James Katz

Feld Professor of Emerging Media

Education
PhD, Rutgers University, sociology
MEd, Rutgers University, educational statistics and psych
MA, Northern Illinois University, sociology
BA, Northern Illinois University, sociology
Office
Room 402B, 704 Commonwealth Avenue
Email
katz2020@bu.edu

James Katz’s core interests revolve around societal and interpersonal aspects of communication technology. His pioneering publications on artificial intelligence (AI) and society, social media, mobile communication, and robot-human interaction have been internationally recognized and translated into a dozen languages. His two most recent books are Perceiving the Future Through New Communication Technologies: Robots, AI and Everyday life, co-edited with Juliet Floyd and Katie Schiepers (Palgrave Macmillan) and Journalism and the Search for Truth in an Age of Social Media, co-edited with Kate Mays (Oxford University Press). His forthcoming book, also co-edited with Juliet Floyd and Katie Schiepers is Nudging Choices Through Media: Ethical and Philosophical Implications for Humanity (Palgrave Macmillan). Earlier books include The Social Media President: Barack Obama and the Politics of Citizen engagement (with Michael Barris and Anshul Jain), Social Consequences of Internet Use: Access, Involvement, Expression (with Ronald E. Rice) and Handbook of Mobile Communication Studies. According to Google Scholar, his works have been cited more than 17,000 times.

Immediately prior to his Boston University appointment, he was Board of Governors Distinguished Professor of Communication at Rutgers University (the title being the highest honor that Rutgers can bestow on one of its faculty). Earlier in his career he was a distinguished member of staff at Bell Communications Research. In 2021, he received the prestigious Frederick Williams Prize for Contributions to the Study of Communication Technology by the International Communication Association, which recognizes annually “an outstanding scholar whose works and cumulative achievements have ignificantly advanced the study of communication technology.” In 2013, he received an honorary doctorate from Budapest University of Technology and Economics. Among his other awards are the Ogburn Career Achievement award from the American Sociological Association and the Fulbright Distinguished Chair in Twentieth Century Communications History. He is an elected Fellow of several professional societies and holds two patents.

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