Search and Decision Making Speakers: Difference between revisions
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==<span style="color:#d15a2a">Speakers, Panelists & Moderators Include:</span>== | ==<span style="color:#d15a2a">Speakers, Panelists & Moderators Include:</span>== | ||
[[File: | [[File: Bruch.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.santafe.edu/people/profile/elizabeth-bruch '''Elizabeth Bruch''']<br />'''University of Michigan & Santa Fe Institute''']] | ||
''' | '''Elizabeth Bruch''' is an Associate Professor of Sociology and Complex Systems at the University of Michigan and an external faculty member of Santa Fe Institute. Prior to joining the faculty at Michigan in 2008, she was a postdoctoral scholar in the Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy program. She earned a PhD in Sociology and MS in Statistics from the University of California at Los Angeles.<br/><br/>Bruch's longstanding interest is in the quantitative study of human behavior, and what it implies for larger scale social patterns and dynamics.Her research combines substantive knowledge of human behavior from cognitive science, marketing, and decision theory with statistical techniques and richly textured online activity data in an effort to understand the dynamic interplay between human behavior and the social environment.<br/><br/>She has developed "cognitively plausible" statistical models of neighborhood and mate choice and is applying models from behavioral ecology to understand how men and women adapt their mate-seeking strategies to particular romantic markets. She is also exploring how online dating markets are divided vertically into "leagues" and horizontally into "submarkets", as well as how people organize their search for romantic partners in space and time. | ||
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[[File: | [[File: Daryl_Fairweather.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.redfin.com/blog/author/darylfairweather '''Daryl Fairweather''']<br />'''Redfin''']] | ||
''' | '''Daryl Fairweather''' is the chief economist of Redfin. Prior to joining Redfin she was a senior economist at Amazon working on problems related to employee engagement and managing a team of analysts. During the housing crisis, Daryl worked as a researcher at the Boston Fed studying why homeowners entered foreclosure. Daryl received her Bachelor's of Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and received her Ph.D. and Master's degrees in economics at the University of Chicago where she specialized in behavioral economics. Follow her on Twitter @FairweatherPhD. | ||
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[[File: | [[File: AlisonGopnik.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://psychology.berkeley.edu/people/alison-gopnik '''Alison Gopnik''']<br />'''University of Californina, Berkeley''']] | ||
''' | '''Alison Gopnik''' is a professor of psychology and affiliate professor of philosophy at the University of California at Berkeley. She received her BA from McGill University and her PhD from Oxford University. She is an internationally recognized leader in the study of children’s learning and development and was one of the founders of the field of "theory of Mind", an originator of the "theory theory" of children's development, and more recently introduced the idea that probabilistic models and Bayesian inference could be applied to children's learning. She has held a Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences Fellowship, the Moore Distinguished Scholar fellowship at the California Institute of Technology, the All Souls College Distinguished Visiting Fellowship at Oxford, and King's College Distinguished Visiting Fellowship at Cambridge. She is an elected member of the Society of Experimental Psychologists and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and is a fellow of the Cognitive Science Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She has been continuously supported by the NSF and was Principal Investigator on a 2.5 million dollar interdisciplinary collaborative grant on causal learning from the McDonnell Foundation. | ||
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[[File: | [[File:davidkrakauer2.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.santafe.edu/people/profile/david-krakauer '''David Krakauer''']<br />'''Santa Fe Institute''']] | ||
''' | '''David Krakauer''' is the President and William H. Miller Professor of Complex Systems at Santa Fe Institute. His research explores the evolution of intelligence on earth. This includes studying the evolution of genetic, neural, linguistic, social and cultural mechanisms supporting memory and information processing, and exploring their shared properties. He served as the founding Director of the Wisconsin Institute for Discovery, the Co-Director of the Center for Complexity and Collective Computation, and Professor of mathematical genetics all at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. David has been a visiting fellow at the Genomics Frontiers Institute at the University of Pennsylvania, a Sage Fellow at the Sage Center for the Study of the Mind at the University of Santa Barbara, a long-term Fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, and visiting Professor of Evolution at Princeton University. In 2012 Dr. Krakauer was included in the Wired Magazine Smart List as one of 50 people "who will change the World.” In 2016 Krakauer was included in Entrepreneur Magazine’s visionary Leaders advancing global research and business. | ||
