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  1.  17
    The Mangle of Practice: Time, Agency, and Science.Andrew Pickering - 1995 - University of Chicago Press.
    This ambitious book by one of the most original and provocative thinkers in science studies offers a sophisticated new understanding of the nature of scientific, mathematical, and engineering practice and the production of scientific knowledge. Andrew Pickering offers a new approach to the unpredictable nature of change in science, taking into account the extraordinary number of factors—social, technological, conceptual, and natural—that interact to affect the creation of scientific knowledge. In his view, machines, instruments, facts, theories, conceptual and mathematical structures, disciplined (...)
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  2. Constructing Quarks: A sociological history of particle physics.Andrew Pickering - 1984 - University of Chicago Press.
    Inviting a reappraisal of the status of scientific knowledge, Andrew Pickering suggests that scientists are not mere passive observers and reporters of nature.
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  3. Science as practice and culture.Andrew Pickering (ed.) - 1992 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    Science as Practice and Culture explores one of the newest and most controversial developments within the rapidly changing field of science studies: the move toward studying scientific practice--the work of doing science--and the associated move toward studying scientific culture, understood as the field of resources that practice operates in and on. Andrew Pickering has invited leading historians, philosophers, sociologists, and anthropologists of science to prepare original essays for this volume. The essays range over the physical and biological sciences and mathematics, (...)
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  4. The Mangle of Practice.Andrew Pickering & Jed Z. Buchwald - 1996 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 47 (3):479-482.
  5. Constructing Quarks: A Sociological History of Particle Physics.Andrew Pickering - 1990 - Synthese 82 (1):163-174.
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  6. Statistical language, statistical truth and statistical reason: the self-authenticictation of a style of scientific reasoning.A. Pickering - 1992 - In Andrew Pickering (ed.), Science as Practice and Culture. University of Chicago Press.
  7. Constructing quaternions: on the analysis of conceptual practice.Andrew Pickering & Adam Stephanides - 1992 - In Science as Practice and Culture. University of Chicago Press. pp. 139--67.
     
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  8.  44
    What Is Agency? A View from Science Studies and Cybernetics.Andrew Pickering - 2024 - Biological Theory 19 (1):16-21.
    The first part of this essay relates a minimal and primordial concept of agency to be found in science and technology studies to an overall ontology of liveliness. The second part explores the relation between minimal and higher-level conceptions of agency concerning goal-orientedness and adaptation, and moves towards specifically biological concerns via a discussion of cybernetic machines.
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  9. From science as knowledge to science as practice.Andrew Pickering - 1992 - In Science as Practice and Culture. University of Chicago Press. pp. 4.
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  10.  18
    The Hunting of the Quark.Andrew Pickering - 1981 - Isis 72:216-236.
  11.  24
    Schizophrenia: In context or in the garbage can?Alan D. Pickering - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (1):205-206.
  12.  24
    The Hunting of the Quark.Andrew Pickering - 1981 - Isis 72 (2):216-236.
  13. Cyborg history and the World War II regime.Andrew Pickering - 1995 - Perspectives on Science 3 (1):1-48.
    The Second World War was a watershed in history in many ways. I focus on the World War II discontinuity as it relates to the intersection of scientific and military enterprise. I am interested in how we should conceptualize that intersection and in offering a preliminary tracing of the “World War II regime” that has grown out of it—a regime that includes new forms of scientific and military practice but that has invaded and transformed many other cultural spaces, including—my primary (...)
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  14.  28
    Beyond constraint: The temporality of practice and the historicity of knowledge.Andrew Pickering - 1995 - In Jed Z. Buchwald (ed.), Scientific practice: theories and stories of doing physics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 42--55.
  15.  73
    Decentering sociology: Synthetic dyes and social theory.Andrew Pickering - 2005 - Perspectives on Science 13 (3):352-405.
