Writing

Selected writing

As a data scientist, most of my work takes place in professional settings with limited public access.

This page brings together some of my favourite pieces from public-facing projects.


Blog posts

  • Time.
  • “I find, in fact, that I think less and less about time these days, in part because I’ve found that I’m able to both get a lot more accomplished and feel a lot more present when I keep my thinking about it to a minimum.”

  • Endings.
  • “It’s an idea that’s stuck with me, and one that I’ve incorporated into my own work ever since.”

  • As April ends, I’m thinking about…
  • This month’s recommended reading includes an essay by Kyle Chayka and recent work from Laurie Woolever.

  • Keep the line open.
  • “One thing I’ve learned, over the course of my career, is that you never know when someone from your professional past will later come to play a role in your professional present.”

  • Gift your best time to yourself.
  • “The challenge, when it came to realizing my longer-term goals, had mostly been that although they were important to me in the long run their benefits were both largely intangible and relatively far in the future.”

  • As March ends, I’m thinking about…
  • This month’s recommended reading includes an essay by Alexander Chee and recent work from Anthropic.

  • Mentorship probably won’t look the way you thought it would.
  • “Too often, there’s an expectation that a mentor will offer a clear-cut answer, a distinctly measurable outcome, or some piece of advice that will be immediately actionable. In reality, it’s a lot of gradually piecing together little bits of insight that, on their own, don’t necessarily look like much.”

  • The calvary isn’t coming.
  • “You don’t have to do it all yourself, but you will almost certainly have to be the one who at least gets the ball rolling by putting yourself forward for consideration in some way.”

  • It (mostly) happens on email.
  • “I was once offered a job I hadn’t applied to, from a person I didn’t know, because I’d been recommended for the position by another person I didn’t know. What connection did they have to me or my work? Our only exchange had been a single cold email I’d sent.”

  • As February ends, I’m thinking about…
  • “Over the years, I’ve lived, worked, and studied in many different countries, using several different languages. I’ve lived in big cities, and I’ve lived in small ones; I’ve lived in places whose names anybody would know, and I’ve lived in places that few have ever heard of. What these experiences have taught me is that amazing people are not a finite resource.”

  • Reading through the pandemic: A year (and a bit) in review
  • “It was the middle of PhD application season, and I had recently been admitted to the PhD in English programs at Oxford and at Cambridge. The next step in the progression of this decision-making process was to buy my plane tickets to the UK, where I was scheduled to attend the welcome day events for newly admitted students at each university.”

  • Context is king: A prediction about the future of ChatGPT and other AI chatbots.

    “Why, then, would OpenAI use the term ‘remember’ to describe what ChatGPT is capable of doing? I suspect that, in part, it’s a gesture towards a future in which ChatGPT has undergone significant improvements in contextual capability.”

     

    Academic writing

  • Large language models (LLMs): Risks and policy implications, in the MIT Science Policy Review
  • Locating the leading edge of cultural change, in the Proceedings of the Computational Humanities Research Conference
  • Forthcoming from Routledge: DEEP LITERACY, DIGITAL TIME
  •  

    Women of Letters

  • Pushing against the pull: In conversation with Emily J. Smith
  • Having it all: In conversation with Corinne Low
  • Hopeful determination: In conversation with Nikkya Hargrove
  • A measure of worth: In conversation with Carrie Sun
  • A geographical mind: In conversation with Kapka Kassabova
  • Everyone is a mentor: In conversation with Jennifer Baker
  • The experience of caring: In conversation with Marianne Brooker
  • Of language, of poetry, of memory: In conversation with Mary Jo Bang
  • How writing could be: In conversation with Elisa Gabbert
  • Ourselves, each other, and the world around us: In conversation with Noreen Masud
  • Pack light and listen deeply: In conversation with Cass Marketos
  • To live many different lives: In conversation with Ayşegül Savaş
  • So much that we’re not able to see: In conversation with Iris Jamahl Dunkle
  • Humming, crackling, and expanding: In conversation with Frances Dickey
  • A place in the larger world: In conversation with Jenna Butler
  • So many words not in the dictionary: In conversation with Nancy K. Miller
  • Paying attention: In conversation with Sheila Liming
  • Harbor your own dreams: In conversation with Beth Kephart
  • To feel and think and know: In conversation with Miranda Dunham-Hickman
  • Not a person but a landscape: In conversation with Kasia Van Schaik
  •  

    Press

  • INTERSECT: Cultivating a new breed of researchers, from Princeton Research Computing
  • How Poetry Matters is making space for a conversation on poetry, from the McGill Faculty of Arts
  • Research radar, from Concordia University
  • Fictionalizing science: How literature and film have shaped modern technology, from The Tribune

    Jana M. Perkins, PhD, is an award-winning scholar. Her research has garnered over a quarter of a million dollars in funding from leading institutions across North America and the UK, including the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). As a data scientist with a background in literary scholarship, her expertise extends across disciplines to yield the unique analytical frameworks which characterize her approach. Her forthcoming book, co-authored with Miranda Dunham-Hickman, will be published by Routledge.

    You can follow her latest work on Bluesky or by visiting janajm.com.