Edward L.

Glaeser, David I. Laibson, Vilmundur Guðnason, Tamara B. Harris, Lenore J. Launer, Shaun Purcell, Albert Vernon Smith, Magnus Johannesson, Patrik K.E. Magnusson,Jonathan P. Beauchamp, Nicholas A. Christakis, Craig S. Atwood, Benjamin Hebert, Jeremy Freese, Robert M. Hauser,Taissa S. Hauser, Alexander Grankvist, Christina M. Hultman, Paul Lichtenstein “The promises and pitfalls of genoeconomics.” Annual Review of Economics 4: 627-662.

Page 7: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 7

7

2012 Jeremy Freese and Amelia R. Branigan*. “Cognitive Ability and Survey Nonresponse: Evidence from Two Longitudinal Studies in the United States.” EurAmerica 42(2): 221-248.

2011 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genomic Data and Social Science: Challenges

and Opportunities.” Politics and the Life Sciences 30(2): 88-92. 2011 Maynard, Douglas W., Nora Cate Schaeffer, and Jeremy Freese.

“Improving Response Rates in Telephone Interviews.” Charles Antaki (ed.) Applied Conversation Analysis. Palgrave Macmillan.

2011 Jeremy Freese. “Sociology’s Contribution to Understanding the

Consequences of Medical Innovations.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior 52: 282-284.

2011 Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk*, Jeremy Freese, Robert M. Hauser. “Using

Anchoring Vignettes to Assess Group Differences in General Self-Rated Health.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior 52: 246-261.

2011 Jeremy Freese and Karen Lutfey. “Fundamental Causality: Challenges of

an Animating Concept for Medical Sociology.” Pp. 67-84 in Bernice A. Pescosolido, Jack K. Martin, Jane McLeod, and Ann Rogers (eds.) The Handbook of the Sociology of Health, Illness, and Healing.

2010 Douglas W. Maynard, Jeremy Freese, Nora Cate Schaeffer. “Calling for

Participation: Requests, Blocking Moves, and Rational (Inter)action in Survey Introductions.” American Sociological Review 75(5):791-814.

2010 Lei Jin, Felix Elwert, Jeremy Freese, and Nicholas Christakis. “Preliminary

Evidence Regarding the Hypothesis that the Sex Ratio at Sexual Maturity May Affect Longevity in Men.” Demography 47: 579-86.

2010 Sara Shostak and Jeremy Freese. "Gene-Environment Interaction and

Medical Sociology." Pp. 418-434 Chloe E. Bird, Allen M. Fremont, Stefan Timmermans, and Peter Conrad (eds.) Handbook of Medical Sociology, 6th Edition.

2010 Jeremy Freese and Eszter Hargittai. “Cache Me If You Can.” Contexts

9(4): 66-68. 2009 Jeremy Freese and Sara Shostak. “Genetics and Social Inquiry.” Annual

Review of Sociology 35: 107-128.

Page 8: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 8

8

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Secondary Analysis of Large Social Surveys.” Pp. 238-261 in Eszter Hargittai (ed.) Research Confidential. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Preferences and the Explanation of Social Behavior.”

Pp. 94-114 in Peter Hedström and Peter Bearman, Oxford Handbook of Analytic Sociology.

2009 Sara Shostak, Jeremy Freese, Bruce G. Link, and Jo C. Phelan. “The

Politics of the Gene: Social Status and Beliefs about Genetics for Individual Outcomes.” Social Psychology Quarterly 72: 79-93.

2009 Jeremy Freese. “The Limits of Evolutionary Psychology and The Open-

Endedness of Social Possibility.” Sociologia 3. 2009 Jeremy Freese. “Blogs and the Attention Market for Public Intellectuals.”

