February 2014

JEREMY FREESE

Department of Northwestern University 1810 Chicago Avenue Evanston, IL 60208 (847) 467-3985 (office) (847) 491-9907 (fax) [email protected]

EMPLOYMENT

2013-present Ethel and John Lindgren Professor of Sociology, Northwestern University

2007-present Professor, Department of Sociology, Northwestern University (Department Chair, 2010-2013)

2007-present Faculty Fellow, Institute for Policy Research

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,

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

1 Freese - 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

RESEARCH AND TEACHING INTERESTS

Social Psychology / Sociology of Cognition Sociology of Health, Illness, and Medicine Demography and Population Inequality Quantitative and Qualitative Methodology Sociology of Science and Technology

PUBLICATIONS

Forthcoming Ethan Fosse*, Jeremy Freese, and Neil Gross. “Political Liberalism and Graduate School Attendance: A Longitudinal Analysis.” To appear 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.

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.

2 Freese - 3

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.

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.

3 Freese - 4

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.

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.

4 Freese - 5

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.

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.

5 Freese - 6

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.

2003 Dean Krahn, Jeremy Freese, Robert M. Hauser, Kristen Barry, Brian Goodman. “Alcohol Use and Cognition at Mid-Life: The Importance of

6 Freese - 7

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 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 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 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.

7 Freese - 8

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

2010 Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk*, Jeremy Freese and Robert M. Hauser. Anchors-A Way? Using Anchoring Vignettes to Assess Group Differences in Self-Rated Health

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.

2007 James A. Yonker*, Dean D. Krahn, Jeremy Freese, and Robert M. Hauser. Alcohol Consumption and Later Life Cognitive Ability: The Effects of Correcting for Baseline Cognition

2006 Jeremy Freese and Salvador Rivas. Cognition, Personality, and Individual Response to Technological Change: The Case of Internet Adoption.

2006 Jeremy Freese. Cognitive Skills and Survey Nonresponse: Evidence from Two Longitudinal Studies.

BOOK REVIEWS

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.

8 Freese - 9

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.

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.

SOFTWARE

2002 Jeremy Freese. “Least likely observations in regression models for categorical outcomes” Stata Journal 2(3): 227-231.

2001 J. Scott Long and Jeremy Freese. “Predicted Probabilities for Count Models.” Stata Journal 1(1): 51-57.

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.

RESEARCH SUPPORT

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.

9 Freese - 10

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.

HONORS AND AWARDS

2012 Elected as Chair, Section on Social Psychology, American Sociological Association

2010 Invited Member, Sociological Research Association

2010 Elected as Chair, Section on Evolution, Biology, and Society, American Sociological Association

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)

10 Freese - 11

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

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

11 Freese - 12

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

INVITED PRESENTATIONS AND PRESENTATIONS AT PROFESSIONAL MEETINGS

2012 Jill D. Weinberg, Laura Beth Nielsen, and Jeremy Freese. “Public Perceptions of Sexual Harassment.” Annual Meetings of the Law and Society Association, Honolulu.

2012 J. Alex Kevern and Jeremy Freese. “Demographic Determinants of Trends in Public Opinion about Abortion in the United States" American Sociological Association Meetings, Denver.

2012 Amelia R. Branigan, Kenneth McCallum, and Jeremy Freese. “Cross- National Heterogeneity in the Heritability of Educational Attainment.” American Sociological Association Meetings, Denver.

2012 Jeremy Freese. “Using Genetic Data in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Denver.

2012 J. Alex Kevern and Jeremy Freese. “Demographic Determinants of Trends in Public Opinion about Abortion in the United States" Population Association of America Meetings, San Francisco

12 Freese - 13

2012 Amelia R. Branigan and Jeremy Freese. “Skin Color, Sex, and Educational Attainment in the Post Civil Rights Era" Population Association of America Meetings, San Francisco

2011 Jeremy Freese. “Issues in Gene-by-Environment Interaction.” Social Science Genetics Consortion, Los Angeles

2011 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genetic Data into Social Science.” Conference on Biological Data in Social Science, Helsinki.

2011 Jeremy Freese. “Man without a Face: Analytic Microsociology and Sociological Social Psychology.” Invited Participant in Panel on Future of Social Psychology, Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Las Vegas.

2011 Jeremy Freese. “The Promise and Problems of Genetic Data in Social Science.” Invited Banquet Speaker for Sociological Research Association, Las Vegas.

