To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jorge Cham
Cham in 2018
Born
Jorge Gabriel Cham

May 1976 (age 47)
Alma mater
Known forCartoon work - Piled Higher and Deeper
Podcast - Daniel and Jorge Explain the Universe
Scientific career
ThesisOn performance and stability in open-loop running (2002)
Doctoral advisorMark Cutkosky[1][2]
Websitejorgecham.com
A PhD Comics special on the occasion of Open Access Week 2012.

Jorge Gabriel Cham (Spanish: [ˈxorxe]) (born 1976)[1] is an engineer-turned cartoonist, writer and producer, who writes the web comic strip Piled Higher and Deeper (PhD Comics).[1][3] Cham was born in Panama and lives in the United States, where he started drawing PhD Comics as a graduate student at Stanford University.[4] He has since been syndicated in several university newspapers and in six published book collections.[5][6] He was featured on NPR on December 20, 2010.[7] With physicist Daniel Whiteson, he is the coauthor of We Have No Idea (2017), a book about unsolved problems in physics.[8] In September 2018, Cham and Whiteson debuted the podcast Daniel and Jorge Explain the Universe, produced by iHeartMedia, in which the hosts aim to explain popular questions and complex topics about science, technology, and the universe, in the simplest way possible.[9] Cham co-creatored the PBS Kids animated series Elinor Wonders Why, which premiered in September 2020.[10]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    168 457
    5 144
    27 937
    434
    287 988
  • The Science Gap: Jorge Cham at TEDxUCLA
  • Jorge Cham and Daniel Whiteson - We Have No Idea: A Guide to the Unknown Universe
  • Jorge Cham: Creating PhD Comics
  • WE HAVE NO IDEA!! PhD Comics Jorge Cham and UC Irvine Professor Daniel Whiteson
  • The Higgs Boson Explained

