Project-Related Publications
The following papers involve the study of, or the fostering of, the incorporation of
challenging information into individuals' conceptual systems. The first bullet below
(the "Numerically Driven Inferencing Papers") subsumes papers that are most related to the
More Numerate project.
Numerically Driven Inferencing Papers
- Munnich, E. L., & Ranney, M.A. (2019).
Learning from surprise: Harnessing a metacognitive surprise signal to build and adapt belief networks.
Topics in Cognitive Science, 11, 164-177. https://doi.org/10.1111/tops.12397
- Yarnall, L., & Ranney, M. A. (2017). Fostering scientific and numerate practices in journalism to support rapid public learning,
Numeracy, 10 (1), article 3. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.5038/1936-4660.10.1.3
Also available at: http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/numeracy/vol10/iss1/art3
- Ranney, M. A., Munnich, E. L., & Lamprey, L. N. (2016).
Increased wisdom from the ashes of ignorance and surprise: Numerically-driven inferencing, global warming, and other exemplar realms.
In B. H. Ross (Ed.), The psychology of learning and motivation, 65, 129-182. New York: Elsevier.
doi:10.1016/bs.plm.2016.03.005.
- Ranney, M. A., & Clark, D. (2016).
Climate change conceptual change: Scientific information can transform attitudes.
Topics in Cognitive Science, 8, 49-75. doi: 10.1111/tops.12187
- Clark, D., & Ranney, M. A., & Felipe, J. (2013).
Knowledge Helps: Mechanistic Information and
Numeric Evidence as Cognitive Levers to Overcome Stasis and Build Public Consensus on Climate Change.
In M. Knauff, M. Pauen, N. Sebanz, & I. Wachsmuth (Eds.) Proceedings of 35th Annual Meeting
of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 2070- 2075). Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society.
- Clark, D., & Ranney, M.A. (2010).
Known knowns and unknown knowns:
Multiple memory routes to improved numerical estimation. In K. Gomez, L.
Lyons, & J. Radinsky (Eds.), Learning in the Disciplines: Proceedings of
the Ninth International Conference of the Learning Sciences, Volume 1-Full Papers (pp. 460-467).
International Society of the Learning Sciences, Inc.
- Ranney, M. A., Rinne, L. F., Yarnall, L., Munnich, E., Miratirx, L., & Schank, P. (2008).
Designing and assessing numeracy
training for journalists: Toward improving quantitative reasoning among media consumers.
In P A. Kirschner, F. Prins, V. Jonker, & G. Kanselaar (Eds.),
International Perspectives in the Learning Sciences: Proceedings of the
Eighth International Conference for the Learning Sciences, Volume 2 (pp.
2-246-2-253). International Society of the Learning Sciences, Inc.
- Munnich, E.L., Ranney, M.A., & Song, M. (2007).
Surprise, surprise: The
role of surprising numerical feedback in belief change. In D. McNamara & G.
Trafton (Eds.) Proceedings of the Twenty-ninth Annual Conference of the
Cognitive Science Society (pp. 503-508). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
- Rinne, L.F., Ranney, M.A., & Lurie, N.H. (2006).
Estimation as a catalyst for
numeracy: Micro-interventions that increase the use of numerical information in
decision-making. In S. Barab, K. Hay, & D. Hickey (Eds.). Proceedings
of the Seventh International Conference of the Learning Sciences (pp. 571-577).
Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
- Munnich, E., Ranney, M., & Bachman, M. L. N. (2005).
The longevities of policy-shifts
and memories due to single feedback numbers. In B.G. Bara, L. Barsalou, &
M. Bucciarelli (Eds.) Proceedings of the Twenty-seventh Annual Conference
of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 1553-1558). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
- Garcia de Osuna, J., Ranney, M., & Nelson, J. (2004).
Qualitative and quantitative
effects of surprise: (Mis)estimates, rationales,
and feedback-induced preference changes while considering abortion.