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[[File: | [[File:Jeffrey_lewis.png|thumb|200px|[https://www.middlebury.edu/institute/people/jeffrey-lewis '''Jeffrey Lewis''']<br /> '''Middlebury Institute for International Studies''']] | ||
''' | '''Jeffrey Lewis''' is the director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies of the Middlebury Institute for International Studies. Before coming to CNS, he was the director of the Nuclear Strategy and Nonproliferation Initiative at the New America Foundation. Prior to that, he was executive director of the Managing the Atom Project at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, executive director of the Association of Professional Schools of International Affairs, a visiting fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and a desk officer in the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Policy.<br/><br/>At the Middlebury Institute, He teaches courses on arms control issues in Northeast Asia and Chinese nuclear policy. The work of his team was recently covered in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and VICE. He is the author of Minimum Means of Reprisal: China's Search for Security in the Nuclear Age (MIT Press, 2007), and Paper Tigers: China’s Nuclear Posture (IISS, 2014). He is a regular columnist for Foreign Policy, and has published articles in Foreign Affairs, the Washington Post, and The New York Times. He is the founder of ArmsControlWonk.com, the leading blog and podcast on disarmament, arms control and nonproliferation. | ||
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[[File: Steve_Liu.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.cs.mcgill.ca/~xueliu/site/intro.html '''Steve Liu''']<br />'''McGill University | [[File: Steve_Liu.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.cs.mcgill.ca/~xueliu/site/intro.html '''Steve Liu''']<br />'''McGill University''']] | ||
'''Xue (Steve) Liu''' is a Full Professor in the School of Computer Science and a William Dawson Scholar (Chair Professor) at McGill University. He is also a | '''Xue (Steve) Liu''' is a Full Professor in the School of Computer Science and a William Dawson Scholar (Chair Professor) at McGill University. He is also a Professor (courtesy appointment) of Mathematics and Statistics at McGill University. Dr. Liu is an associate faculty member of the Montreal Institute for Learning Algorithms (MILA). He served as the Chief Scientist at Tinder Inc., leading the research and innovation for the world's largest dating and social discovery app. <br/><br/>At McGill University, Dr. Liu is also an associated member of the Center for Intelligent Machines (CIM), and an associated member of the Center for Advanced Systems and Technologies in Communications (SYTACom). He is a recipient of several awards including the 2017 Mitacs Award for Exceptional Leadership -- Professor; the Outstanding Young Canadian Computer Science Researcher Prizes from the Canadian Association of Computer Science in 2014; the NSERC/DND Discovery Grants Supplements Award in 2017; and the Tomlinson Scientist Award for "recognition of excellence and scientific leadership" at McGill University. He is the founding director of the Cyber-Physical Intelligence Lab at McGill University since 2007. Dr. Liu obtained his Ph.D. in Computer Science with multiple distinctions from The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He also worked briefly as the Samuel R. Thompson Chair Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at The University of Nebraska-Lincoln, at Hewlett-Packard Labs in Palo Alto, California, and IBM T. J. Watson Research Center in New York. <br/><br/>Dr. Liu serves/served on the editorial boards of IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (ToN), ACM Transactions on Cyber-Physical Systems (TCPS), IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology (TVT), IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorial (COMST), and IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems (TPDS). | ||
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[[File: | [[File: MelanieMoses.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.santafe.edu/people/profile/melanie-moses '''Melanie Moses''']<br />'''University of New Mexico & Santa Fe Institute''']] | ||
''' | '''Melanie Moses''' is a principal investigator at the Moses Biological Computation Lab at the University of New Mexico and an external faculty member of Santa Fe Institute. studies complex biological and information systems, the scaling properties of networks, and the general rules governing the acquisition of energy and information in complex adaptive systems. Melanie's focus is on the efficiency of growth and information exchange in biological and computational networks, and how the size and topology of networks determine emergent system behavior. Melanie draws insights, tools and approaches from different disciplines in an effort to find unifying principles in the natural world. | ||