Transcription

I'm a cartoonist as Scott mentioned. And to me cartooning is about taking a blank page and filling it with your ideas. The idea that I want to draw out for you guys here today is this idea of The Science Gap. Now I'm a cartoonist, but in addition to that, I also have a PhD in robotics. Now you might be wondering what does cartooning and robotics have in common? What do they have to do with each other? Well, I can tell you that my parents are also very concerned about that. (Laughter) But because of this kind of unique combination of academia and the arts, I kind of find myself, a lot of the time, travelling all over the world talking to scientists and researchers about what they do and how they do it. And it's very interesting to me to find out, to learn all the things that we know about the universe, about our bodies, about ourselves and about our societies. But even more interesting, more amazing to me is to find out how much we don't know. So for example, here are some things that you'd think that we as a human species would know by now, but actually don't. (Laughter) Starting with, first of all, What is 95% of the Universe made out of? (Laughter) 95%, right? Like all those billions of stars, all the atoms in this room, inside of me, inside of you. That's just 5% of the entire Universe. So what's the other 95%? We don't actually know, apparently. Even the stuff that we think we know about, that 5%, it's just still so many questions that we don't know. Right, like you know, what is cancer? How do we cure it? What is gravity? What makes markets work? How do we -- What is Alzheimer's disease? How do we cure it? And on, and on, and on. There are so many questions that we still don't know. But that's not actually the gap that I want to talk to you about here today. The gap that I do want to talk to you about today is this gap between the people who are trying to come up with answers to these questions and the general public. So right now if you're a scientist or a researcher, the only way -- basically the main way that you have for communicating what you do to the public, basically is -- the following things have to happen. First of all, you have to write a long and esoteric journal paper, and then your university maybe will issue out a press release about it, and then maybe some reporter somewhere will catch actually this press release, and maybe they'll get interested about it, and maybe they'll talk to their editor about it, and then maybe they'll write a good story about it, and maybe they'll do a good job of it, and then maybe they'll actually get published somewhere. But it won't actually reach the public really unless the media, general media picks it up, or the Internet picks it up, and then maybe it will actually reach the public, and then maybe somebody will actually read it and understand it. Yeah, so that seems a little bit, um, sub-optimal to me. (Laughter) But then something pretty interesting happened to me last year. I was contacted by this physicist called Daniel Whiteson from UC Irvine. Yeah, I know you're UCLA, but you shouldn't laugh at UC Irvine just because I said UC Irvine. (Laughter) Yeah, but he contacted me and he said, "Jorge, you know, I want to pay you to write a comic about the Higgs Boson." And I said, "What?" He's like "Yeah, I feel like people are really curious about this topic, and, you know, the media's not doing a very good job of explaining what it is." And so I said, "Sure!" So I went and I interviewed him and I recorded this conversation that I had with him. And at the same time I was looking on the Internet, people were really experimenting with YouTube videos and taking recordings and making animations of it. And so I decided to also experiment and so we made this video about this animation that explains what the Higgs Boson is. Then when the Higgs Boson was discovered, or some form of it was discovered earlier this year, this video kind of went viral. It was everywhere. It was posted in all kinds of media outlets and websites. Millions of people saw this video and they understood a little bit more about what these scientists were trying to do. So imagine that, right, the best and most clear explanation of what this complex and nuanced topic was came from a scientist himself, in his own voice, who took the initiative to hire a cartoonist, and experiment with new ways to sort of close this gap between him and the public. He didn't wait around for the press release. He didn't wait around for the reporter to come calling. He just took the initiative and did it. So that's pretty cool. But I think, you know, part of the general problem is also that there's another gap, I think, between scientists and the public which is in how the public perceives scientists and researchers. And I know this because probably the thing that I'm most known for as a cartoonist with a PhD, as the most over-educated cartoonist in the history of mankind. One of the things that I'm probably most known for is to make this comic strip called "Piled higher and deeper" or PhD Comics. (Laughter) And this is a comic strip that I started while I was in grad school because, you know, you have a lot of free time in grad school. (Laughter) But people sometimes call it like the "Dilbert of academia". Or they say that it's really interesting because it actually portrays scientists and academics as real people, you know. Apparently they're not robots, and you know, I'm an expert, so I think I would know the difference. (Laughter) But these comic strips, they're pretty popular in academia. They get forwarded around a lot and the website gets about seven million visitors a year. But, you know, outside of academia, in the general public, most people haven't heard about it. What they have probably heard about is probably the most, one of the most popular television sitcoms in network TV today it's a show called "The Big Bang Theory". (One clap) Exactly. (Laughter) Some people groan, some people cheer. "The Big Bang Theory" is also a show, a major TV network show, but that's also supposed to be about scientists and researchers. And, you know, the show has a lot of fans and I don't want to offend them, especially on the Internet. (Chuckling) This show is, does show smart people, all the smart people in this show they have these -- their glasses, they dress really weird, they're socially inept. And all the pretty, cool people are blond, they're dumb, they're outgoing, etc. And so I don't have anything personal against this show. But I do sort of worry about what these stereotypes, what impact they have on society in general. So, for example, I sometimes volunteer in this middle school in East LA called Endeavor College Prep. And these are kids that come from very disadvantaged communities. Most of them, their parents never went to college. Half of them statistically won't even graduate from High School. But, you know, for all we know the next Einstein, or the next Marie Curie, or the next Darwin could be sitting in one of those classrooms now. And so I wonder sometimes, you know, what these stereotypes, the effect that they have. First of all, how are these kids going to get communicated the science that they need to catch up and become these superstars. But most importantly, how are they going to ever see themselves as future scientists or researchers if all they see when they turn on the TV are these stereotypes and caricatures of what scientists and researchers are supposed to be? And so my point here today is that, you know, what we don't know about the Universe should inspire us, but it should also inspire us to try to close these gaps in communication, and in perception, so that more people, more of us, most of the human species can participate and be engaged in looking for these answers, so that maybe we can even discover blank pages to fill up with ideas. Thank you. (Applause)

Early life and education

Jorge Cham was born and raised in Panama to parents working in the Panama Canal Zone as engineers for the United States Government.[11][12] He received his B.S. from Georgia Institute of Technology in 1997,[13] and earned a PhD[2][14][15] in mechanical engineering from Stanford University.[16] He previously worked at Caltech as an instructor and as a researcher on neural prosthetics.[17] He has now fully devoted to his comic work.[18]

Cartoonist

In 2005, Cham became a full time cartoonist and began an invited speaking tour of major universities delivering his talk titled "The Power of Procrastination".[1] To date, he has given hundreds of lectures worldwide.[19] In this lecture, Cham talks about his experiences creating the comic strip and examines the sources of grad students' anxieties. He also explores the guilt and the myths associated with procrastination and argues that in many cases it is actually a good thing.[20]

In 2012, Cham wrote and produced The PHD Movie, an independent feature-length film based on his comics.[21] The film featured real researchers and academics and was screened at over 500 universities and research centers worldwide.[22][23] In 2015, Cham wrote and produced The PHD Movie: Still in Grad School, a sequel to the first film, which also screened worldwide.[24][25] He also illustrated the book Scientific Paper Writing: A Survival Guide (2015) by Bodil Holst.[26]

Cham has also had six collections of his comics published, with the most recent one — a 20th-anniversary edition — backed by more than $234,000 in pledges on Kickstarter.[19]