In K. Forbus, D. Gentner, & T. Regier (Eds.),
Proceedings of the Twenty-Sixth Annual Conference of the Cognitive
Science Society (pp. 422-427). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
- Garcia de Osuna, J., Ranney, M., Nelson, J., & Germine, L. (2004). Numerically
Driven Inferencing about abortion: Estimation and rate feedbackÕs diverse
effects on personal policies and justifications. In Y.B. Kafai, N. Enyedy, & W.
Sandoval (Eds), Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference of the
Learning Sciences, 600. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
- Munnich, E., Ranney, M., & Appel, D. (2004).
Numerically-Driven Inferencing
in instruction: The relatively broad transfer of estimation skills.
In K. Forbus, D. Gentner, & T. Regier (Eds.),
Proceedings of the Twenty-Sixth Annual Conference of the Cognitive
Science Society (pp. 987-992). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
- Munnich, E., Ranney, M., Nelson, J., Garcia de Osuna, J., & Brazil, N. (2003).
Policy shift through
Numerically-Driven Inferencing: An EPIC experiment about when base
rates matter. In R. Alterman & D. Kirsh (Eds.),
Proceedings of the Twenty-Fifth Annual Conference of the Cognitive
Science Society (pp. 834-839). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Reinforced Theistic Manifest Destiny and Some Evolution- and Climate-Related Papers
- Velautham, L., & Ranney, M. A. (2020). Global warming, nationalism, and reasoning with numbers: Toward techniques to promote the public's critical thinking about statistics. In S. Denison., M. Mack, Y. Xu, & B.C. Armstrong (Eds.), Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society(pp. 1834-1840). Cognitive Science Society.
- Munnich, E. L., & Ranney, M.A. (2019).
Learning from surprise: Harnessing a metacognitive surprise signal to build and adapt belief networks.
Topics in Cognitive Science, 11, 164-177. https://doi.org/10.1111/tops.12397.
- Ranney, M.A., Shonman, M., Fricke, K., Lamprey, L. N., & Kumar, P. & (2019).
Information that boosts normative global warming acceptance without polarization: Toward J. S. Mill's political ethology of national character.
In D. A. Wilkenfeld & R. Samuels (Eds.) Advances in experimental philosophy of science (pp. 61-96). (In Bloomsbury's Advances in Experimental Philosophy series.) New York: Bloomsbury.
- Velautham, L., Ranney, M. A., Brow, Q. S. (2019).
Communicating climate change oceanically: Sea level rise information increases mitigation, inundation, and global warming acceptance.
Frontiers in Communication, 4, 1-17 [article 7, 17 pages].
- van der Linden, S., Maibach, E., Cook, J., Leiserowitz, A., Ranney, M., Lewandowsky, S., çrvai, J., & Weber, E. (2017).
Culture vs. cognition is a false dilemma.
Nature Climate Change, 7. 457.
- Yarnall, L., & Ranney, M. A. (2017). Fostering scientific and numerate practices in journalism to support rapid public learning,
Numeracy, 10 (1), article 3. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.5038/1936-4660.10.1.3
Also available at: http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/numeracy/vol10/iss1/art3
- Ranney, M. A., Munnich, E. L., & Lamprey, L. N. (2016).
Increased wisdom from the ashes of ignorance and surprise: Numerically-driven inferencing, global warming, and other exemplar realms.
In B. H. Ross (Ed.), The psychology of learning and motivation, 65, 129-182. New York: Elsevier.
doi:10.1016/bs.plm.2016.03.005.
- Ranney, M. A., & Clark, D. (2016).
Climate change conceptual change: Scientific information can transform attitudes.
Topics in Cognitive Science, 8, 49-75. doi: 10.1111/tops.12187
- Clark, D., & Ranney, M. A., & Felipe, J. (2013).
Knowledge Helps: Mechanistic Information and
Numeric Evidence as Cognitive Levers to Overcome Stasis and Build Public Consensus on Climate Change.
In M. Knauff, M. Pauen, N. Sebanz, & I. Wachsmuth (Eds.) Proceedings of 35th Annual Meeting
of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 2070- 2075). Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society.
