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== Those Questions ==
== Those Questions ==
<ol>
<ol>
<li>'''What are your main interests?'''<br/>
<li>'''What are your main interests?'''
<p>
My interests have wandered about in the last few years. Currently I'm really interested in evolutionary game theory, specifically in origins and sustainability of cooperation between individuals and groups. Within that, specialization and branching phenomena pique my interests. It seems like the models I look at have some information in them (in the information theoretic sense), and eventually I'd like to how the amount of information in the system changes over time.  
My interests have wandered about in the last few years. Currently I'm really interested in evolutionary game theory, specifically in origins and sustainability of cooperation between individuals and groups. Within that, specialization and branching phenomena pique my interests. It seems like the models I look at have some information in them (in the information theoretic sense), and eventually I'd like to how the amount of information in the system changes over time.  
 
</p>
For a while I thought I might be a geometer, and for a while I was interested in general relativity&mdash;but only enough to have learned things that are so vague that they'd be appropriate at a cocktail party.
<p>
For a while I thought I might be a geometer, and for a while I was interested in general relativity&mdash;but only enough to have learned things that are so vague that they'd be appropriate at a gathering no more rigorous than a cocktail party. A cocktail party ''without'' scientists present.
</p>
</li>
</li>


<li>'''What sorts of expertise can you bring to the group?''' <br/>
<li>'''What sorts of expertise can you bring to the group?'''  
I know the basics of evolutionary game theory and can program in Java well enough. I'm also expertly curious, and oftentimes, expertly confused.
<p>
I know the basics of evolutionary game theory and can program in Java well enough. Maybe by June I'll be confident enough to add [http://www.eclipse.org/aspectj/docs.php AspectJ] to my expertise. I'm also expertly curious, and oftentimes, expertly confused.
</p>
</li>
</li>


<li>'''What do you hope to get out of the CSSS?''' <br/>
<li>'''What do you hope to get out of the CSSS?'''
I'd like to bring home a solid collection of modeling tools and tricks. I'd like to see how others approach model building. As far as I can tell, it's a dark art, and I want in. It'd be nice to meet other people who are tackling (approximately) the sort of questions I'm wondering about. And it'd be fantastic to brush up and extend my foundational knowledge.  
<p>
I'd like to bring home a solid collection of modeling tools and tricks. As I'm new to the game, it'd be great for me to see how others approach model building. As far as I can tell, it's a dark art, and I want in. It'd be nice to meet other people who are tackling (approximately) the sort of questions I'm wondering about&mdash;remember I'm all about cooperation. And it'd be fantastic to brush up on and extend my foundational knowledge in, say, dynamical systems.
</p>
</li>
</li>



Revision as of 13:18, 7 April 2008

About Me

I'm a masters student in computer science at the University of Massachusetts Boston. I'm interested in evolutionary dynamics, especially modeling group behavior.

I have a website!

Those Questions

  1. What are your main interests?

    My interests have wandered about in the last few years. Currently I'm really interested in evolutionary game theory, specifically in origins and sustainability of cooperation between individuals and groups. Within that, specialization and branching phenomena pique my interests. It seems like the models I look at have some information in them (in the information theoretic sense), and eventually I'd like to how the amount of information in the system changes over time.

    For a while I thought I might be a geometer, and for a while I was interested in general relativity—but only enough to have learned things that are so vague that they'd be appropriate at a gathering no more rigorous than a cocktail party. A cocktail party without scientists present.

  2. What sorts of expertise can you bring to the group?

    I know the basics of evolutionary game theory and can program in Java well enough. Maybe by June I'll be confident enough to add AspectJ to my expertise. I'm also expertly curious, and oftentimes, expertly confused.

  3. What do you hope to get out of the CSSS?

    I'd like to bring home a solid collection of modeling tools and tricks. As I'm new to the game, it'd be great for me to see how others approach model building. As far as I can tell, it's a dark art, and I want in. It'd be nice to meet other people who are tackling (approximately) the sort of questions I'm wondering about—remember I'm all about cooperation. And it'd be fantastic to brush up on and extend my foundational knowledge in, say, dynamical systems.

  4. Do you have any possible projects in mind for the CSSS?
    Not really, but if my project had a strong connection to evolutionary game theory, information theory, or both, I'd be very happy.