His book We Have No Idea: A Guide to the Unknown Universe, with physicist Daniel Whiteson, has been translated to over 23 languages,[27] was a Der Spiegel Best-seller,[28] and was awarded the Wen Jin National Book Award in China.[29]

Cham is also the co-creator of Elinor Wonders Why, a show on PBS Kids that is based on Cham's daughter. The series premiered on September 7, 2020. He is the co-owner of Shoe Ink, which produces the Elinor Wonders Why series and That's So Interesting, a live-action short form series hosted by Cham and featuring characters from Elinor Wonders Why itself.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Coelho, Sara (2009). "Piled Higher and Deeper: The Everyday Life of a Grad Student" (PDF). Science. doi:10.1126/science.caredit.a0900042.
  2. ^ a b Cham, Jorge Gabriel (2002). On performance and stability in open-loop running (PDF) (PhD thesis). Stanford University.
  3. ^ Choe, Jaywon (22 July 2011). "The Joke Is on the Ph.D." The New York Times.
  4. ^ Cham, Jorge (2012). "Jorge G. Cham homepage at Stanford". Stanford University. Archived from the original on 2012-04-22.
  5. ^ Jorge Cham interview: "Creating PhDComics"
  6. ^ "The "Piled Higher and Deeper" Book Collections". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2019-08-25.
  7. ^ Ruben, Adam (2010-09-09). "Three Books For Surviving Graduate School". NPR. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
  8. ^ Cham, Jorge; Whiteson, Daniel (2017). We have no idea : a guide to the unknown universe. New York: Riverhead Books. ISBN 9780735211513. OCLC 956959104.
  9. ^ "A Cartoonist and Physicist Team Up to Explain the Universe in New Science Podcast". mentalfloss.com. 2018-09-25. Retrieved 2019-02-08.
  10. ^ Announcement: "PBS KIDS Announces New Series ELINOR WONDERS WHY"
  11. ^ Grim, Kathryn (March 2009). "Jorge Cham: Piled higher and deeper". Symmetry. Vol. 9, no. 1. pp. 30–35.
  12. ^ Maddaus, Gene (15 May 2013). "Jorge Cham: The Overeducated Cartoonist". L.A. Weekly.
  13. ^ "Pacesetters: Piled High". Georgia Tech Alumni Association. Archived from the original on 2007-10-28. Retrieved 2007-02-27.
  14. ^ Cham, J. G.; Bailey, S. A.; Clark, J. E.; Full, R. J.; Cutkosky, M. R. (2002). "Fast and Robust: Hexapedal Robots via Shape Deposition Manufacturing". The International Journal of Robotics Research. 21 (10–11): 869. doi:10.1177/0278364902021010837. S2CID 9390666.
  15. ^ Clark, J. E.; Cham, J. G.; Bailey, S. A.; Froehlich, E. M.; Nahata, P. K.; Full, R. J.; Cutkosky, M. R. (2001). "Biomimetic design and fabrication of a hexapedal running robot". Proceedings 2001 ICRA. IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (Cat. No.01CH37164). Vol. 4. pp. 3643–3649. doi:10.1109/ROBOT.2001.933183. ISBN 0-7803-6576-3.
  16. ^ "About PhD Comics". Archived from the original on 2006-10-19. Retrieved 2006-08-13.
  17. ^ "Jorge Cham's Research". Archived from the original on 2007-02-27. Retrieved 2006-08-13.
  18. ^ "Home". jorgecham.com.
  19. ^ a b Williams June, Audrey (2019). "How the 'Dilbert of Academia' Finds Humor in Grad-School Pain". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
  20. ^ "Jorge Cham's Speaking Tour". Archived from the original on 2005-07-14. Retrieved 2007-02-26.
  21. ^ Corbyn, Zoë (16 September 2011). "PhD Comics hits the big screen". Nature.
  22. ^ Loza-Coll, Mariano (21 June 2012). "Piled too high". Nature.
  23. ^ Powell, Julia (17 June 2014). "PHD comics' Jorge Cham on misery, hope and academia". Wired Magazine.
  24. ^ Corbyn, Zoë (10 September 2015). "Q&A: The academic satirist". Nature.
  25. ^ "Revenge of the Non-Nerds". The New York Times. 30 October 2015.
  26. ^ Krämer, Katrina (10 May 2016). "Review of Scientific Paper Writing: A Survival Guide". Chemistry World.
  27. ^ "We Have No Idea: A Guide to the Unknown Universe".
  28. ^ "Der Spiegel Best Seller List May 2018".
  29. ^ "The 14th Wenjin Book Award is announced".

External links

This page was last edited on 19 September 2023, at 18:06
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.