    : This essay addresses the difficulties that sociology as a discipline continues to experience in grasping the relations between technology, science and the social. I argue that these difficulties stem from a resolute centering of sociology on the social, which follows a generically Durkheimian blueprint. I elaborate a response to these difficulties which derives from recent lines of work in science and technology studies, and which entails a decentering of the social relative to the material and the conceptual, in terms (...)
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  16.  41
    The mangle in practice: science, society, and becoming.Andrew Pickering & Keith Guzik (eds.) - 2008 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    An examination, by a diverse field of experts, of Pickering's mangle theory and its applicability (or lack thereof) beyond the limited cases he presented in the ...
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  17.  13
    Individual differences in reward prediction error: contrasting relations between feedback-related negativity and trait measures of reward sensitivity, impulsivity and extraversion.Andrew J. Cooper, ÉIlish Duke, Alan D. Pickering & Luke D. Smillie - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  18.  87
    Against Putting the Phenomena First: the Discovery of the Weak Neutral Current.Andy Pickering - 1984 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 15 (2):85.
  19. Beyond design: cybernetics, biological computers and hylozoism.Andrew Pickering - 2009 - Synthese 168 (3):469-491.
    The history of British cybernetics offers us a different form of science and engineering, one that does not seek to dominate nature through knowledge. I want to say that one can distinguish two different paradigms in the history of science and technology: the one that Heidegger despised, which we could call the Modern paradigm, and another, cybernetic, nonModern, paradigm that he might have approved of. This essay focusses on work in the 1950s and early 1960s by two of Britain’s leading (...)
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  20.  13
    A note on DeCaro, Thomas, and Beilock (2008): Further data demonstrate complexities in the assessment of information–integration category learning.Ian J. Tharp & Alan D. Pickering - 2009 - Cognition 111 (3):410-414.
  21.  38
    New ontologies.Andrew Pickering - 2008 - In Andrew Pickering & Keith Guzik (eds.), The mangle in practice: science, society, and becoming. Durham: Duke University Press. pp. 1--14.
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  22.  20
    9 Ontology and Antidisciplinarity.Andrew Pickering - 2013 - In Andrew Barry & Georgina Born (eds.), Interdisciplinarity: Reconfigurations of the Social and Natural Sciences. Routledge. pp. 209.
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  23.  30
    Some evidence of a female advantage in object location memory using ecologically valid stimuli.Nick Neave, Colin Hamilton, Lee Hutton, Nicola Tildesley & Anne T. Pickering - 2005 - Human Nature 16 (2):146-163.
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  24.  28
    Asian Eels and Global Warming: A Posthumanist Perspective on Society and the Environment.Andrew Pickering - 2005 - Ethics and the Environment 10 (2):29-43.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Asian Eels and Global Warming:A Posthumanist Perspective on Society and the EnvironmentAndrew Pickering (bio)My idea in this essay is to talk about how some recent developments in my field—science and technology studies—might pass over into environmental studies. In particular, I want to talk about a certain posthumanist perspective, as I call it, on the relation between people and things, because I think that it transfers nicely from thinking about (...)
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  25. Interests and analogies.Andrew Pickering - 1982 - In Barry Barnes & David O. Edge (eds.), Science in context: readings in the sociology of science. Cambridge: MIT Press. pp. 125--45.
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  26. Practice and posthumanism.Andrew Pickering - 2000 - In Karin Knorr Cetina, Theodore R. Schatzki & Eike von Savigny (eds.), The Practice Turn in Contemporary Theory. New York: Routledge. pp. 163--174.
     
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  27.  16
    In our place.Andrew Pickering - 2017 - Common Knowledge 23 (3):381-395.
    This Common Knowledge guest column concerns performance, understood in its simple ur-sense of “doing things” in the world. It continues the author's analysis, in his book The Mangle of Practice, of cultural evolution as a “dance of agency”: a performative, decentered, and emergent back-and-forth between a multiplicity of actors, variously human and nonhuman. The author's concern in this new essay is with apparently stable and dependable technologies, such as cars, computers, and power stations, which he conceptualizes here as “islands of (...)
