Jeremy Freese

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Jeremy Freese February 2014 JEREMY FREESE Department of Sociology 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, 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 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.
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