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[[File: | [[File: SidRedner.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.santafe.edu/people/profile/sidney-redner '''Sidney Redner''']<br />'''Santa Fe Institute''']] | ||
''' | '''Sidney Redner''' is a resident faculty member at Santa Fe Institute. He received an A.B. in physics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1972 and a Ph.D. in Physics from MIT in 1977. After a postdoctoral year at the University of Toronto, Sid joined the physics faculty at Boston University in 1978. During his 36 years at BU, he served as Acting Chair during two separate terms and also served as Departmental Chair. Sid has been a Visiting Scientist at Schlumberger-Doll Research in the mid 80's, the Ulam Scholar at the Center for Nonlinear Studies at LANL in 2004, and a sabbatical visitor at Université Paul Sabatier in Toulouse France and at Université Pierre-et-Marie-Curie in Paris.<br/><br/>Sid has published more than 250 articles in major peer-reviewed journals, as well as two books: the monograph “A Guide to First-Passage Processes” (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2001) and the graduate text, jointly with P. L. Krapivsky and E. Ben-Naim, “A Kinetic View of Statistical Physics” (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2010). He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, as well as an Associate Editor for the Journal of Statistical Physics, and a Divisional Associate Editor for Physical Review Letters. | ||
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[[File: | [[File: DanRockmore.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.santafe.edu/people/profile/dan-rockmore '''Dan Rockmore''']<br />'''Dartmouth College & Santa Fe Institute''']] | ||
''' | '''Dan Rockmore''' is Neukom Director, William H. Neukom 1964 Distinguished Professor of Computational Science, Associate Dean of Science faculty at Dartmouth College, and an external faculty member of Santa Fe Institute. Dan came to the College in 1991, after completing his undergraduate work at Princeton University and earning his Ph.D. at Harvard University. In 1995, he was one of 15 scientists awarded a five-year Presidential Faculty Fellowship from the White House for excellence in education and research. | ||
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[[File: | [[File: Graham-spencer.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.santafe.edu/people/profile/graham-spencer '''Graham Spencer''']<br />'''GV & SFI Trustee''']] | ||
''' | '''Graham Spencer''' is a managing partner at GV and a trustee of Santa Fe Institute.<br/><br/>Graham was one of the original 6 founders of Excite.com and was the chief technology officer of the company until its sale to @Home. Graham was also a co-founder of JotSpot, which was acquired by Google in 2006.<br/><br/>In 1999, Graham left Excite@Home to co-found DigitalConsumer.org, a 50,000-member non-profit consumer organization dedicated to protecting fair-use rights for digital media. Graham Spencer received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Stanford University. | ||
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[[File: | [[File: Christina.Thompson.jpg|thumb|200px|<font size = "1">Photo by Maria Stenzel</font><br/>[https://scholar.harvard.edu/cthompson/home'''Christina Thompson''']<br />'''Harvard University''']] | ||
''' | '''Christina Thompson''' is the author of ''Sea People: The Puzzle of Polynesia'' and ''Come on Shore and We Will Kill and Eat You All'', which was shortlisted for the Douglas Stewart Prize and the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing. She is a recipient of various fellowships, including grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and a 2015 Public Scholar Award from the National Endowment for the Humanities. She is the editor of Harvard Review and teaches in the writing program of Harvard University Extension. A dual citizen of the U.S. and Australia, she lives in Boston with her husband and three sons. | ||
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[[File: | [[File: Will_Tracy.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.santafe.edu/people/profile/william-tracy '''William Tracy''']<br />'''Santa Fe Institute''']] | ||
''' | '''William Tracy''' is the Vice President for Applied Complexity at the Santa Fe Institute. He came to SFI from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, where he was the undergraduate program director for the Lally School of Management and a faculty member. He was formerly the Associate Director of SFI’s Complex Systems Summer School, Beijing. Before entering academia, he was a Junior Professional Associate at The World Bank, where he focused on Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Will also has private sector and entrepreneurial experience in the US, China, and India. He holds a Ph.D. in management with a certificate in human complex systems from UCLA. | ||
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[[File: | [[File: Pete_Worden.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://breakthroughinitiatives.org/leaders/3 '''Pete Worden''']<br />'''Breakthrough Starshot''']] | ||
