Faculty Profile for Dr. Nicole Taylor

profile photo for Dr. Nicole Taylor
Dr. Nicole Taylor
Associate Professor — Anthropology
ELA 266
phone: (512) 245-8272

Biography Section

Biography and Education

I received my PhD in anthropology from the University of Arizona. Following graduate school, I worked in nonprofit and corporate settings conducting research in the areas of substance abuse, education and poverty, childhood obesity, and school climate. I then served for five years as the Director of Scholar Programs at the School for Advanced Research in Santa Fe, New Mexico before returning to Texas State University, my undergraduate alma mater, to accept a faculty position.

Research Interests

I am anthropologist who explores contemporary social issues related to youth including social media, gender and identity, body image, and obesity. My most recent research examines self-presentation, emotional expression, and sociality among college students on social media. Funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation, (award #1745222) this project also explores ethical and methodological challenges of conducting long term participant observation in social media.

In 2022, with support from another National Science Foundation grant (award #2203209), my team conducted customer discovery interviews as part of the I-Corps program to explore a potential commercial solution to social media dependence that could mitigate the effects of "always on" technology culture.

In 2022, I also began working with Dr. Kate Spradley to ethnographically explore decision-making processes surrounding the treatment of unidentified human remains by law enforcement and other agencies along the south Texas border in order to understand procedural gaps that give rise to the long-term dead (human remains that are buried and forgotten). Our goal is to provide insights that can inform the development of strategies to help jurisdictional authorities follow state laws in processing unidentified human remains. This project draws on my earlier work as a practicing anthropologist exploring institutional culture, decision-making, and collaboration.

Selected Scholarly/Creative Work

  • Taylor, N., Valencia, L. D., VandenBroek, A. K., Stinnett, A., & Allen, A. (2023). Ethics and Images in Social Media Research. First Monday, 28(4). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.5210/fm.v28i4.12680
  • Taylor, N., & Nichter, M. (2022). A Filtered Life: Social Media on a College Campus. New York: Routledge.
  • Morey, T., & Taylor, N. (2019). Understanding How Undergraduate Students Experience and Manage Stress: Implications for Teaching and Learning Anthropology. Teaching & Learning Anthropology, 2(2), 41–61.
  • Taylor, N., & Tamir, O. (2019). Diverse Student Experiences in Higher Education: Implications for the Anthropology Classroom. Teaching & Learning Anthropology (2nd ed., Vol. 2, pp. 1–6).
  • Tamir, O., & Taylor, N. (2019). Nontraditional Students: Understanding and Meeting their Needs in the Anthropology Classroom. Teaching & Learning Anthropology, 2(2), 25–40.

Selected Awards

  • Award / Honor Recipient: Alpha Chi Favorite Professor, Alpha Chi Honor Society. April 12, 2019
  • Award / Honor Recipient: Literary Award, 1st Place in Societal Issues, Reader Views. April 2017
  • Award / Honor Recipient: Reviewers' Choice Best Non-fiction Book of the Year, Reader Views. April 2017
  • Award / Honor Nominee: Finalist, New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards, Anthropology/Archaeology category, New Mexico Book Co-op. November 2016

Selected Grants

  • Taylor, Nicole (Principal), Minifie, Jana (Co-Principal). Interactive Technology for Social Media Use Awareness and Intervention, National Science Foundation, Federal, $50000. (Funded: April 1, 2022 - September 30, 2022). Grant.
  • Spradley, Martha K (Principal), Taylor, Nicole (Co-Principal). Migrant Death Practices: Understanding Institutional Decision-making in the Treatment of Unidentified Human Remains, Texas State University, Texas State University, $16000. (Funded: 2020 - Present). Grant.
  • Taylor, Nicole (Principal). EAGER: Ethical and Methodological Challenges in Social Media Research, National Science Foundation, EAGER Grant, Texas State University, Federal, $29851. (Funded: September 1, 2017 - August 31, 2019). Grant.
  • Taylor, Nicole (Principal). Support for Research Team Seminars, National Science Foundation, Senior Research Program, School for Advanced Research, Federal, $136424. (Funded: 2016). Grant.
  • Taylor, Nicole (Principal). Mellon Doctoral and Postdoctoral Research Fellowships for Underrepresented Minority Scholars, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, School for Advanced Research, Private / Foundation / Corporate, $350000. (Funded: 2015). Grant.

Selected Service Activities

Graduate Advisor
PhD Program Coordinator
January 2023-Present
Chair
Outstanding PhD Student Award
January 2023-Present
Co-Chair
CASTAC (Committee on the Anthropology of Science, Technology and Computing), American Anthropological Association
January 2023-Present
Reviewer / Referee
American Anthropologist
2017-Present
Reviewer / Referee
Practicing Anthropology
2016-Present