- Ranney, M.A., Clark, D., Reinholz, D., & Cohen, S. (2012).
Changing global warming beliefs with scientific
information: Knowledge, attitudes, and RTMD (Reinforced Theistic Manifest Destiny theory).
In N. Miyake, D. Peebles, & R. P. Cooper (Eds.), Proceedings of the 34th Annual Meeting of the
Cognitive Science Society (pp. 2228-2233). Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society.
- Ranney, M.A., Clark, D., Reinholz, D., & Cohen, S. (2012).
Improving Americans' modest global warming
knowledge in the light of RTMD (Reinforced Theistic Manifest Destiny) theory. In J. van Aalst, K.
Thompson, M. M. Jacobson, & P. Reimann (Eds.), The Future of Learning: Proceedings of the Tenth
International Conference of the Learning Sciences, Volume 2 (pp. 2-481 to 2-482). International
Society of the Learning Sciences, Inc.
- Ranney, M.A. (2012). Why don't Americans
accept evolution as much as people in peer nations do? A theory (Reinforced Theistic
Manifest Destiny) and some pertinent evidence. In K. S. Rosengren, S. K. Brem, E. M. Evans,
& G. M. Sinatra (Eds.) Evolution challenges: Integrating research and practice in teaching and
learning about evolution (pp. 233-269). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Ranney, M.A., & Thanukos, A. (2011). Accepting
evolution or creation in people, critters, plants, and classrooms: The maelstrom of
American cognition about biological change. In R. S. Taylor & M. Ferrari
(Eds.) Epistemology and science education: Understanding the evolution vs. intelligent
design controversy (pp. 143-172). New York: Routledge.
- Brem, S.K., Ranney, M., & Schindel, J. (2003).
Perceived
consequences of evolution: College students perceive negative personal and
social impact in evolutionary theory. Science Education, 87, 181-206.
- Kaufman, D., Ranney, M., Lewis, E., Thanukos, A., & Brem, S. (2000).
Was
apatosaurus a vegan? Dinosaur knowledge rocks when learning about
evolution. Proceedings of the Twenty-second Annual Conference of the
Cognitive Science Society (pp. 741-746). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Convince Me and ECHO Papers
- Adams, S. (2003). Investigation of the "Convince Me" computer environment as
a tool for critical argumentation about public policy issues. Journal of
Interactive Learning Reseach 14(3), 263-283.
- Siegel, M., & Ranney, M. (2003).
Developing
the Changes in Attitude
about the Relevance of Science (CARS) questionnaire and assessing two
high school science classes. Journal of Research in Science Teaching,
40(8), 757-775.
- Diehl, C., Ranney, M., & Schank, P. (2001). Model-based feedback supports
reflective activity in collaborative argumentation. In P. Dillenbourg, A. Eurelings,
& K. Hakkarainen (Eds.), European perspectives on computer-supported collaborative
learning (pp. 189-196) [Proceedings of the First European Conference on
Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning], Netherlands: Universiteit Maastricht.
- Diehl, C. (2001). Computers and students as instructional partners: The role
of simulation feedback in collaborative argumentation. (Doctoral
dissertation, University of California, Berkeley, 2001). Dissertation
Abstracts International. [Won the 2001 Outstanding Dissertation Award from
UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Education.]
- Siegel, M. (1999). Teaching science for public understanding: Developing
decision-making abilities. (Doctoral dissertation, University of
California, Berkeley, 1999). Dissertation Abstracts International.
- Adams, S. (1998). What is "good reasoning" about global warming? A
comparison of high school students and specialists. (Doctoral
dissertation, University of California, Berkeley, 1998). Dissertation
Abstracts International.
- Ranney, M. & Schank, P. (1998). Toward
an integration of the social and the scientific: Observing, modeling,
and promoting the explanatory coherence of reasoning.
In S. Read and L. Miller (Eds.), Connectionist models of social
reasoning and social behavior (pp. 245-274). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
- Weidner, J., Ranney, M., & Steinbach, A. (1998).