Society 46:45-48. 2008 Jeremy Freese. “Genetics and the Social Science Explanation of Individual

Outcomes.” American Journal of Sociology 114: S1-S35. 2008 Jeremy Freese. “The Problem of Predictive Promiscuity in Deductive

Applications of Evolutionary Reasoning to Intergenerational Transfers: Three Cautionary Tales.” Pp. 45-78 in Alan Booth, Ann C. Crouter, Suzanne Bianchi, and Judith A. Seltzer (eds.) Caring and Exchange Within and Across Generations. Washington, DC: Urban Institute Press.

2008 Wendy Cadge, Jeremy Freese, and Nicholas Christakis. “The Provision of

Hospital Chaplaincy in the United States: A National Overview.” Southern Medical Journal 101(6): 626-630.

2007 Jeremy Freese. “Overcoming Objections to Open-Source Social Science.”

Sociological Methods and Research 36: 220-226. 2007 Jeremy Freese. “Replication Standards for Quantitative Social Science:

Why not Sociology?” Sociological Methods and Research 36:153-172. (Reprinted in W. Paul Vogt [ed.], Data Collection, Sage Benchmarks in Social Research Methods.)

2007 Jeremy Freese and James D. Montgomery. “The Devil Made Her Do It?:

Evaluating Risk Preference as an Explanation of Sex Differences in Religiousness.” Pp. 187-230 in Shelley J. Correll (ed.), Advances in Group Processes: The Social Psychology of Gender. Oxford: Elsevier.

Page 9: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 9

9

2007 Jeremy Freese, Sheri Meland*, and William Irwin*. “Expressions of Positive Emotion in Photographs, Personality, and Later-Life Marital and Health Outcomes.” Journal of Research on Personality. 41:488-497.

2007 Karen Lutfey and Jeremy Freese. “Ambiguities of Chronic Illness

Management and Challenges to the Medical Error Paradigm.” Social Science and Medicine 64: 314-325.

2006 Kathryn E. Flynn*, Maureen Smith, and Jeremy Freese. “When Do Older

Adults Turn to the Internet for Health Information? Findings from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study.” Journal of General Internal Medicine 21:1295-301.

2006 Kristen W. Springer*, Robert M. Hauser, and Jeremy Freese. “Bad News

Indeed for Ryff’s Six-Factor Model of Well-Being.” Social Science Research 35: 1120-1131.

2006 Jeremy Freese, Salvador Rivas, and Eszter Hargittai. “Cognitive Ability

and Internet Use among Older Adults.” Poetics. 34: 236-249. 2006 Jeremy Freese. “The Analysis of Variance and the Social Complexities of

Genetic Causation.” International Journal of Epidemiology 35: 534-536. 2005 J. Scott Long and Jeremy Freese. Regression Models for Categorical

Outcomes using Stata, Second Edition. College Station, TX: Stata Press. 2005 Karen Lutfey and Jeremy Freese. “Toward Some Fundamentals of

Fundamental Causality: Socioeconomic Status and Health in Treatment Design for Diabetes” American Journal of Sociology 110:1326-1372. (An 2013 abridgement and light revision of this paper appears in David Grusky (ed.) Social Stratification [Fourth edition, Westview Press]).

2004 Jeremy Freese. “Risk Preferences and Gender Differences in

Religiousness: Evidence from the World Values Survey.” Review of Religious Research 46: 88-91.

2003 Jason Schnittker, Jeremy Freese, and Brian Powell. “Who are Feminists

and What Do They Believe?: The Role of Generations.” American Sociological Review 68: 607-622.

2003 Jeremy Freese, Jui-Chung Allen Li*, and Lisa Wade*. “The Potential

Relevances of Biology to Social Inquiry.” Annual Review of Sociology 29: 233-56.

Page 10: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 10

10

2003 Dean Krahn, Jeremy Freese, Robert M. Hauser, Kristen Barry, Brian Goodman. “Alcohol Use and Cognition at Mid-Life: The Importance of Adjusting for Baseline Cognitive Ability and Educational Attainment.” Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research 27: 1162-66.