2010 Jeremy Freese. “Taq1a and Education and Political Outcomes: Evidence from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study.” Invited Colloquium, Conference on Integrating Genetics into Social Sciences, University of Colorado- Boulder.

2010 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genotypic Data into Social Science: The Cautionary Tale of Taq1a.” Invited Colloquium, Cornell University.

2010 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genotypic Data into Social Science: The Cautionary Tale of Taq1a.” Invited Colloquium, Oxford University (Nuffield).

2010 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genotypic Data into Social Science: The Cautionary Tale of Taq1a.” Invited Colloquium, .

2010 Jeremy Freese. “Why Are Wealthier People Healthier?” Invited Colloquium, University of Nebraska-Lincoln.

2010 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genotypic Data into Social Science: The Cautionary Tale of Taq1a.” Invited Colloquium, University of Nebraska- Lincoln.

13 Freese - 14

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genotypic Data into Social Science: The Cautionary Tale of Taq1a.” Invited Colloquium, University of Colorado- Boulder.

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genotypic Data into Social Science: The Cautionary Tale of Taq1a.” Invited Colloquium, .

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genotypic Data into Social Science: Evidence from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study.” Conference on European and American Studies, Academia Sinica, Taiwan.

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Genetics and the Social Science Explanation of Individual Outcomes.” Invited Colloquium, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Gen(i)e in the Bottle: The Arrival of Genotypic Measures in Social Science.” Invited Colloquium, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Integrating Genotypic Data into Social Science.” New Genomics Symposium, Department of Epidemiology, University of Bristol.

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Genotypic Data and Social Science.” Invited Colloquium, Ohio State University.

2009 Jeremy Freese. “Genotypic Data and Social Science.” Invited Colloquium, University of California at Berkeley.

2008 Douglas Maynard, Jeremy Freese, and Nora Cate Schaeffer. Requesting as a Social Action: Implications for Non-Response and ‘Leverage-Saliency’ in the Survey Interview. Presentation at the Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Boston.

2008 Jeremy Freese. Cognitive Ability and Promoting Choice in Health Policy Innovation: The Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit. Presentation at the Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Boston.

2008 Jeremy Freese. “Genetics and the Social Science Explanation of Individual Outcomes.” Presentation at the Annual Meetings of the Population Association of America, New Orleans.

14 Freese - 15

2007 Jeremy Freese. Cognitive Differences and Choices about the Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit. Presentation at the Annual Meetings of the Gerontological Society of America, San Francisco.

2007 Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk, Jeremy Freese, and Robert M. Hauser. When One Person’s Good is Another Person’s Poor: Can Anchoring Vignettes Help Us Understand Subjective Ratings in Surveys. Presentation of the Annual Meetings of the Gerontological Society of America, San Francisco.

2007 James M. Raymo Deborah S. Carr, Jeremy Freese, Robert M. Hauser, and Megan Sweeney. Planfulness across the Life Course and Preparation for Retirement. Presentation of the Annual Meetings of the Gerontological Society of America, San Francisco.

2007 Jeremy Freese. “Cognitive Ability, Procrastination, and the Promotion of Choice in Health Policy: Considering the Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit.” Invited Colloquium, Yale University.

2007 Jeremy Freese. “Why are the Wealthier Healthier?” Invited Colloquium, Cornell University.

2007 Jeremy Freese. “Cognitive Ability, Procrastination, and the Promotion of Choice in Health Policy: Considering the Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit.” Meetings of the Robert Wood Johnson Scholars in Health Policy Research Program, Aspen, CO.

2007 Jeremy Freese. “Genetics and the Social Science Explanation of Biographical Outcomes.” Invited Colloquium, Brigham Young University

2007 Jeremy Freese. “The Challenge of Freakonomics to Quantitative Sociology.” Meetings of the Eastern Sociological Society, Philadelphia.

2007 Jeremy Freese, Sara Shostak, Jo C. Phelan, and Bruce G. Link. “Beliefs about Genetics Causation and Genetics Policy Attitudes.” Meetings of the Eastern Sociological Society, Philadelphia

2006 Jeremy Freese, Salvador Rivas, and Eszter Hargittai. “Cognition and Internet Use among Older Adults.” Meetings of the Gerontological Society of America, Dallas.

15 Freese - 16

2006 James Yonker, Dean Krahn, Jeremy Freese, and Robert M. Hauser. “Alcohol Use and Cognitive Functioning in the Near Elderly: A Replication and Extension.” Meetings of the Gerontological Society of America, Dallas.