Using Convince Me to assess medical
reasoning skills (and vice versa). Proceedings of the International Conference
of the Learning Sciences (ICLS 98; pp. 284-290). Charlottesville, VA: AACE.
- Diehl, C., Ranney, M., & Schank, P. (1995). Multiple representations for improving
scientific thinking. Report No. TP-024-671, ERIC Document Reproduction Service No.
ED 392 842; pp. 1-36.
- Ranney, M., & Schank, P. (1995). Protocol
modeling, bifurcation/bootstrapping, and Convince Me: Computer-based
methods for studying beliefs and their revision. Behavior Research
Methods, Instruments and Computers, 27, 239-243.
- Ranney, M., Schank, P., & Diehl, C. (1995). Competence Versus Performance in Critical
Reasoning: Reducing the Gap by Using Convince Me. Psychology Teaching Review, 4, 2, 151-164.
- Schank, P. (1995). Computational tools for modeling
and aiding reasoning: Assessing and applying the Theory of Explanatory Coherence.
(Doctoral dissertation, University of California, Berkeley, 1995). Dissertation
Abstracts International. [Won the 1995 Outstanding Dissertation Award from UC
Berkeley's Graduate School of Education.]
- Schank, P, & Ranney, M. (1995).
Improved reasoning with Convince Me. Human Factors in Computing Systems
CHI '95 Conference Companion, 276-277. New York, NY: Association for Computing Machinery.
- Hoadley, C., Ranney, M., & Schank, P. (1994).
WanderECHO: A connectionist simulation
of limited coherence. Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Conference of
the Cognitive Science Society, 421-426, Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
- Ranney,M., Schank, P., & Diehl, C. (1994). Reducing the competence/performance
gap with Convince Me, the reasoner's workbench. In A. Trapp & N. Hammond
(Eds.), Computers in Psychology Handbook, 54-56. York, England: CTI Centre
For Psychology, University of York. [Also to appear in Psychology Software News.]
- Ranney, M., Schank, P., Hoadley, C., & Neff, J. (1994).
"I
know one when I see one": How (much) do hypotheses differ from evidence?
In R. Fidel, B.
H. Kwasnik, C. Beghtol, & P. J.Smith (Eds.) Advances in classification
research: Vol. 5. (ASIS Monograph Series; pp. 141-158, etc.) Medford, NJ:
Learned Information. [An earlier version appeared in the (October, 1994)
Proceedings of the Fifth American Society for Information Science SIG/CR
Workshop on Classification Research (pp. 139-156, etc.).]
- Schank, P., Ranney, M., & Hoadley, C. (1994, 1995, 1999, etc.). Convince Me [Computer
program and manual]. In J.R. Jungck, N. Peterson, & J.N. Calley (Eds.),
The BioQUEST Library. College Park, MD: Academic Software Development Group,
University of Maryland.
[See the Convince Me web site.]
- Schank, P., Ranney, M., Hoadley, C., Diehl, C., & Neff, J. (1994). A reasoner's
workbench for improving scientific thinking: Assessing Convince Me. Proceedings
of the International Symposium on Mathematics/Science Education and Technology.
Charlottesville, VA: AACE.
- Ranney, M., Schank, P., Mosmann, A., & Montoya, G. (1993).
Dynamic explanatory coherence
with competing beliefs: Locally coherent reasoning and a proposed treatment.
In T.-W. Chan (Ed.), Proceedings of the International Conference on Computers
in Education: Applications of Intelligent Computer Technologies (pp. 101-106).
- Schank, P. & Ranney, M. (1993). Can reasoning be taught? Educator, 7 (1), 16-21.
[Special issue on Cognitive Science and Education].
- Schank, P., and Ranney, M. (1992). Assessing
explanatory coherence: A new method
for integrating verbal data with models of on-line belief revision. Proceedings
of the Fourteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society,
599-604. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. [David Marr Memorial Prize was awarded
to the first author for this article.]
- Schank, P., and Ranney, M. (1991). The
psychological
fidelity of ECHO: Modeling an experimental study of explanatory coherence. Proceedings
of the Thirteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, 892-897.
Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
- Ranney, M., & Thagard, P. (1988).
Explanatory coherence and belief revision in
naive physics. Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive
Science Society (pp. 426-432). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. (Also appears as
Report No. SE-050-095, ERIC Document Reproduction Service No. ED 301 407; pp. 1-15.)
Selected Other Papers of Potential Interest
- Ranney, M. (2008). Studies in
historical replication in psychology VII: The relative utility of "ancestor analysis"
from scientific and educational vantages. Science & Education, 17(5), 547-558.
- Kaiser, F., Doka, G., Hofstetter, P., & Ranney, M. (2003).
Ecological behavior and
its environmental consequences: A life cycle assessment of a self-report measure.
Journal of Environmental Psychology, 23, 11-20.
- Weidner, J., & Ranney, M. (2000). Knowledge retention
following problem-solving versus information-gathering. In R. Robson (Ed.) Proceedings
of the 2000 International Symposium on Mathematics/Science Education and Technology (pp. 404-409),
Charlottesville, VA: AACE.
- Kaiser, F., Ranney, M., Hartig, T., & Bowler, P. (1999).
Ecological behavior, environmental attitudes,
and feelings of responsibility for the environment. European Psychologist, 4, 59-74.
- Ranney, M., & Shimoda, T. (1999). Education.
In R. Wilson & F. Keil (Eds.), The MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences (pp. 261-262).
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
- Weidner, J., Ranney, M., & Diamond, M. (1999). Knowledge
organizations resulting from pairs' problem-solving versus information gathering activities.
In B. Collis & R. Oliver (Eds.) Proceedings of the World Conference on Educational Multimedia,
Hypermedia & Telecommunications (pp. 593-597).
- Wolfe, E.W., Kao, C.-W., & Ranney, M. (1998).
Cognitive differences in proficient
and non-proficient essay scorers. Written Communication, 14, 465-492.
- Diehl, C., & Ranney, M. (1996). Assessing spatial navigation
tools with instructional hypermedia for cognitive science. Proceedings of the
Second International Conference on the Learning Sciences (pp. 36-43).
Charlottesville, VA: AACE.
- Ranney, M. (1996).
Individual-centered
vs. model-centered approaches to consistency:
A dimension for considering human rationality. Vivek, A Quarterly in Artificial
Intelligence, 9 (2), 35-43.
[Also in the Proceedings of the Second Annual International Symposium
on Cognition and Education: A Multidisciplinary Perspective.]
- Wolfe, E.W., & Ranney, M. (1996). Expertise in essay scoring.
Proceedings of the Second International Conference on the Learning Sciences (pp. 545-550).
Charlottesville, VA: AACE.
- Ranney, M. (1994a). Assessing and
contrasting formal and
informal/experiential understandings of trajectories. In G.H. Marks (Ed.),
Proceedings of the 1994 International Symposium on Mathematics/Science
Education and Technology (pp. 142-146). Charlottesville, VA: AACE.
- Ranney, M. (1994b).
Relative consistency and subjects' "theories"
in domains such as naive physics: Common research difficulties illustrated by Cooke and Breedin.
Memory & Cognition, 22, 494-502.
- Merrill, D.C., Reiser, B.J., Ranney, M., & Trafton, J.G. (1992).
Effective tutoring techniques: A
comparison of human tutors and intelligent tutoring systems. The Journal of the Learning
Sciences, 2, 277-305.
- Wolfe, E.W., & Ranney, M. (1992).
The manifestation of classroom
experience in the problem solving of teachers. Report No. SP-034-042, ERIC Document
Reproduction Service No. ED 349 299; pp. 1-106. Also accepted into the Technical
Report Series of the Institute of Cognitive Studies, University of California,
Berkeley (pp. 1-85). [This is an expanded version of a paper that was peer-reviewed
and presented at the 1992 meeting of the American Educational Research Association.]
- Ranney, M. (1989).
Internally represented forces may be cognitively
penetrable: A comment on Freyd, Pantzer, and Cheng (1988). Journal of Experimental Psychology:
General, 118, 399-402.
