Not attempting to answer the question, but I’ve been nursing a thought about the rationality org that might be useful:
The nearby Stanford University has a world-renown program in “decision sciences” http://decision.stanford.edu/ which is basically “how to make decisions scientifically”; they virtually invented influence diagrams, they teach biases as a part of the program, etc. The head of the program, Ronald Howard, also co-founded http://www.decisioneducation.org/ , his teen-oriented “rationality org”.
there is probably things to learn from both
if “rationality org” has a value proposition to these organizations they can be useful in teaching opportunities and for credibility building
The other guy to talk to (unless you decide to strategically approach younger faculty) is Ross Shachter, inventor of bayes-ball algorithm and some other interesting AI papers.
Not attempting to answer the question, but I’ve been nursing a thought about the rationality org that might be useful: The nearby Stanford University has a world-renown program in “decision sciences” http://decision.stanford.edu/ which is basically “how to make decisions scientifically”; they virtually invented influence diagrams, they teach biases as a part of the program, etc. The head of the program, Ronald Howard, also co-founded http://www.decisioneducation.org/ , his teen-oriented “rationality org”.
there is probably things to learn from both
if “rationality org” has a value proposition to these organizations they can be useful in teaching opportunities and for credibility building
The reading list (books) from decisioneducation.org.
These do indeed sound like people to talk to, and local too—thanks!
The other guy to talk to (unless you decide to strategically approach younger faculty) is Ross Shachter, inventor of bayes-ball algorithm and some other interesting AI papers.
Please tell me how that goes. Also, you planning to look into this, or Anna et al?
A comma broke one of the links in your post.