Simon DeDeo: Difference between revisions
From Santa Fe Institute Events Wiki
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
I'm an Omidyar Fellow at the Institute; I did Mathematical Physics ("Part III") at Cambridge, and then a Ph.D. in Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton in 2005, and have done research at the University of Chicago and University of Tokyo. Here at SFI I think a great deal about how combinatoric and dynamical methods developed for physical systems might help to (on the one hand) analyze and (on the other hand) explain biological and social systems. I | I'm an Omidyar Fellow at the Institute; I did Mathematical Physics ("Part III") at Cambridge, and then a Ph.D. in Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton in 2005, and have done research at the University of Chicago and University of Tokyo. Here at SFI I think a great deal about how combinatoric and dynamical methods developed for physical systems might help to (on the one hand) analyze and (on the other hand) explain biological and social systems. I've worked with a range of folks on topics in the empirics of complex systems and the profound question of computation in natural systems. | ||
You can find links to my research and papers here -- [http://santafe.edu/~simon http://santafe.edu/~simon] | You can find links to my research and papers here -- [http://santafe.edu/~simon http://santafe.edu/~simon] |
Revision as of 22:32, 12 June 2012
I'm an Omidyar Fellow at the Institute; I did Mathematical Physics ("Part III") at Cambridge, and then a Ph.D. in Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton in 2005, and have done research at the University of Chicago and University of Tokyo. Here at SFI I think a great deal about how combinatoric and dynamical methods developed for physical systems might help to (on the one hand) analyze and (on the other hand) explain biological and social systems. I've worked with a range of folks on topics in the empirics of complex systems and the profound question of computation in natural systems.
You can find links to my research and papers here -- http://santafe.edu/~simon