- Ranney, M., & Reiser, B.J. (1989).
Reasoning and explanation
in an intelligent tutor for programming. In G. Salvendy & M.J. Smith (Eds.),
Designing and using human-computer interfaces and knowledge based systems
(pp. 88-95). New York: Elsevier Science Publishers.
- Harman, G., Ranney, M., Salem, K., Doring, F., Epstein, J. & Jaworska, A.
(1988). A theory of simplicity.
Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Conference
of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 111-117). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
- Ranney, M. (1988). Contradictions and
Reorganizations Among Naive Conceptions of Ballistics. Manuscript of the paper
presented at the annual meeting of the Psychonomic Society.
- Ranney, M. (1987a). The role of
structural context in perception:
Syntax in the recognition of algebraic expressions. Memory & Cognition, 15, 29-41.
- Ranney, M. (1987b). Restructuring
conceptions of motion in physics-naive students. (Report No. SE-053-227).
Pittsburgh, PA: University of
Pittsburgh, Learning Research and Development Center. (Also ERIC Document
Reproduction Service No. ED 357 965; pp. 1-15) [This is an expanded
version of a paper that was peer-reviewed and subsequently presented at
the 1987 meeting of the American Educational Research Association.]
- Greeno, J.G., Magone, M.E., Rabinowitz, M., Ranney, M., Strauch, C., & Vitolo, T.M. (1985).
Investigations
of a cognitive skill (LRDC
Publication 1985/27). Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh, Learning
Research and Development Center.
- Fujii, G., Ranney, M.A., & Clark, A.F. (1981).
Thermal expansion of multifilamentary
NB3Sn and V3Ga superconductive cables and fiberglass-epoxy and cotton-phenolic composite
materials. Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, 20, L267-L270.
- Thomas, D.R., McKelvie, A.R., Ranney, M.A., & Moye, T.B. (1981).
Interference in pigeons' long-term memory
viewed as a retrieval problem. Animal Learning & Behavior, 9, 581-586.
- Ranney, M.A., & Clark, A.F. (1980).
Thermal expansion of cryogenic-grade
glass-epoxy laminates. In R.P. Reed (Ed.), Materials studies for magnetic
fusion energy applications at low temperatures - III, (pp. 407-412).
Boulder, CO: National Bureau of Standards.
Selected Project Presentations
- Munnich, E., & Ranney, M. (2009, October). Base Rate Statistics in the Classroom:
Using Controversy to Promote Coherent Reasoning. Paper presented at the Best
Practices Conference on Teaching Controversial Topics, Atlanta.
- Munnich, E., Ranney, M., Rinne, L., Miratrix, L., Crain, M., & Galpern, A. (2008, July).
"This Stat Seems Bogus!" Perspectives on Causality in Determining Veracity. Poster presented
at the Thirtieth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Washington, D.C.
- Ranney, M. A., Rinne, L. F., Yarnall, L., Munnich, E., Miratirx, L., & Schank, P. (2008, June).
Designing and Assessing Numeracy Training for Journalists: Toward Improving Quantitative Reasoning
Among Media Consumers. Paper presented at the Eighth International Conference of the Learning
Sciences, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
- Ranney, M.A., Rinne, L., Yarnall, L., Johnson, T., Schank, P. (2007, September).
A Way to Boost Reasoning Skills for All? The "Numbers, News, and Evidence"
Numeracy Module for Journalists. Invited talk at the School of Education and
Social Policy, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL.
- Ranney, M.A., Rinne, L., Crain, M. Miratrix, L., & Galpern, A. (2007, March).
Designing and Analyzing the "Numbers, News, and Evidence" Journalism Curriculum.
Paper presented at the GSE Research Day, Berkeley, CA.
- Ranney, M.A., Rinne, L., Munnich, E., Yarnall, L., Johnson, T., & Schank,
P. (2007, February). The "Numbers, News, and Evidence Journalism Curriculum:
Might It Boost Everyone's Reasoning?". Invited talk at the Learning and Teaching
Workshop, Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago.