Shanto Iyengar

Shanto Iyengar is an American political scientist and professor of political science at Stanford University. He is also the Harry & Norman Chandler Professor of Communication at Stanford, the director of Stanford's Political Communication Lab, and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.[1]

Shanto Iyengar
NationalityAmerican
EducationLinfield College (B.A., 1968)
University of Iowa (Ph.D., 1972)
Known forWork on political communication
Awards1996 Goldsmith Book Prize (with Stephen Ansolabehere)
1998 Murray Edelman Distinguished Career Award from the American Political Science Association
Scientific career
FieldsPolitical science
InstitutionsStanford University
ThesisThe correlates and consequences of response stability: a methodological analysis (1972)

Biography

Iyengar received his bachelor's degree from Linfield College in 1968 and his Ph.D. from the University of Iowa in 1972. In 1973, he joined the faculty of Kansas State University as an assistant professor, where he remained until 1979. He taught at Yale University as an assistant professor from 1983 to 1985, and then taught at Stony Brook University and the University of California, Los Angeles before joining Stanford's faculty in 1998.[2]

Research

Iyengar is known for his work on the role of the news media in contemporary politics.[1] This includes work he conducted with Dartmouth College political scientist Sean J. Westwood, in which they analyze partisan divisions in American politics.[3][4]

gollark: Mostly I do actually have to think before typing things, so typing speed isn't a *terrible* concern.
gollark: I can type 100WPM or so on my laptop's keyboard, and really slowly on my phone even with the autospellcorrection.
gollark: I really just want a cuboid with a 5"-diagonal display with a sensibly low-resolution rectangular LCD screen (or a smaller one with a keyboard or something, like BlackBerry's keyone stuff), enough thickness to fit in a few days of battery life, swappable batteries (maybe even two), GNU/Linux support, headphone jacks and other important IO (maybe a USB-C and USB-A port), and µSD card support.
gollark: And notches, weird curvey screens you can't put in cases easily, overlarge screens, sort of thing.
gollark: I want one to replace my ailing existing phone (it runs an outdated Android version with no hope of support, the battery's degraded horribly and is not easily replaceable, and earlier today it randomly rebooted), but they're not being produced now or something.

References

  1. "Shanto Iyengar". Stanford Political Communication Lab. Retrieved 2017-10-08.
  2. "Shanto Iyengar CV" (PDF).
  3. Badger, Emily; Chokshi, Niraj (2017-06-15). "How We Became Bitter Political Enemies". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-10-08.
  4. Weeks, Linton (2014-10-15). "What Is Really Tearing America Apart". NPR. Retrieved 2017-10-08.
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