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  28.  97
    Asian eels and global warming: A posthumanist perspective on society and the environment.Andrew Pickering - 2005 - Ethics and the Environment 10 (2):29-43.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Asian Eels and Global Warming:A Posthumanist Perspective on Society and the EnvironmentAndrew Pickering (bio)My idea in this essay is to talk about how some recent developments in my field—science and technology studies—might pass over into environmental studies. In particular, I want to talk about a certain posthumanist perspective, as I call it, on the relation between people and things, because I think that it transfers nicely from thinking about (...)
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  29.  46
    Islands of Stability: Engaging Emergence from Cellular Automata to the Occupy Movement.Andrew Pickering - 2014 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 2014 (1):121-134.
    Instead of considering »being with« in terms of non-problematic, machine-like places, where reliable entities assemble in stable relationships, STS conjures up a world where the achievement of chancy stabilisations and synchronisations is local. We have to analyse how and where a certain regularity and predictability in the intersection of scientists and their instruments, say, or of human individuals and groups, is produced. The paper reviews models of emergence drawn from the history of cybernetics—the canonical »black box,« homeostats, and cellular automata—to (...)
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  30.  51
    Sociology of knowledge and the sociology of scientific knowledge.Andrew Pickering - 1997 - Social Epistemology 11 (2):187 – 192.
    (1997). Sociology of knowledge and the sociology of scientific knowledge. Social Epistemology: Vol. 11, New Directions in the Sociology of Knowledge, pp. 187-192.
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  31.  8
    Reason Enough? More on Parity-Violation Experiments and Electroweak Gauge Theory.Andy Pickering - 1990 - PSA Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1990 (2):459-469.
    In recent years a unified strategy in dealing with constructivism has been emerging in the writings of historians and philosophers of science. In my own experience, the strategy is exemplified in the long critiques of all or parts of my book, Constructing Quarks (CQ), set out by Paul Roth, Peter Galison and Allan Franklin. These critiques have two common features. First, the substance of constructivist claims is more or less ignored, in favour a fictional version that simply asserts the opposite (...)
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  32.  8
    Shock-elicited behaviors in paired gerbils.Robert Boice & Antonette Pickering - 1973 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 2 (4):221-224.
  33.  24
    The effects of social anxiety on emotional face discrimination and its modulation by mouth salience.Andrew R. du Rocher & Alan D. Pickering - 2018 - Cognition and Emotion 33 (4):832-839.
    ABSTRACTPeople high in social anxiety experience fear of social situations due to the likelihood of social evaluation. Whereas happy faces are generally processed very quickly, this effect is impaired by high social anxiety. Mouth regions are implicated during emotional face processing, therefore differences in mouth salience might affect how social anxiety relates to emotional face discrimination. We designed an emotional facial expression recognition task to reveal how varying levels of sub-clinical social anxiety related to the discrimination of happy and fearful (...)
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  34. Anti-discipline or narratives of illusion.Andrew Pickering - 1993 - In Ellen Messer-Davidow, David R. Shumway & David Sylvan (eds.), Knowledges: historical and critical studies in disciplinarity. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. pp. 103--124.
     
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  35.  12
    Author’s response.Andrew Pickering - 1997 - Metascience 6 (1):45-48.
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  36.  10
    Beamtimes and Lifetimes: The World of High Energy Physicists. Sharon Traweek.Andy Pickering - 1990 - Isis 81 (2):381-382.
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  37.  29
    Cybernetics.Andrew Pickering - 2012 - In Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis, Stig Andur Pedersen & Vincent F. Hendricks (eds.), New Scholasticism. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 361-362.
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  38.  6
    Cybernetics.Andrew Pickering - 2009 - In Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen, Stig Andur Pedersen & Vincent F. Hendricks (eds.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Technology. Oxford, UK: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 118–122.
