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URL:https://lectures.london/london-school-of-economics/what-we-ask-google/
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UID:bb71653d-7094-43aa-9351-a18b64b681ba
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DTSTAMP:20260523T065227
DTSTART:20260528T173000
DTEND:20260528T190000
SUMMARY:What we ask Google
LOCATION:London School of Economics: In-person and online public event (Sh
 aw Library\, Old Building)
DESCRIPTION:Thursday 28 May 2026 6.30pm - 8pmSpeakerSimon RogersChairDr An
 uschka SchmittEver wondered what goes through other people’s minds – t
 heir silly questions\, their inner anxieties\, their hopes and dreams?In h
 is new book\, What we ask Google\, Simon Rogers draws on two decades of ag
 gregated Google search data. He examines what traditional search has revea
 led about humanity’s private fears\, hopes and instincts\, and asks what
  happens as we move from typing keywords into a search bar to asking Chat 
 GPT fully formed questions.Join us to hear Simon Rogers\, in conversation 
 with Anuschka Schmitt\, as he shares insights from what is now the world
 ’s largest dataset and learn that it offers a surprisingly hopeful pictu
 re of humankind.Meet our speaker and chairSimon Rogers is Google’s Data 
 Editor\, leading a team of data journalists\, analysts\, and visualisers t
 o tell stories with Google’s data. Previously\, he was Twitter’s first
  ever Data Editor\, and he is also the author of Facts Are Sacred (2013\, 
 Faber & Faber)\, based on the Guardian’s Datablog which he helped launch
 . A lecturer in Data Journalism at Medill-Northwestern University in San F
 rancisco\, he has received the Royal Statistical Society’s award for sta
 tistical excellence in journalism and been named Best UK Internet Journali
 st by the Oxford Internet Institute at the University of Oxford.Dr Anuschk
 a Schmitt is an Assistant Professor of Information Systems in the Departme
 nt of Management at LSE. Her research examines how AI-based systems augmen
 t human work\, as well as individual decision-making and learning\, placin
 g special emphasis on conversational AI. Her work uses laboratory and fiel
 d experiments\, as well as digital trace data analysis methods. Anuschka
 ’s research has been published in outlets such as the Journal of the Ass
 ociation of Information Systems.Any questions?If you have a query please e
 mail dsi.events@lse.ac.uk or take a look at the information below.LSE Blog
 s Many speakers at LSE events also write for LSE Blogs\, which present res
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URL;VALUE=URI:https://www.lse.ac.uk/dsi/events/2025-26/public-events/what-
 we-ask-google
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