2003 Jeremy Freese and Brian Powell. “Tilting at Twindmills: Rethinking

Sociological Responses to Behavioral Genetics.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior 44: 130-135.

2003 Jeremy Freese. “Imaginary Imaginary Friends?: Television Viewing and

Satisfaction with Friendships.” Evolution and Human Behavior 24: 65-69. 2002 Jeremy Freese. “Least likely observations in regression models for

categorical outcomes” Stata Journal 2(3): 227-231. 2002 Jeremy Freese and Sheri Meland*. “Seven Tenths Incorrect:

Heterogeneity and Change in the Waist-to-Hip Ratios of Playboy Centerfold Models and Miss America Winners.” Journal of Sex Research 39: 133-138.

2002 Jeremy Freese. “Evolutionary Psychology: ‘New Science’ or the Same Old

Storytelling?” Contexts 1(3) 44-49. 2001 J. Scott Long and Jeremy Freese. Regression Models for Categorical

Outcomes using Stata. College Station, TX: Stata Press. Revised first edition, Stata Press, 2003.

2001 J. Scott Long and Jeremy Freese. “Predicted Probabilities for Count

Models.” Stata Journal 1(1): 51-57. 2001 Jeremy Freese and Brian Powell. “Making Love out of Nothing at All?:

Null Findings and the Trivers-Willard Hypothesis.” American Journal of Sociology 106: 1776-1789.

2000 Jeremy Freese and J. Scott Long. “Tests for Multinomial Logit.” Stata

Technical Bulletin 58: 19-25. 2000 J. Scott Long and Jeremy Freese. “Listing and Interpreting Transformed

Coefficients for Certain Regression Models.” Stata Technical Bulletin 57: 27-34.

2000 J. Scott Long and Jeremy Freese. “Scalar Measures of Fit for Regression

Models.” Stata Technical Bulletin 56: 34-40.

Page 11: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 11

11

2000 Jason Schnittker, Jeremy Freese, and Brian Powell. “Nature, Nurture, Neither, Nor: Black-White Differences in Beliefs about the Causes and Appropriate Treatment of Mental Illness.” Social Forces 72: 1101-1132.

1999 Jeremy Freese and Brian Powell. “Sociobiology, Status, and Parental

Investment in Sons and Daughters: Testing the Trivers-Willard Hypothesis” American Journal of Sociology 106: 1704-43.

1999 Jeremy Freese, Brian Powell, and Lala Carr Steelman. “Rebel Without a

Cause or Effect: Birth Order and Social Attitudes.” American Sociological Review 64: 207-31.

1999 Jeremy Freese, Julie Artis, and Brian Powell. “Now I Know My ABC’s:

Demythologizing Grade Inflation.” Pages 185-94 in The Social Worlds of Higher Education, Bernice A. Pescosolido and Ron Aminzade (eds.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press.

1998 Jeremy Freese and Douglas W. Maynard. “Prosodic Features of Bad News

and Good News in Conversation.” Language in Society 27: 195-219.

WORKING PAPERS (Only includes papers that have not yet otherwise been published.) 2019 Austin van Loon and Jeremy Freese, Word-embedding Data as an

Alternative to Questionnaires for Measuring the Affective Meaning of Concepts. SocArXiV

2019 Jeremy Freese, Benjamin Domingue, Sam Trejo*, Kamil Sicinski, Pamela

Herd. Problems with a Causal Interpretation of Polygenic Score Differences between Jewish and non-Jewish Respondents in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study. SocArXiV

2015 Jeremy Freese and David Peterson*. “The Emergence of Forensic

Objectivity.” Institute for Policy Research Working Paper Series, Northwestern University (WP-15-10)

2014 Kevin Mullinix*, James Druckman, and Jeremy Freese. “The

Generalizability of Survey Experiments” Institute for Policy Research Working Paper Series, Northwestern University (WP-14-19)

2014 J. Alex Kevern* and Jeremy Freese. “Differential Fertility as a

Determinant of Trends in Public Opinion about Abortion in the United

Page 12: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 12

12

States.” Institute for Policy Research Working Paper Series, Northwestern University (WP-14-11)

2007 James A. Yonker*, Robert M. Hauser, and Jeremy Freese. The

Dimensionality and Measurement of Cognitive Functioning at Age 65 in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study.

2006 Jeremy Freese and Salvador Rivas. Cognition, Personality, and Individual

Response to Technological Change: The Case of Internet Adoption. BOOK REVIEWS 2019 Jeremy Freese, "Personalized Medicine: Empowered Patients in the 21st

Century? by Barbara Prainsack," American Journal of Sociology 125, no. 1 (July 2019): 308-309.

2014 Jeremy Freese. Review of Amy J. Binder and Kate Wood’s Becoming Right: How Campuses Shape Young Conservatives. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. American Journal of Sociology 119:1478-1480.

2006 Jeremy Freese. Review of Paul Kamolnick’s The Just Meritocracy: IQ,

Class Mobility, and American Social Policy. Contemporary Sociology 35: 250-252.

2006 Jeremy Freese. Review of Gerhard Lenski’s Ecological-Evolutionary

Theory: Principles and Applications. Social Forces. 2003 Jeremy Freese. Review of Jonathan Marks’s What It Means To Be 98%

Chimpanzee: Apes, People, and Their Genes. Social Forces 81: 1054-1056.

2003 Jeremy Freese. “Between a Rock and a Blank Slate.” Review of Steven

Pinker’s The Blank Slate. Contexts 2 (2): 63-65. 2002 Jeremy Freese. Review of Lawrence Hamilton’s Statistics with Stata.

Stata Journal 2: 223-225. 2002 Jeremy Freese. Review of Stephen Sanderson’s The Evolution of Human

Sociality Contemporary Sociology 31: 358-59. 2001 Jeremy Freese. Review of Leon E. Trachtman and Robert Perrucci’s

Science Under Siege: Interest Groups and the Science Wars. Contemporary Sociology 30: 266-67.

Page 13: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 13

13

1998 Jeremy Freese and Brian Powell. Review of Frank J. Sulloway’s Born to

Rebel: Birth Order, Family Dynamics, and Creative Lives. Contemporary Sociology 27: 57-58.

1996 Jeremy Freese. Review of Howard Nathaniel Boughey’s Ordinary Social

Occasions, Sandcastles, and Structural Reproduction: A Sociology of Everybody’s Social Life. American Journal of Sociology, 102: 272-73.

RESEARCH SUPPORT

2021-2024 Principal Investigator (with Michael Davern, Stephen L. Morgan, Pamela Herd, and Rene Bautista). “A National Data Program for the Social Sciences: The General Social Survey and International Survey Programme.” $15,924,856

2020-2023 Principal Investigator (with James N. Druckman and Maureen Craig).

"Collaborative Research: Time-Sharing Experiments for the Social Sciences (TESS)" $3,491,538

2019-2021 Principal Investigator (with Michael Davern, Tom W. Smith, Stephen L.

Morgan, and Rene Bautista). “A National Data Program for the Social Sciences: The General Social Survey and International Survey Programme.” $8,222,298.

2019-2020 Co-investigator (with Benjamin W. Domingue and Sam Trejo). “Genetic

Cognitive Epidemiology: Using Molecular Genetic Data to Explore the Link Between Cognition and Mortality.” Stanford Center on the Demography and Economics of Health and Aging. $23,997.

2017-2019 Principal Investigator (with Benjamin W. Domingue and Pamela Herd).

“Sociogenomics in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study: Probing Questions of Validity Regarding the Genetics of Educational Attainment and Subsequent Occupational and Economic Attainments.” Russell Sage Foundation and Ford Foundation. $93,264.