''' | '''Pete Worden''' is the Executive Director of the Breakthrough Prize Foundation. Prior to that he was Director of NASA's Ames Research Center and research professor of astronomy at the University of Arizona. He is a recognized expert on space and science issues and has been a leader in building partnerships between governments and the private sector internationally. Dr. Worden has authored or co-authored more than 150 scientific papers in astrophysics and space sciences. He served as a scientific co-investigator for three NASA space science missions – most recently the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph launched in 2013 to study the Sun. He received the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal for the 1994 Clementine Mission to the moon. Dr. Worden was named the 2009 Federal Laboratory Consortium ‘Laboratory Director of the Year’ and is the recipient of the 2010 Arthur C. Clarke Innovator’s Award. | ||
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[[File: | [[File: VickyChuqiaoYang.jpg|thumb|200px|[https://www.santafe.edu/people/profile/vicky-chuqiaoyang '''Vicky Chuqiao Yang''']<br />'''Santa Fe Institute''']] | ||
''' | '''Vicky Chuqiao Yang''' is an Omidyar Postdoctoral Fellow and Peters Scholar at the Santa Fe Institute. Her research is centered around understanding complex societal phenomena using mathematical tools. Some topics of her work include scaling laws in cities, political polarization, and categorical perception of social groups. Her approach involves both building mechanistic models and learning from real-world datasets. Recently, she has been thinking a lot about how groups can more effectively aggregate individuals’ information and make better decisions.<br/><br/>She received a Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics from Northwestern University. She holds an M.S. in Applied Mathematics from Northwestern University, and dual-major B.S. in Physics and Mathematical Sciences from Worcester Polytechnic Institute. | ||
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Latest revision as of 21:18, 22 April 2019
SFI ACtioN Topical Meeting
Co-hosted by GV
April 25, 2019
Held at GV, 1489 Charleston Rd, Mountain View, CA 94043
Speakers, Panelists & Moderators Include:
Elizabeth Bruch is an Associate Professor of Sociology and Complex Systems at the University of Michigan and an external faculty member of Santa Fe Institute. Prior to joining the faculty at Michigan in 2008, she was a postdoctoral scholar in the Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy program. She earned a PhD in Sociology and MS in Statistics from the University of California at Los Angeles.
Bruch's longstanding interest is in the quantitative study of human behavior, and what it implies for larger scale social patterns and dynamics.Her research combines substantive knowledge of human behavior from cognitive science, marketing, and decision theory with statistical techniques and richly textured online activity data in an effort to understand the dynamic interplay between human behavior and the social environment.
She has developed "cognitively plausible" statistical models of neighborhood and mate choice and is applying models from behavioral ecology to understand how men and women adapt their mate-seeking strategies to particular romantic markets. She is also exploring how online dating markets are divided vertically into "leagues" and horizontally into "submarkets", as well as how people organize their search for romantic partners in space and time.
Daryl Fairweather is the chief economist of Redfin. Prior to joining Redfin she was a senior economist at Amazon working on problems related to employee engagement and managing a team of analysts. During the housing crisis, Daryl worked as a researcher at the Boston Fed studying why homeowners entered foreclosure. Daryl received her Bachelor's of Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and received her Ph.D. and Master's degrees in economics at the University of Chicago where she specialized in behavioral economics. Follow her on Twitter @FairweatherPhD.
Alison Gopnik is a professor of psychology and affiliate professor of philosophy at the University of California at Berkeley. She received her BA from McGill University and her PhD from Oxford University. She is an internationally recognized leader in the study of children’s learning and development and was one of the founders of the field of "theory of Mind", an originator of the "theory theory" of children's development, and more recently introduced the idea that probabilistic models and Bayesian inference could be applied to children's learning. She has held a Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences Fellowship, the Moore Distinguished Scholar fellowship at the California Institute of Technology, the All Souls College Distinguished Visiting Fellowship at Oxford, and King's College Distinguished Visiting Fellowship at Cambridge. She is an elected member of the Society of Experimental Psychologists and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and is a fellow of the Cognitive Science Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. She has been continuously supported by the NSF and was Principal Investigator on a 2.5 million dollar interdisciplinary collaborative grant on causal learning from the McDonnell Foundation.