2006 Jeremy Freese and Robert M. Hauser. “Cognition and Survey Response: Implications for Longitudinal Studies.” Meetings of the Gerontological Society of America, Dallas.

2006 Jeremy Freese. “Making Sense of the Modern Stone Age Family: Problems of Predictive Promiscuity.” Annual Symposium on Family Issues, Pennsylvania State University

2006 Devah Pager and Jeremy Freese. “How Far to Extend the Helping Hand?: An Experimental Survey of Attitudes Toward Government Assistance to the Unemployed.” Presentation to the Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Montreal.

2006 Jeremy Freese and Salvador Rivas. “Cognitive Ability and Internet Use among Older Adults.” Presentation at the Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Montreal.

2006 Salvador Rivas and Jeremy Freese. “Income and Digital Inequalities in the United States.” Presentation at the Institute for Research on Poverty Annual Summer Workshop, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

2006 Kathryn E. Flynn, Maureen A. Smith, and Jeremy Freese. “How Older Adults Use the Internet to Look for Health Information.” Oral Presentation at the Academy for Health Services and Health Policy Annual Research Meeting, Seattle.

2006 Jeremy Freese. “Cognition, Education, and Health-Related Social Innovations.” Meetings of the Robert Wood Johnson Scholars in Health Policy Research Program, Aspen, CO.

2006 James A. Yonker, Dean D. Krahn, Robert M. Hauser, Jeremy Freese, Kristen Barry. “Alcohol Use and Cognition at Age 64: The Effects of Adjusting for Baseline Cognition.” Poster presentation, Annual Meetings of the Research Society on Alcoholism, Baltimore

2006 Jeremy Freese. “Reproducibility Standards for Quantitative Social Science: Why Not Sociology?” American Sociology Association Methodology Conference, University of Connecticut

16 Freese - 17

2006 Jeremy Freese, Robert Hauser, and Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk. “Can Anchoring Vignettes Improve Self-Reports of Health Status?: Evidence from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study.” Invited Colloquium, Rutgers University

2006 Jeremy Freese and Jui-Chung Allen Li. “The Phenotypic Bottleneck and the Role of Genes in the Explanation of Social Outcomes.” Invited presentation at conference on Genetics and Social Structure, Columbia University

2006 Jeremy Freese and Karen Lutfey. “Fundamental Causality and the Challenge of Understanding Socioeconomic Health Disparities.” Annual Meetings of the Eastern Sociological Society, Boston.

2005 Jeremy Freese. “Biopportunity and Change.” William H. Sewell Memorial Lecture, University of Wisconsin-Madison

2005 Jeremy Freese. “Cognitive Ability, Personality, and Response to Social Change: Older Adults and Internet Adoption.” Invited colloquium, Department of Sociology, Harvard University

2005 Jeremy Freese and Salvador Rivas. “Exploring Cognitive and Occupational Explanations for Educational Differences in Home Internet Adoption among Older Adults.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Philadelphia.

2005 Jeremy Freese. “The Social Science Interface to the Study of Cognitive Aging: What are the Best Prospects for Complementary Contribution?” Invited Presentation, International Conference on the Future of Cognitive Aging Research, Penn State University.

2005 Devah Pager and Jeremy Freese. “Who Deserves a Helping Hand: Attitudes about Government Assistance for the Unemployed by Race, Incarceration Status, and Worker History.” Invited Presentation, Conference on Time Sharing Experiments in the Social Sciences, University of Pennsylvania.

2005 Dean Krahn, Kristen Barry, Jeremy Freeese, and Robert Hauser. “Changes in Alcohol Consumption from 53-65 Years of Age.” Poster presentation, Annual Meetings of the Research Society on Alcoholism.

17 Freese - 18

2005 Jeremy Freese and Salvador Rivas. “Cognitive Ability, Personality, and the Sociology of Response to Cognitive Change: The Case of Internet Adoption.” Invited Presentation, University of Washington.

2004 Jeremy Freese. “Sociology, Psychology, and the Digital Divide: Internet Adoption among Older Adults.” Invited presentation, Department of Sociology, University of Iowa.

2004 Jeremy Freese. “Studying Social Psychology and the Life Course with the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study: Overview and Three Swift Applications.” Invited presentation, Program on Social Psychology, Life Course, and Health, Indiana University.

2004 Devah Pager and Jeremy Freese. “Who Deserves a Helping Hand: Attitudes about Government Assistance for the Unemployed by Race, Incarceration Status, and Worker History.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco.