    This chapter contains sections titled: References and Further Reading.
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  39.  18
    Digital Tripping.Andrew Pickering - 2007 - Metascience 16 (2):341-343.
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  40.  24
    Dynamic thresholds for controlling encoding and retrieval operations in localist (or distributed) neural networks: The need for biologically plausible implementations.Alan D. Pickering - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (4):488-489.
    A dynamic threshold, which controls the nature and course of learning, is a pivotal concept in Page's general localist framework. This commentary addresses various issues surrounding biologically plausible implementations for such thresholds. Relevant previous research is noted and the particular difficulties relating to the creation of so-called instance representations are highlighted. It is stressed that these issues also apply to distributed models.
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  41.  51
    Emergence and synthesis: science studies, cybernetics and antidisciplinarity.Andrew Pickering - 2008 - Technoetic Arts 6 (2):127-133.
    Research in science studies supports a vision of the world as an endlessly lively and emergent place. This essay briefly notes a range of philosophical and scientific positions that elaborate cognate ontologies, but I dwell at greater length on a variety of objects and practices that, in contrast to the modern sciences, thematise, foreground and stage emergence for us. Drawn from the history of cybernetics these span the fields of robotics, organisations and management, the arts and architecture. Noting the eruption (...)
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  42.  28
    From dyes to iraq: A reply to Jonathan Harwood.Andrew Pickering - 2005 - Perspectives on Science 13 (3):416-425.
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  43.  5
    How Experiments End. Peter Galison.Andy Pickering - 1988 - Isis 79 (3):472-473.
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  44.  4
    Islands of Stability: Engaging Emergence from Cellular Automata to the Occupy Movement.Andrew Pickering - 2014 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 5 (1):121-134.
    Instead of considering »being with« in terms of non-problematic, machine-like places, where reliable entities assemble in stable relationships, STS conjures up a world where the achievement of chancy stabilisations and synchronisations is local.We have to analyse how and where a certain regularity and predictability in the intersection of scientists and their instruments, say, or of human individuals and groups, is produced.The paper reviews models of emergence drawn from the history of cybernetics—the canonical »black box,« homeostats, and cellular automata—to enrich our (...)
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  45.  25
    Modeling dopaminergic and other processes involved in learning from reward prediction error: contributions from an individual differences perspective.Alan D. Pickering & Francesca Pesola - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  46.  18
    Personality correlates of the dopaminergic facilitation of incentive motivation: Impulsive sensation seeking rather than extraversion?Alan D. Pickering - 1999 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (3):534-535.
    Depue & Collins associate dopaminergically mediated incentive motivational processes with extraversion. In this commentary I consider dopaminergic indices from neuroimaging investigations which correlate more closely with impulsive sensation seeking personality traits than with extraversion. Measures of relevant behavioural processes also appear to correlate with personality measures other than extraversion.
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  47.  8
    Pushing PositivismThe Second Creation: Makers of the Revolution in Twentieth-Century PhysicsRobert P. Crease Charles C. MannInward Bound: Of Matter and Forces in the Physical WorldAbraham PaisStory of the W and ZPeter Watkins.Andy Pickering - 1987 - Isis 78 (3):425-428.
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  48.  17
    Reading the.Andy Pickering - 2001 - Perspectives on Science 9 (4):499-510.
    : This essay discusses the ways in which Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions has influenced my own work in science studies over the past twenty years or so. It offers a critical but constructive appraisal and development of some of Kuhn's key claims and insights.
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  49.  35
    Reading the Structure.Andy Pickering - 2001 - Perspectives on Science 9 (4):499-510.
    This essay discusses the ways in which Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions has influenced my own work in science studies over the past twenty years or so. It offers a critical but constructive appraisal and development of some of Kuhn's key claims and insights.
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  50.  9
    The Closed World: Computers and the Politics of Discourse in Cold War America. Paul N. Edwards.Andy Pickering - 1996 - Isis 87 (4):756-756.
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