Dr Joanna Strycharz (PhD, University of Amsterdam, 2020) is an assistant professor of persuasive communication at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research, University of Amsterdam. Her research focuses on how insights gained from data can be used to adjust communication between organizations and consumers. She is also interested in how such data-driven communication impacts cognitions, attitudes, and behavior of consumers as well as what unintended effects such communication has on individuals and the society. In her work, she often relies on a combination of different quantitative data (e.g., surveys, experiments, online trace data), applying methods such as structural equation modelling, multilevel and panel analysis, natural language processing, and methods of causal inference.
Dr Susanne Baumgartner (PhD, University of Amsterdam, 2013) is an assistant professor of Youth and Media Entertainment at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research, University of Amsterdam. Her research focuses on the role of digital media in adolescent development. Specifically, she is interested in how digital media affect the cognitive development of youth. Moreover, she studies the effects of smartphones on stress and sleep. To study the impact of digital media, she employs innovative methodological approaches, such as experience sampling, smartphone tracking data, physiological measures, and eye-tracking.
Emma Schreurs (MSc, University van Amsterdam, 2020) is a data steward at the Department of Child Development and Education, for the University of Amsterdam. Her work focuses on the development of Research Data Management (RDM), which includes her involvement in several ongoing projects, among which the implementation of the Research Management Services, Research Data Exchange, and the development of new RDM guidelines for the Faculty Social and Behavioural Sciences. She is interested in machine-actionability (i.e., the capacity of computational systems to work with none or minimal human intervention), seeing that researchers increasingly rely on computational support to deal with large and complex data sets and higher computational speed.
Anna Keuchenius (MSc, University of Amsterdam, 2021) is a postdoctoral researcher at the Political Sociology group, department of Sociology, the University of Amsterdam. Her research is situated in the field of computational social science and focuses on integrating a complexity science view on social systems with a sociological view that pays attention to collective meaning-making. From that perspective, she studies how new ideas emerge and spread successfully or lead to conflict, using large social media datasets, network analysis and machine learning. Anna is one of the initiators behind the Computational Social and Behavioral Science Community, bringing together researchers and institutes that use computational tools to study social dynamics.
Evelien Oomen (MSc, University van Amsterdam, 2016) is data steward at the Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR), for the University of Amsterdam. She has worked at the AISSR as program manager for four years prior to her position as data steward, assisting researchers with managing research grants, and witnessing developments and changes in research data management (RDM) requirements from subsidy holders. With a background in anthropology, Evelien is particularly interested in RDM of qualitative and ethnographic research projects.
Amber van der Wal is a data steward at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR). In this capacity, she helps researchers to understand and incorporate best research practices that are in accordance with institutional protocols and European laws and regulations (GDPR). In order to do so, she works closely together with the university’s legal department, the data stewards of the other domains within the faculty, and the institute’s ethical review board. Amber has a great passion for the field of Communication Science and the principles of open science and FAIR data in general. Being a data steward is part of her job as ASCoR’s Research Manager, which entails being the first person of contact for all research-related issues. In addition, she also teaches in the Communication Science master track and works as a postdoctoral researcher in Project AWeSome, led by Patti Valkenburg.
Aino Koho (LLM, University of Amsterdam, 2019) is a data steward at the Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR) at the University of Amsterdam. In this role she supports researchers with the implementation of good data management practices in accordance with institutional guidance, and the applicable European laws and regulations. With background in data protection and GDPR compliance, Aino is particularly interested in the interplay between privacy and open science.
Klaas Seinhorst (PhD, University of Amsterdam, 2021) is a data steward at the Psychology research institute. He obtained a doctorate in linguistics, for which he investigated the role that complexity plays in the learnability and typology of languages. As a data steward, Klaas supports colleagues with their RDM-related questions in all stages of the research process. He is particularly interested in developing and teaching RDM courses, Open Science, and the tension between privacy restrictions and doing meaningful research.