David Krakauer is the President and William H. Miller Professor of Complex Systems at Santa Fe Institute. His research explores the evolution of intelligence on earth. This includes studying the evolution of genetic, neural, linguistic, social and cultural mechanisms supporting memory and information processing, and exploring their shared properties. He served as the founding Director of the Wisconsin Institute for Discovery, the Co-Director of the Center for Complexity and Collective Computation, and Professor of mathematical genetics all at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. David has been a visiting fellow at the Genomics Frontiers Institute at the University of Pennsylvania, a Sage Fellow at the Sage Center for the Study of the Mind at the University of Santa Barbara, a long-term Fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, and visiting Professor of Evolution at Princeton University. In 2012 Dr. Krakauer was included in the Wired Magazine Smart List as one of 50 people "who will change the World.” In 2016 Krakauer was included in Entrepreneur Magazine’s visionary Leaders advancing global research and business.
Jeffrey Lewis is the director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies of the Middlebury Institute for International Studies. Before coming to CNS, he was the director of the Nuclear Strategy and Nonproliferation Initiative at the New America Foundation. Prior to that, he was executive director of the Managing the Atom Project at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, executive director of the Association of Professional Schools of International Affairs, a visiting fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and a desk officer in the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Policy.
At the Middlebury Institute, He teaches courses on arms control issues in Northeast Asia and Chinese nuclear policy. The work of his team was recently covered in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and VICE. He is the author of Minimum Means of Reprisal: China's Search for Security in the Nuclear Age (MIT Press, 2007), and Paper Tigers: China’s Nuclear Posture (IISS, 2014). He is a regular columnist for Foreign Policy, and has published articles in Foreign Affairs, the Washington Post, and The New York Times. He is the founder of ArmsControlWonk.com, the leading blog and podcast on disarmament, arms control and nonproliferation.
Xue (Steve) Liu is a Full Professor in the School of Computer Science and a William Dawson Scholar (Chair Professor) at McGill University. He is also a Professor (courtesy appointment) of Mathematics and Statistics at McGill University. Dr. Liu is an associate faculty member of the Montreal Institute for Learning Algorithms (MILA). He served as the Chief Scientist at Tinder Inc., leading the research and innovation for the world's largest dating and social discovery app.
At McGill University, Dr. Liu is also an associated member of the Center for Intelligent Machines (CIM), and an associated member of the Center for Advanced Systems and Technologies in Communications (SYTACom). He is a recipient of several awards including the 2017 Mitacs Award for Exceptional Leadership -- Professor; the Outstanding Young Canadian Computer Science Researcher Prizes from the Canadian Association of Computer Science in 2014; the NSERC/DND Discovery Grants Supplements Award in 2017; and the Tomlinson Scientist Award for "recognition of excellence and scientific leadership" at McGill University. He is the founding director of the Cyber-Physical Intelligence Lab at McGill University since 2007. Dr. Liu obtained his Ph.D. in Computer Science with multiple distinctions from The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He also worked briefly as the Samuel R. Thompson Chair Associate Professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at The University of Nebraska-Lincoln, at Hewlett-Packard Labs in Palo Alto, California, and IBM T. J. Watson Research Center in New York.
Dr. Liu serves/served on the editorial boards of IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (ToN), ACM Transactions on Cyber-Physical Systems (TCPS), IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology (TVT), IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorial (COMST), and IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems (TPDS).
Melanie Moses is a principal investigator at the Moses Biological Computation Lab at the University of New Mexico and an external faculty member of Santa Fe Institute. studies complex biological and information systems, the scaling properties of networks, and the general rules governing the acquisition of energy and information in complex adaptive systems. Melanie's focus is on the efficiency of growth and information exchange in biological and computational networks, and how the size and topology of networks determine emergent system behavior. Melanie draws insights, tools and approaches from different disciplines in an effort to find unifying principles in the natural world.