2004 Jeremy Freese. “Academic Performance and Later Life Nonresponse in the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study.” Workshop on Respondent Retention in Longitudinal Surveys, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Washington, DC.

2004 Jeremy Freese. Plenary Address regarding the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study. Annual Meetings of the International Association of Social Science Information Service and Technology, Madison, WI

2003 Jeremy Freese. Plenary Address. Conference on Genetics and Social Science, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan

2003 Dean Krahn, Robert M. Hauser, Jeremy Freese, Kristen Barry. “Alcohol Use and Cognition at Midlife” Presented at the Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Atlanta

2003 Jeremy Freese. “Darwinians at the Gates.” Robert and Clarissa Rees Memorial Alumni Lecture, University of Iowa

2002 Jeremy Freese. “The Perils of Provenance: Evolutionary Psychology, Psychological Postulates, and Theories of Social Consequences” Presented at the Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Chicago

18 Freese - 19

2002 Lyn Christine MacGregor and Jeremy Freese. “Toward a New Sociology of Embodied Cognition” Presented at the Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Chicago

2002 Jason Schnittker, Jeremy Freese, and Brian Powell. “Who's a Feminist and What Does S/He Believe?: Age, Ideology, and Feminist Self-Identification” Presented at the Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Chicago

2002 Jeremy Freese. “Evolutionary Psychology versus evolutionary psychology: Specialized Adaptations for Social Exchange and the Future of Using the Past to Explain the Present”, Group Processes Conference, Chicago

2002 Jason Schnittker, Jeremy Freese, and Brian Powell. “Who's a Feminist and What Does S/He Believe?: Age, Ideology, and Feminist Self-Identification” Presented at the Meetings of the Southern Sociological Society, Baltimore

2001 Discussant, session on Biosocial Interaction, Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Anaheim.

2001 Jeremy Freese and J. Scott Long. “Post-estimation Commands for Regression Models for Categorical and Count Outcomes.” Meetings of the North American Stata User’s Group, Boston.

1998 Jason Schnittker, Jeremy Freese, and Brian Powell. “Neither Nature Nor Nurture: Black-White Differences in Beliefs about the Causes and Appropriate Treatment of Mental Illness.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco.

1998 Jeremy Freese, Brian Powell, and Lala Carr Steelman. “Rebel Without a Cause or Effect: Sociobiology, Birth Order, and Social Attitudes.” Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, San Francisco.

1998 Jason Schnittker and Jeremy Freese. “Racial Differences in Lay Beliefs about Mental Illness.” Annual Meetings of the Society for the Study of Social Problems, San Francisco.

1997 Jeremy Freese. “Politeness and the Introduction of Positive Information about Self.” Annual Meetings of the Midwest Sociological Society, Des Moines.

19 Freese - 20

1996 Jeremy Freese and Douglas W. Maynard. “The Prosody of Bad and Good News.” Annual Meetings of the Speech Communication Association, San Diego.

1993 Jeremy Freese. “On the Formal Properties of Computer-Mediated Interaction Systems.” National Conference for Undergraduate Research, Salt Lake City.

COURSES TAUGHT

Undergraduate/predominantly undergraduate courses:

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:

Introduction to Quantitative Data Analysis, 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

2013-14 Chair, Section on Social Psychology, American Sociological Association

2012-14 Member, National Academy of Sciences Panel on the Measurement of Civic Engagement and Social Cohesion

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

20 Freese - 21

2010 Invited Participant, National Science Foundation advisory workshop for Genes, Cognition, and Social Behavior

2009-12 Publications Committee, American Sociological Association

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-present General Social Survey Board of Overseers (2011-present, 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

21 Freese - 22

2005-7 Executive Committee, Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin- Madison

2004-5 Faculty Senate, University of Wisconsin-Madison

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

22 Freese - 23

2000-present Member, Human Behavior and Evolution Society

1998-present Reviewer, American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology, Social Forces, Sociological Theory, Sociological Methodology, Sociological Methods and Research, Social Psychology Quarterly, American Journal of Political Science, Evolution and Human Behavior, Acta Sociologica, The Sociological Quarterly, Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, Sociology of Religion, Human Nature, National Science Foundation

1997-present Member, American Sociological Association Current section memberships: Aging and the Life Course Ethnomethodology and Conversational Analysis Evolution, Biology, and Society Medical Sociology Methodology Science, Knowledge, and Technology Social Psychology

1997-99 Executive Committee, Department of Sociology, Indiana University

1996-97 President, Sociology Graduate Student Association, Indiana University

23