2016-2019 Principal Investigator (with James N. Druckman). " Collaborative Research: Time-Sharing Experiments for the Social Sciences (TESS)" SES-1627769 $2,611,285. 2015-2019 Principal Investigator (with Stephen Morgan, Michael Hout, Tom W.

Smith, and Michael Davern) “A Proposal To Continue ‘A National Data

Page 14: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 14

14

Program for the Social Sciences’” National Science Foundation (NSF-1458922) $15,726,165.

2013-2018 Principal Investigator (with Robert M. Hauser and Pamela Herd).

“Developing a Longitudinal Resource for Genetic Research in Behavioral and Health Sciences.” National Institutes of Health (R01 AG041868) $5,100,000

2012-2015 Principal Investigator (with James Druckman) “Time-Sharing Experiments

in the Social Sciences.” National Science Foundation (#1227179). $2,787,617.

2010-2011 Principal Investigator (with Laura Beth Nielsen and Jill S. Weinberg).

“Contested Constructions of Discrimination.” American Bar Foundation. $288,720.

2009-2012 Principal Investigator (with Penny S. Visser). “Time-Sharing Experiments

in the Social Sciences.” National Science Foundation (#0818839). $2,323,508.

2006-2008 Co-investigator (with Douglas W. Maynard [PI] and Nora Cate Schaeffer).

“Recruiting Respondents to the Survey Interview.” National Science Foundation. $360,000.

2002-2007 Co-investigator. “The Wisconsin Longitudinal Study: As We Age.” R01

(R01-AG09775), National Insitute on Aging. $9,800,000. 2002-2007 Co-investigator. “The Wisconsin Longitudinal Study: Tracking the Life

Course” (P01-AG21079-01). $8,220,000. 2002-2007 Co-investigator (with Robert M. Hauser). “Social and Behavioral Contexts

of the Aging Mind.” (project of P01-AG21079-01) $1,076,000.

2002-2003 “Adolescent facial attractiveness and later life outcomes: Using yearbook data and the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study” University of Wisconsin Graduate School Research Competition. Amount awarded: $17,072

2001-2002 “The Darwin Problem: Confronting the Potential Relevance of Our Evolutionary Past for Understanding Social Life Today” University of Wisconsin Graduate School Research Competition. $23,796

2001-2007 Vilas Young Investigator Award, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

$50,000.

Page 15: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 15

15

HONORS AND AWARDS 2019-21 Elected as Chair, Section on Methodology, American Sociological

Association 2013-4 Elected as Chair, Section on Social Psychology, American Sociological

Association 2011 Invited banquet speaker, Sociological Research Association 2010 Elected as Chair, Section on Evolution, Biology, and Society, American

Sociological Association 2010 Invited Member, Sociological Research Association 2005-7 Selected as Robert Wood Johnson Scholar in Health Policy Research,

Harvard University 2005 William H. Sewell Memorial Lecturer, University of Wisconsin-Madison 2004 Co-winner, Special Competition for Projects for Time-Sharing

Experiments in the Social Sciences (with Devah Pager) 2003 Robert and Clarissa Rees Memorial Alumni Lecturer, University of Iowa 2003 Co-winner, Special Competition for Projects for Time-Sharing

Experiments in the Social Sciences (with Devah Pager) 2001 American Sociological Association Doctoral Dissertation Award 2001 Esther L. Kinsley Ph.D. Dissertation Award for the Most Outstanding

Dissertation, Indiana University 2001 Outstanding Young Investigator Award, College of Letters and Sciences,

University of Wisconsin-Madison 2000 Dissertation Grant-in-Aid, Indiana University 1999-2000 Predoctoral Fellowship, Training Program in Social Psychology, National

Institute of Mental Health 1999 Alfred Lindesmith-Elizabeth Ione Mullins Fellowship for Excellence in

Research, Department of Sociology, Indiana University

Page 16: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 16

16

1999 Karl F. Schuessler Award for Graduate Research in Sociology, Indiana

University (with Jason Schnittker) 1998 Outstanding Graduate Paper, National Opinion Research Center/General