Sidney Redner is a resident faculty member at Santa Fe Institute. He received an A.B. in physics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1972 and a Ph.D. in Physics from MIT in 1977. After a postdoctoral year at the University of Toronto, Sid joined the physics faculty at Boston University in 1978. During his 36 years at BU, he served as Acting Chair during two separate terms and also served as Departmental Chair. Sid has been a Visiting Scientist at Schlumberger-Doll Research in the mid 80's, the Ulam Scholar at the Center for Nonlinear Studies at LANL in 2004, and a sabbatical visitor at Université Paul Sabatier in Toulouse France and at Université Pierre-et-Marie-Curie in Paris.
Sid has published more than 250 articles in major peer-reviewed journals, as well as two books: the monograph “A Guide to First-Passage Processes” (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2001) and the graduate text, jointly with P. L. Krapivsky and E. Ben-Naim, “A Kinetic View of Statistical Physics” (Cambridge Univ. Press, 2010). He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, as well as an Associate Editor for the Journal of Statistical Physics, and a Divisional Associate Editor for Physical Review Letters.
Dan Rockmore is Neukom Director, William H. Neukom 1964 Distinguished Professor of Computational Science, Associate Dean of Science faculty at Dartmouth College, and an external faculty member of Santa Fe Institute. Dan came to the College in 1991, after completing his undergraduate work at Princeton University and earning his Ph.D. at Harvard University. In 1995, he was one of 15 scientists awarded a five-year Presidential Faculty Fellowship from the White House for excellence in education and research.
Graham Spencer is a managing partner at GV and a trustee of Santa Fe Institute.
Graham was one of the original 6 founders of Excite.com and was the chief technology officer of the company until its sale to @Home. Graham was also a co-founder of JotSpot, which was acquired by Google in 2006.
In 1999, Graham left Excite@Home to co-found DigitalConsumer.org, a 50,000-member non-profit consumer organization dedicated to protecting fair-use rights for digital media. Graham Spencer received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Stanford University.
Christina Thompson is the author of Sea People: The Puzzle of Polynesia and Come on Shore and We Will Kill and Eat You All, which was shortlisted for the Douglas Stewart Prize and the William Saroyan International Prize for Writing. She is a recipient of various fellowships, including grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and a 2015 Public Scholar Award from the National Endowment for the Humanities. She is the editor of Harvard Review and teaches in the writing program of Harvard University Extension. A dual citizen of the U.S. and Australia, she lives in Boston with her husband and three sons.
William Tracy is the Vice President for Applied Complexity at the Santa Fe Institute. He came to SFI from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, where he was the undergraduate program director for the Lally School of Management and a faculty member. He was formerly the Associate Director of SFI’s Complex Systems Summer School, Beijing. Before entering academia, he was a Junior Professional Associate at The World Bank, where he focused on Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Will also has private sector and entrepreneurial experience in the US, China, and India. He holds a Ph.D. in management with a certificate in human complex systems from UCLA.
Pete Worden is the Executive Director of the Breakthrough Prize Foundation. Prior to that he was Director of NASA's Ames Research Center and research professor of astronomy at the University of Arizona. He is a recognized expert on space and science issues and has been a leader in building partnerships between governments and the private sector internationally. Dr. Worden has authored or co-authored more than 150 scientific papers in astrophysics and space sciences. He served as a scientific co-investigator for three NASA space science missions – most recently the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph launched in 2013 to study the Sun. He received the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal for the 1994 Clementine Mission to the moon. Dr. Worden was named the 2009 Federal Laboratory Consortium ‘Laboratory Director of the Year’ and is the recipient of the 2010 Arthur C. Clarke Innovator’s Award.
Vicky Chuqiao Yang is an Omidyar Postdoctoral Fellow and Peters Scholar at the Santa Fe Institute. Her research is centered around understanding complex societal phenomena using mathematical tools. Some topics of her work include scaling laws in cities, political polarization, and categorical perception of social groups. Her approach involves both building mechanistic models and learning from real-world datasets. Recently, she has been thinking a lot about how groups can more effectively aggregate individuals’ information and make better decisions.
She received a Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics from Northwestern University. She holds an M.S. in Applied Mathematics from Northwestern University, and dual-major B.S. in Physics and Mathematical Sciences from Worcester Polytechnic Institute.