INFORMS Open Forum

DAS webinar: Dr. Tony Cox, Wednesday, June 17, 2026, 11AM ET, "Reducing Risk Misinformation and Miscommunication"

  • 1.  DAS webinar: Dr. Tony Cox, Wednesday, June 17, 2026, 11AM ET, "Reducing Risk Misinformation and Miscommunication"

    Posted 19 hours ago

    The Decision Analysis Society (DAS), in partnership with the Society of Decision Professionals (SDP), & the Society for Risk Analysis (SRA) invites you to join our June 2026 Webinar

     

    "Reducing Risk Misinformation and Miscommunication: A Sheaf-Theoretic Perspective"

     

    Speaker: Tony Cox, University of Colorado Denver, Cox Associates
    Moderator: Neil A. Hamlett

     

    Wednesday, June 17, 2026

    8:00 AM – 9:00 AM PT | 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM ET

    Link to register:

    https://www.decisionprofessionals.com/events/event-description?CalendarEventKey=3935b765-56ed-4930-8657-019e21add1ec&Home=%2fsdp-participate%2fevents

    Link to register for member only meet the speaker from 12:00-12:30 pm: https://www.decisionprofessionals.com/events/event-description?CalendarEventKey=05229938-b7d4-48d9-82c1-019e2ce92fca&Home=%2fsdp-participate%2fevents

    Abstract: Persistent misinformation poses serious challenges to risk communication, public understanding, and effective coordinated decision-making. Traditional models of misinformation spread such as informational cascades, opinion dynamics, and Social Amplification of Risk frameworks help explain how beliefs propagate through social systems. However, they do not explain why locally reasonable beliefs can still fail to produce a coherent and accurate shared understanding of risk.

     

    This webinar introduces a new perspective based on sheaf theory, a branch of applied mathematics concerned with how local pieces of information can (or cannot) be consistently integrated into global structures. The presentation will suggest how sheaf-theoretic tools can be used to diagnose and help repair failures in risk communication systems, including information silos, echo chambers, semantic misalignment, and fragile consensus generated by informational cascades.

     

    Using examples drawn from public health, environmental risk communication, and networked decision systems, the webinar will illustrate how misinformation can arise not only from false content or irrational behavior, but also from inconsistencies in how beliefs are translated, filtered, and combined across organizations and social networks. The discussion will introduce concepts such as global coherence, restriction maps, and cohomological obstructions in intuitive, application-oriented terms accessible to decision analysts and risk professionals.

     

    The webinar will also discuss practical implications for improving risk communication, including trust-based bridge agents, semantic alignment strategies, and network interventions designed to improve the coherence and resilience of distributed decision systems. The overall aim is to show how mathematical tools developed for information integration can help support more reliable collective understanding and better-coordinated risk management decisions.

    Speaker information: Tony Cox, Editor-in-Chief of Risk Analysis, Associate Professor of Business Analytics at the University of Colorado Denver, and President of Cox Associates

     

    Tony Cox is Editor-in-Chief of Risk Analysis, Associate Professor of Business Analytics at the University of Colorado Denver, and President of Cox Associates, a consulting firm specializing in AI/ML, advanced analytics, and risk analysis. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and a Fellow of INFORMS and the Society for Risk Analysis. His research focuses on applied risk analysis, causal inference, uncertainty analysis, risk communication, and AI-assisted evaluation of scientific evidence. He has authored more than 300 publications and several books on risk analysis, causality, decision science, and artificial intelligence applications.



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    Robin Dillon-Merrill
    Professor
    Georgetown University
    Washington DC
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