Social Survey Graduate Paper Competition (with Jason Schnittker) 1998 Outstanding Graduate Paper, Division of Health, Health Policy, and

Health Services of the Society for the Study of Social Problems (with Jason Schnittker)

1998-99 Fellowship, Department of Sociology, Indiana University 1997 Clifford C. Clogg Award, Methodology Section of the American

Sociological Association and the Inter-University Consortium on Political and Social Research

1996 Esther L. Kinsley Master’s Thesis Award, College of Arts and Sciences,

Indiana University 1996 Honors on Ph.D. qualifying examination in Ethnomethodology and

Conversation Analysis 1996 College of Arts and Sciences Travel Grant, Indiana University 1994-98 National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship 1994 Jacob K. Javits Fellowship, United States Department of Education

(declined) 1993-94 Fellowship, Indiana University College of Arts and Sciences 1993 E. R. Johnson Prize for Highest Grade Point Average by a Graduating

Senior in the College of Liberal Arts, University of Iowa 1992-93 Stevens Scholarship for Most Outstanding Member, Phi Beta Kappa,

University of Iowa 1992 Manford Kuhn Award, Most Outstanding Undergraduate Paper, Annual

Meetings of the Iowa Sociological Association 1989-93 National Merit Scholarship

Page 17: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 17

17

COURSES TAUGHT Undergraduate/predominantly undergraduate courses: Sport, Competition, and Society, Stanford University Politics and Organization of Sport, Stanford University Genetics and Social Inquiry, Stanford University Sport, Competition, and Society, Northwestern University Individual and Society, Northwestern University Introductory Social Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison Survey of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison Statistics for Sociology, Indiana University Society and the Individual, Indiana University Graduate courses: Sociological Methodology III: Models for Discrete Outcomes, Stanford University Introduction to Quantitative Data Analysis, Northwestern University Genetics and Social Inquiry, Northwestern University Quantitative Analysis of Social Data, Northwestern University Research Methods in Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison Categorical Analysis, Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) Summer Program in Quantitative Methods, University of Michigan Advanced Categorical Data Analysis, Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) Summer Program in Quantitative Methods, University of Michigan PROFESSIONAL, UNIVERSITY, AND NATIONAL SERVICE 2021-present Editorial Board, Socius 2021-present Editorial Board, Annual Review of Sociology 2020-present Advisory Board, Journal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media 2019-present Editorial Board, SCORE Project (Systematizing Confidence in Open

Research and Evidence), conducted by the Center for Open Science. 2019-present Deputy Editor, Demography 2019-present Director of Undergraduate Studies, Stanford, Sociology

Page 18: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 18

18

2019-2022 Member, Working Group, “Wrestling with Social/Behavioral Genomics: Risks, Potential Benefits, and Ethical Responsibility.” Sponsored by Russell Sage Foundation and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

2018-2021 Member, Data Monitoring Committee, Understanding America Study. 2019-2020 Panelist, Graduate Research Fellowship Program (Sociology and

Geography), National Science Foundation 2016-7 Steering Committee, Committee on National Statistics workshop on

reproducibility in federal statistics 2014-18 Panelist, Social Sciences and Population Studies Study Section, Center

for Scientific Review, National Institutes of Health 2014-16 Editorial Board, Journal of Health and Social Behavior 2015 Award Committee, Lazarsfeld Award, Section on Methodology,

American Sociological Association 2014 Chair, Subcommittee on Replication, Workshop on Reporting Guidelines

and Open Science, Center for Open Science 2013-14 Chair, Section on Social Psychology, American Sociological Association 2013-present Editorial Board, Biodemography and Social Biology 2012-14 Panelist, National Academy of Sciences Panel on the Measurement of

Civic Engagement and Social Cohesion. (Committee Report: National Research Council. 2014. Civic Engagement and Social Cohesion: Measuring Dimensions of Social Capital to Inform Policy. Washington, DC: National Academies Press.)

2012 Program Committee, European Science Foundation for Strategic

Workshop, “The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly: Understanding Collaboration Between the Life Sciences and the Social Sciences.”

2010-11 Chair, Section on Evolution, Biology, and Society, American Sociological

Association 2010 Invited Participant, National Science Foundation advisory workshop for

Genes, Cognition, and Social Behavior 2009-12 Publications Committee, American Sociological Association

Page 19: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 19

19

2009-10 Committee for Lazarsfeld, Goodman, and graduate student paper

competitions, American Sociological Association section on Methodology.

2009-10 Council, Section on Methodology, American Sociological Association 2008-15 General Social Survey Board of Overseers (2011-15, Chair, Long-Range

Planning Committee) 2008-10 National Science Foundation, Panel on Measurement, Methodology, and

Statistics, Division of Social, Behavioral, and Economic Sciences 2008-11 Executive Committee, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern

University 2009 Chair, Nominations Committee, Section on Medical Sociology, American

Sociological Association 2008-9 Research Subcommittee, Research and Administrative Computing

Committee, Northwestern University 2008-9 Editorial Board, Social Psychology Quarterly 2007 Organizer, Symposium on the Social Psychology of Work and

Retirement. Annual Meetings of the Gerontological Society of America, San Francisco

2007 Presider, Thematic Session on Aging and Life Course, American

Sociological Association Meetings 2007-10 Council member, Section on Social Psychology, American Sociological

Association 2006 Presider, Session on Health Policy, Eastern Sociological Society Meetings 2005 Discussant, Session on Psychological Health and the Life Course, Annual

Meetings of the Gerontological Society of America 2005-7 Executive Committee, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-

Madison 2004-5 Faculty Senate, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Page 20: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 20

20

2005-7 Editorial Board, American Sociological Review 2005 Presider and Discussant, Session on Integrating Qualitative and

Quantitative Methods, Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association

2005 Organizer and Presider, Sessions on Biosocial Interaction, Annual

Meetings of the American Sociological Association 2004-7 Consulting editor, American Journal of Sociology 2004 Presider, Session on Biosocial Interaction, Annual Meetings of the

American Sociological Association 2003 Hacker-Mullins Paper Award Committee, Section on Science Knowledge

and Technology, American Sociological Association 2002-5 Organizer, Social Psychology and Microsociology area, Department of

Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison 2002-5 Web Committee, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-

Madison 2002 Organizer, Regular Sessions on Social Theory, Annual Meetings of the

American Sociological Association 2002 Robert K. Merton Book Award Selection Committee, Section on Science,

Knowledge, and Technology 2002 Cooley-Mead Award Selection Committee, Section on Social Psychology,

American Sociological Association 2001-2 Social Committee, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-

Madison 2001-4 Publicity Committee, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin-

Madison 1998-present Reviewer, American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology,

Social Forces, Sociological Theory, Sociological Methodology, Sociological Methods and Research, Journal of Health and Social Behavior, Social Science and Medicine, Social Psychology Quarterly, Sociology of Education, American Journal of Political Science, American Journal of Public Health, Journal of Public Policy and Management, Sociological

Page 21: Jeremy Freese - sociology.stanford.edu

Freese - 21

21

Science, Science, Science Advances, Evolution and Human Behavior, Acta Sociologica, The Sociological Quarterly, Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, Sociology of Religion, Human Nature, American Behavioral Scientist, National Science Foundation, Russell Sage Foundation, William T. Grant Foundation, Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences, Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation)

1997-present Member, American Sociological Association

Current section memberships: Evolution, Biology, and Society Inequality, Poverty, and Mobility Medical Sociology Methodology Social Psychology

1997-99 Executive Committee, Department of Sociology, Indiana University 1996-97 President, Sociology Graduate Student Association, Indiana University