Monday workshop
Monday, September 17, 2018 - 3:30pm

337 Cohen Hall

Janet Vertesi, Princeton University
 
Ordering Worlds: Organizations, Decision-making and Science on NASA’s Spacecraft Teams
 
 
 
How does social organization affect the conduct and practice of science? To explore this question, I present empirical data from a comparative ethnographic study of work on two NASA robotic spacecraft mission teams. While the robots appear to be singular entities operating autonomously in the frontiers of space, decisions about what the robots should do and how they accomplish their science are made on an iterative basis by a large, distributed team of scientists and engineers on Earth. As spacecraft team members negotiate among themselves for robotic time and resources, their sociotechnical organization is paramount to understanding how decisions are made, which scientific data are acquired, and how the team relates to their robot, with implications for team solidarity, data sharing, and scientific results.